Akari Maeda’s research while affiliated with The University of Tokyo and other places

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Publications (1)


Dementia education and training for the general public: A scoping review
  • Article

November 2021

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164 Reads

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30 Citations

Gerontology & Geriatrics Education

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Akari Maeda

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The lack of public awareness and understanding of dementia affects the experiences of people living with dementia and their families. Dementia education and training for the general public have been gradually disseminated. We conducted a systematic scoping review guided by PRISMA-ScR to map existing evidence and identify dementia education and training available to the general public. From the four electronic databases, 41 articles were identified. Dementia education has three main purposes: dementia friendliness (n = 25), early diagnosis/help-seeking (n = 10), and prevention (n = 6). Education aimed at dementia friendliness was delivered in the community (n = 6), schools/universities (n =14), workplaces (n = 2), and online (n = 3). Interventions aimed at early diagnosis and prevention were often conducted in communities with middle-aged and older people or specific ethnic groups. Eleven dementia-friendliness studies reported on the interaction with people living with dementia to reduce stigma. Dementia knowledge, attitudes, and preventive behaviors were assessed as outcomes. Though randomized controlled trials were conducted in early diagnosis and prevention studies via e-learning, they were not performed in dementia-friendliness studies. Therefore, there is a need to further accumulate evidence of dementia education for each of these purposes.

Citations (1)


... Education may facilitate a young person's understanding of dementia and empower them to engage with a family member/friend with dementia more effectively as was found by the Kids4dementia learning programme in Australia [11,12]. There is, however, a paucity of age-appropriate resources to support children's understanding of dementia [13]. There is evidence to suggest that young people struggle to communicate with grandparents living with dementia due to a lack of skill and knowledge, and that their parents have to balance multiple roles to try and address those gaps: young adults, interviewed about their interactions with grandparents or great-grandparents living with dementia highlighted that they experienced a lack of knowledge about dementia and maintaining those relationships [14]. ...

Reference:

Acceptability study of a co-designed educational game about dementia for children: The Kids Dementia Game
Dementia education and training for the general public: A scoping review
  • Citing Article
  • November 2021

Gerontology & Geriatrics Education