**Apologies for cross posting**
You are invited to the next MICRA seminar occurring 22nd November 2018.
Impact and benefits of treating hearing and vision problems for people living with dementia
Hearing and vision impairments cause difficulties with daily living activities for people living with dementia and impact on communication.
The SENSE-Cog Sensory Intervention is a novel sensory remediation intervention for people with dementia who also experience hearing and / or vision loss. The sensory intervention is currently being empirically tested for efficacy in a large
scale RCT which is comparing outcomes for those who receive the intervention against those who receive care as usual. The sensory intervention is comprised of several interacting components including assessment for and provision of corrective sensory devices
(hearing aids and / or glasses lenses) by audiology / optometry professionals, and input over 10 visits from a novel ‘sensory support therapist’ to support adoption of the devices into everyday life.
In this MICRA seminar, we will talk about our work from the SENSE-cog project (http://www.sense-cog.eu/ ), case studies of the first participants who have received the sensory intervention will be
presented in order to contextualise the intervention within people with dementia's lives and stimulate discussion about its scope with this varied population. Also our SENSE-Cog care home study is looking into moving forward and adapting the sensory intervention
into people with dementia with hearing and sensory impairments living in residential aged care facilities both UK and internationally. Currently, knowledge, attitude and practice (KAP) surveys are being completed in residential aged care homes and dementia
specialist care homes to explore the detection and management of hearing and vision impairments in people with dementia in residential aged care facilities. The study intends to continue exploring this through focus groups and would like your input into how
we can move forward in adapting the intervention for care home settings.
The seminar is free to attend but we ask that you register here:
https://hearing_vision_dementia.eventbrite.co.uk
Seminar Itinerary:
13:00 - 14:00 - Free Networking Lunch
14:00 - 14:10- Introduction - general introduction by chair (TBC)
14:10 - 14:35 - Background to SENSE-Cog intervention and RCT – Iracema Leroi
14:35 - 15:00 - Experiencing the SENSE-Cog intervention: Sensory Intervention case studies – Emma Hooper
15:00 - 15:25 - An introduction to the SENSE-Cog care home study & PPI Activity- Nisha Chauhan
15:25 - 15:55 - Q&As with the panel of speakers
15:55 - 16:00 – Closing Comments
Speakers:
Professor Iracema Leroi
Iracema Leroi is a Professor of Psychiatry in Aging and Dementia at the University of Manchester and an honorary consultant psychiatrist at Greater Manchester NHS Foundation Trust. Professor Leroi is the lead Investigator for SENSE-Cog.
She leads the clinical dementia research group at the university and is Director of the Greater Manchester Dementia Research Centre, which focuses on clinical dementia research in the NHS. She trained in Canada and at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
in the USA. She moved to the UK in 2002 to continue her work in the mental health and cognitive aspects of Parkinson’s disease and other dementias.
Emma Hooper
Emma is an occupational therapist who has worked with people who are living with dementia since 2002. She is passionate about finding ways to support people with dementia to live their lives to the optimum. She is the Senior Sensory Therapist
on the SENSE-Cog trial and has been involved in the study since 2017, initially field-testing and refining the Sensory Intervention through a field trial, and more recently delivering the intervention in the RCT whilst also training and supporting the sensory
therapists in the other study sites.
Nisha Chauhan
Nisha Chauhan (Research Assistant). Nisha has recently joined the SENSE-Cog team, and she is assisting the SENSE-Cog care home study. She has worked in various dementia, learning disability and mental health services since 2011.
This seminar will take place at St Peters House - Oxford Road Manchester M13 9GH