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Addressing dementia :the OECD response.
~
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
Addressing dementia :the OECD response.
紀錄類型:
書目-語言資料,印刷品 : Monograph/item
杜威分類號:
616.8/3
書名/作者:
Addressing dementia : : the OECD response.
出版者:
[Paris] : : OECD,, c2015.
面頁冊數:
122 p. : : ill. ;; 28 cm.
標題:
Dementia.
標題:
Dementia - economics.
標題:
Data Collection - ethics.
ISBN:
9789264231719 (pbk.) :
ISBN:
9264231714 (pbk.)
書目註:
Includes bibliographical references.
內容註:
Foreword and Acknowledgements -- Acronyms and abbreviations -- Executive summary -- Assessment and recommendations -- The growing human and financial cost of dementia -- Improving the lives of people living with dementia -- Towards a cure for dementia -- The role of big data in driving global co-operation and innovation in dementia research.
摘要、提要註:
The large and growing human and financial cost of dementia provides an imperative for policy action. It is already the second largest cause of disability for the over-70s and it costs $645bn per year globally, and ageing populations mean that these costs will grow. There is no cure or effective treatment for dementia, and too often people do not get appropriate health and care services, leading to a poor quality of life. Our failure to tackle these issues provides a compelling illustration of some of today's most pressing policy challenges. We need to rethink our research an innovation model, since progress on dementia has stalled and investment is just a fraction of what it is for other diseases of similar importance and profile. But even then a cure will be decades away, so we need better policies to improve the lives of people living with dementia now. Communities need to adjust to become more accommodating of people with dementia and families who provide informal care must be better supported. Formal care services and care institutions need to promote dignity and independence, while coordination of health and care services must be improved. But there is hope: if we can harness big data we may be able to address the gaps in our knowledge around treatment and care.
Addressing dementia :the OECD response.
Addressing dementia :
the OECD response. - [Paris] :OECD,c2015. - 122 p. :ill. ;28 cm. - OECD health policy studies,2074-3181. - OECD health policy studies..
Includes bibliographical references.
Foreword and Acknowledgements -- Acronyms and abbreviations -- Executive summary -- Assessment and recommendations -- The growing human and financial cost of dementia -- Improving the lives of people living with dementia -- Towards a cure for dementia -- The role of big data in driving global co-operation and innovation in dementia research.
The large and growing human and financial cost of dementia provides an imperative for policy action. It is already the second largest cause of disability for the over-70s and it costs $645bn per year globally, and ageing populations mean that these costs will grow. There is no cure or effective treatment for dementia, and too often people do not get appropriate health and care services, leading to a poor quality of life. Our failure to tackle these issues provides a compelling illustration of some of today's most pressing policy challenges. We need to rethink our research an innovation model, since progress on dementia has stalled and investment is just a fraction of what it is for other diseases of similar importance and profile. But even then a cure will be decades away, so we need better policies to improve the lives of people living with dementia now. Communities need to adjust to become more accommodating of people with dementia and families who provide informal care must be better supported. Formal care services and care institutions need to promote dignity and independence, while coordination of health and care services must be improved. But there is hope: if we can harness big data we may be able to address the gaps in our knowledge around treatment and care.
ISBN: 9789264231719 (pbk.) :NTD 1,617Subjects--Topical Terms:
339939
Dementia.
LC Class. No.: RC521 / .A38 2015
Dewey Class. No.: 616.8/3
Addressing dementia :the OECD response.
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