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European Dementia Monitor 2017 – Comparing and benchmarking national dementia strategies and policies

Authors :
Merkuri, Norketa
Croy, Antonia
Henry, Sabine
Hajrić, Amela
Ilieva, Irina Vasileva
Mehrabian- Spassova, Shima
Mimica, Ninoslav
Diakou, Noni
Seleari, Maria
Holmerová, Iva
Vølund, Brigitte
Pohjanvuori, Anita
Okkonen, Eila
Desama, Marie-Odile
Jansen, Ssbine
Tsolaki, Magda
Egervari, Agnes
Crean, Mags
Begley, Emer
Possenti, Mario
Bartorelli, Luisa
Ashkenazi, Avishag
Blamey, Mark
Konevnina, Aleksandra
Kuznecovs, Vladimirs
Rastenyte, Daiva
Macijauskiene, Jurate
Adomaitiene, Virginija
Knasiene, Jurgita
Mancini, Denis
Diederich, Lydie
Scerri, Charles
Palermiti, Federico
Meerveld, Julie
Hov Eggan, Siri
Wojciechowska, Mirka
Zincke dos Reis, Maria do Rosario
Tudose, Catalina
Moglan, Maria
Grniaková, Darina
Zlobec, Stefanija
Rodrigo, Jesus
Westerlund, Kristina
Wolfensberger, Marianne
Kocaman, Fusun
Dalrymple, Amy
Pearson, Jim
Tree, Philippa
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Overall ranking Table 12 shows the rank each country was able to achieve in each of the ten categories. As can be seen from table 12, different countries excelled in different categories. 13 different countries (Belgium, Czech Republic, Finland, France, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Slovakia, Spain and the UK- both England and Scotland) came first in at least one of the 10 categories. Three countries however excelled and could score first place in three different categories: • Finland came first in care availability, care affordability and in the number of international conventions ratified. • Ireland came first in the treatment, dementia as a priority and employment right categories. • The United Kingdom (England) came first in the categories treatment, dementia friendliness and legal rights. In order to calculate the overall ranking of countries, we based the global score on a combined score of the ten different categories with each contributing m% to the overall score. This score is presented as a percentage of the over-all maximum score which countries could have achieved and leads to the following ranking as shown in figure 13. According to the overall ranking, Finland, the United Kingdom (England) and the Netherlands were the countries which had the most dementia-friendly policies in place, with Albania, Latvia and Bosnia and Herzegovina being the countries which need to make the most progress and reforms to improve the lives of people with dementia in their countries. When looking at the map of Europe (see map 5 below), we can see that there are significant differences across Europe with countries in Northern and Central Europe generally scoring much better than countries in Southern Europe.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.57a035e5b1ae..e5ff6f1e2874007c8ad4d24d2dd694cd