One couple's ordeal reveals the scandalous failings of dementia care in Britain...
By Angela Epstein
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The consultantâs tone was compassionate but his words to Shirley Ives were frank and to the point. Her husband, Mick, had Alzheimerâs disease.
Itâs the kind of diagnosis that would leave anyone reeling with shock â" but Shirley also felt a faint pulse of relief. At last, after a protracted battle that had brought her to the edge of despair, the medical profession was acknowledging what she had long suspected.
Over the past few years, Shirley had watched her husband change from a bright, animated and capable man to someone who seemed confused about where the local shops were. But despite repeated trips to their family doctor, they had been sent away and told Mick had stress or depression.

Relief and anger: Shirley Ives is glad husband Mick is finally being treated for Alzheimer's but is annoyed his diagnosis was not made sooner
âFor three long years, we tried to get Mickâs GP and specialists to listen to my concerns,â says Shirley. âNow, finally, we knew the reasons for my husbandâs behaviour â" and could make plans, and see what could be done for him.â
This coupleâs journey to diagnosis has been harrowing, but theirs is far from an isolated case. A study by the Alzheimerâs Society found that half of people with Alzheimerâs will never receive a formal diagnosis, and of those who do, two in three will wait longer than a year.
They are shocking statistics, made all the more worrying when compared with other countries. In a major study in 2005 involving 2,500 patients, carers and doctors, to compare dementia care in European countries, the UK came bottom of a league table. Britain had an average time lag of two years and eight months between signs of Alzheimerâs being suspected by carers and the medical diagnosis being made.
Delays were more than twice as long in the UK as in Italy and Germany, and nine months longer than in Poland.
'When I went back to the doctor with Mick a few times over the coming months, I was made to feel that I was making a fuss'
Although diagnosis times may have improved slightly since this survey (which include the latest available Europe-wide figures), experts warn that Britain is still performing poorly in comparison with other developed nations. Indeed, on every level â" from diagnosis to treatment â" the UKâs state of medical provision seems to be in a pitiful state.
A survey conducted by drug company Pfizer among 200 carers from six different European countries (France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Spain and the UK) found a majority of physicians recommended treatment at the time of diagnosis. However, UK carers reported this happened in only 51 per cent of cases, whereas carers in Poland or Spain said it happened in 86 per cent of cases.
âWeâre still a third world country in some respects,â says Dr David Wilkinson, consultant in old age psychiatry at Southamptonâs Memory Assessment and Research Centre, and a leading expert in the field.
âWeâr e not as quick to diagnose, because other countries routinely use things such as brain scans and biomarkers â" compounds in the spinal fluid â" to test for Alzheimerâs, which we donât because of cost.
âAnd while things such as combination drug treatment (prescribing memantine and donepezil together) is now standard treatment in France, Italy, Spain and many U.S. states, weâre still lagging behind, as always.â

Uncertain future: Mick and Shirley Ives on their wedding day
Last week, with figures showing one person is diagnosed with the condition every four seconds, the World Health Organisation called for dementia to become a âworld health priorityâ.
Only recently, David Cameron talked of the ânational crisisâ posed by dementia, which is thought to affect 670,000 people (Alzheimerâs accounts for 70 per cent of cases). A further 400,000 have not been diagnosed and do not know they have it. In the next ten years, the number of people with the disease is expected to rise to a million as the population ages.
Even the National Audit Office has warned the NHS must address failings in dementia care to cope with future demands. It likened the situation to cancer in the Fifties, when patients were not even told they had the disease due to a lack of treatment options.
Alzheimerâs is both progressive and incurable â" a key factor in the despair of those facing a diagnosis.
''It was of ficial. My husband was losing his mind, and there was no way of stopping this. I felt sick. But I also felt angry. Why had it taken so long? Why had nobody listened to me?'
But this bleak picture is compounded by surveys and studies which consistently testify to the paucity of diagnostic provision and care in this country.
A survey published in the Journal of International Medical Research in 2004 revealed just 21 per cent of UK citizens eligible for drug therapy are being treated. France treats 77 per cent of its Alzheimerâs patients.
Similarly, 73 per cent of patients in Italy and 56 per cent in Spain are being treated with acetylcholinesterase anti-dementia drugs, such as Aricept (donepezil).
This works by stopping the breakdown of acetylcholine, a chemical in the brain that works as a messenger between nerve cells, which temporarily stabilises the symptoms of Alzheimerâs. âThe earlier a person is diagnosed, they more they are able to make decisions while they still have the capacity, particularly about their care,â says Professor Clive Ballard, director of the Alzheimerâs Society.
When Shirley Ives first noticed her husband, a former power station worker, was distracted and withdrawn, their GP dismissed the symptoms as stress and depression and prescribed antidepressants.
âThe doctor had originally been quite pleasant,â says Shirley who lives in Ironbridge, Shropshire. âBut when I went back with Mick a few times over the coming months, I was made to feel that I was making a fuss.
âI asked about Alzheimerâs because Iâd read about it and because there was some family history â" Mickâs mother died from the condition at the age of 48. Mick was 60. It was only at my insistence that we got a referral.â

Mick was referred to a geriatrician, who said he didnât feel there was evidence of any problem other than stress. They were back to square one.
But it was clear to Shirley that her husband was getting worse. Previously a sociable man, he now hated talking to people and was confused by the smallest tasks.
Finally, in December 2007, after Mick saw another GP, they secured a referral to a different consultant. This time they received a concrete diagnosis, based on his behaviour and memory tests: Mick had Alzheimerâs.
âI was overwhelmed by the most horrible feeling of dread,â says Shirley. âIt was official. My husband was losing his mind, and there was no way of stopping this. I felt sick. But I also felt angry.
âWhy had it taken so long? Why had nobody listened to me?â
However, while Mick had at least been diagnosed, incredibly he was offered no treatment at all. The only drug available o n the NHS is Aricept.
Unfortunately, it wasnât until last year that sufferers with mild to moderate Alzheimerâs could be prescribed the medication.
'This disease is soul-destroying. But at least with an early diagnosis you can have some quality of life for longer'
Out of desperation, Shirley contacted her sister in Turkey, who was able to buy the drug from a pharmacy for £140 a month, using the coupleâs savings. The difference was enormous.
âMick was sleeping better, he was happy to go out and was more animated,â says Shirley. âSure, he was still forgetful, but it was so much easier to have some kind of life.â
Today, thankfully, he can get Aricept on the NHS. So why is Mick and Shirleyâs story a typical experience of those with Alzheimerâs in the UK â" and why are we the sick man of Europe when it comes to this devastating condition?
The 2005 Facing Dementia survey of 600 GPs, primary care physicians and specialists revealed some yawning failings in the approach of clinicians here.
Most physicians in France (84 per cent), Germany (83 per cent), Italy (86 per cent), Poland (96 per cent) and Spain (86 per cent) accepted there is a critical window of opportunity for insti tuting treatment of Alzheimerâs, and most of these said that treatment should begin immediately.
In the UK, however, only about half of physicians felt there was a critical window for initiating treatment. A minority considered that immediate therapy was important, and a majority believed that initiating treatment in two months or more was acceptable.
âThe reasons for this are varied, but I think a lot of the problem relates to the fact that some GPs have a nihilistic attitude to dementia,â says Professor Ballard. âThey think: âWell, whatâs the point of diagnosis and treatment when there is very little that can be done?â
âMaybe this also produces a knock-on effect, where people in the UK are scared to come forward because they know nothing can be done anyway.â
A further issue is the fact that only specialists are allowed to make an Alzheimerâs diagnosis. This creates a delay between the first signs of A lzheimerâs disease and possible treatment.
A major improvement could be gained by training GPs to diagnose Alzheimerâs at an early stage, which is when drugs are going to have the best effect.

Quality of life: Drugs can work better on Alzheimer's sufferers if they get an early diagnosis (posed by models)
Only one in five of the 500,000 patients with Alzheimerâs in the UK, a third of whom have advanced disease, are currently receiving drug treatment because of a shortage of clinics to diagnose them.
As well as being excluded from diagnosis, GPs in the UK â" unlike in France, Portugal and Belgium â" cannot prescribe Aricept because this has to be done by specialists in dementia care.
And even though the Governmentâs health watchdog, the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE), recently changed its remit so Aricept can now be prescribed to those with mild as well as moderate dementia, this is taking time to filter through.
âOnly 10 per cent of people with Alzheimerâs are getting access to Aricept,â says Professor Ballard, âeither because they arenât being diagnosed or because their trusts donât provide it.â
What frustrates many experts even more is that science is continuing to show th e capabilities of the drug in dealing with the disease. Aricept is not generally prescribed once Alzheimerâs reaches its later stages, but a recent study of 295 Alzheimerâs patients by the Medical Research Council found the drug works even when the condition is advanced.
The study found that over 12 months, patients who stayed on Aricept had a slower decline in their mental ability than those who stopped using the drug.
âPatients were better able to remember, understand, communicate and perform daily tasks than those who stopped taking the drugs,â said Professor Robert Howard, of the Institute of Psychiatry, Kingâs College, London, who led the study.
Dr Wilkinson blames the British medical professionâs âinnate conservatismâ for the fact so few Britons can access drugs like Aricept.
âI and others have been saying for three or four years that thereâs now no question patients should have combination drug thera py â" and this treatment should start as soon as Alzheimerâs is diagnosed. But it will be at least another five years before NICE approves it.â
Another knock-on effect of the UKâs inability to pick up early cases of the disease is that it limits the chance to find other effective treatments. Karl Herholz, professor of clinical neuroscience at Manchester University, says a lack of patients being picked up at early stages hampers the very research that could help them. âThe advantage of early diagnosis is that patients can participate in clinical trials, which may give them a chance to improve, and hopefully help us prevent the disease developing so rapidly.â
As our population continues to age, it remains terrifying to think it is our own doctors who are restricting the flow of Alzheimerâs diagnosis and treatment.
Adds Shirley Ives: âThis disease is soul-destroying. But at least with an early diagnosis you can have some qualit y of life for longer. What right has any doctor in this country to take that away?â
Alzheimers.org.uk
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- IY, Scotland , 17/4/2012 1:46 ===WROTE==== "It took nearly 10 years for her GP and finally a specialist to confirm my mother in law had Alzheimer.. Well that way the NHS did not have to contribute towards her care. With Alzheimer she had an illness which requires them to pay without that label she is just a doddery old lady who needs a bit of help which she has to pay for."================ Exactly! the NHS (and many doctors) do not care about a patient getting Alzheimer's but they DO care about funding. A delayed diagnosis is a diagnosis that has saved the NHS money - so don't expect any change in speed of diagnosis or attempts to improve diagnosis, the accountants would never stand for it.
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"Over the past few years, Shirley had watched her husband change from a bright, animated and capable man to someone who seemed confused about where the local shops were." This could be caused by hypothyroidism, I take it Mick has undergone a thorough thyroid check. Hypertension can cause these symptoms too. So can some prescription medications like an Aunt of mine who is on Venlafaxine. Some days she does not know who or where she is because of this medication. I have been telling her son to wean her off it but he fails to take any notice so instead she suffers.
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This is just scandalous as far as I am concerned. I think the age diagnosis is just an expedient get out clause for doctors to shunt you out of the surgery as quickly as possible- hence 20% of doctors diagnose age for first symptoms. Age generally equates to "nothing can be done" or inevitable decline. Scandalous that we pay UK doctors more than their German equivalents, yet end up with a worse service. German doctors diagnose almost two years ahead of their British counterparts and they come over here to earn extra cash to fill in the out of hours service our doctors can't be bothered to work! Imagine what our GP's reactions are like for illnesses with less alarming symptoms and less potential for serious consequences? Maybe it's time to think the unthinkable- is the NHS the best way to provide healthcare?
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Of course there are priorities. Different people have different priorities. Take someone getting old and worked all their life paying taxes. They would like a little consideration for their ills. Now you take someone that is after glory and has the means to spend all the taxes people pay. They have choices. They can either look after those that paid taxes or those who don't even know where our country is. If he looks after those that paid taxes only people in this country would know BUT if you go on the the world stage and give £11billion away to despots and rich countries supposedly for the poor but never reaching them the other glory hunters would slap the giver on the back and say well done............for taking from them horrible greedy Brits and giving to us. Then behind his back say "pompous glory hunting bas...... giving money to countries richer than the one he is bankrupting, his own.
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My husband died in 2010 with Alzheimers, he was just 64 years old. He suffered terribly towards the end. But why I am writing this is to say what wonderful treatment he was given here in Shropshire. Our family GP, and all the Doctors and nurses in Shelton Hospital , the Rowans ward which specialises in Alzeimers cases, was second to none. I hear so much bad critisism of the NHS , but all I can give them is praise. If you think a relative has Alzeimers, do not rest until you get the care you need. Help is out there.
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Many people are unaware they, or a member of their family, may be eligible for Continuing Healthcare. If this is the case the local PCT must pay for their care at home or in a residential home. The government, including the last one, do not want to find the money to pay for this although medical care is free at the point of need. This is why doctors are reluctant to diagnose alzheimer's and dementia;
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Quite the opposite, my grandfather was instantly diagnosed with Alzeimers but thankfully there is a head expert in the family and we knew it wasnt the case. The NHS was extremily quick to label my granddad and encourage us that he would be better in a home. Three years later we now know the symptoms were a delayed reaction to a head trauma. The problem in both cases is not taking the time to LISTEN to the patient, and (occasionally more importantly) the FAMILY. We know our relatives and we know what is in and out of character
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My friend's mother has Alzheimer and he shared with me that despites the hard times it's been also an opportunity for him to learn and be a better person, trying to live deep in her world and not the opposite. The love between them two is too strong that sometimes even if she confuses and call him not son, but "husband" or "father" he can still feel her love for him. One night she went to his bed and covered him with a blanket. The way she treats him is different if you compare with other sons that even don't visit her anymore so often. I believe the sickness may damage the brain but doesn't damage the soul or the love. Love is love doesn't matter the function we occupy in someone's life.
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Similar things have happened to me and a friend with different illnesses. It seems GP's dont always know what is going on and for some reason are reluctant to refer people to specialists to help. It has taken me 18 months to be refered to a Rheumatologist which it is quite clear to me i desperately need but have had to go back to my GP several times over 18 months and eventually insist on a second opinion. I would recommend anyone to do that if they arent happy with what their GP says. It makes me wonder whether GP's do much additional training after they start practice as some of them dont seem to be refreshed with current knowledge.
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Alzheimerâs is one of a number of neurological afflictions classed as DOC's (Diseases of Civilisation) MS, Breast Cancer, Lupus, Erythematosus, Rheumatoid arthritis, Melanoma and Autismâ¦. All these diseases today have reached epidemic proportions and science cannot explain how they are occurringâ¦. Something very wrong is going on, something that is killing good people and causing untold suffering to families and communities around the world. A rapid rise in cases in all these diseases has been noticed particularly in the last 30 yearsâ¦. An American professor has collated all the data and traced the rise, which coincides with the introduction of a food additive to the world diet in 1982 which contains 10% methanolâ¦. This methanol in the body metabolises to Formaldehyde. In his book âwhile Science Sleepsâ The Professor presents his hypotheses â" âFormaldehyde is the most likely etiological agent responsible for all the DOCâsâ â" a m ust read !!--------- Thank you so very much for this!!
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