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Why I am extremely grateful to key individuals for thoughts on my new book
I have spent ages thinking about the contents of my new book on living well with dementia. I submit the manuscript at the end of October 2014, so I have a bit of time yet.
I think the easiest part is the published literature base on which to draw the narrative from. This gives an useful indication about the direction of travel of approaches to dementia.
It’s ‘awkward’ singling people out, but on this occasion, if I may, I would like to.
Jo Moriarty (@aspirantdiva) is at the Social Care Workforce Research Unit at King’s College London.
“Jo joined the Unit in 2002 following the transfer of the National Institute for Social Work Research Unit to King’s College London. Research interests include social work education and dementia care training for social care professionals. … Jo is the Editor of the Innovative Practice Section Dementia: the International Journal of Social Research and Practice.”
Kate Swaffer (@KateSwaffer) is a close friend of mine, and we share between us many concerns in common. I don’t think Kate needs any introduction. Kate has educated me on various initiatives working globally, especially in Australia; but the odd combination of warmth and grittiness of the Dementia Alliance International, a group of people living with different causes of dementia, continues to inspire me.
Chris Roberts (@mason4233) is also a very good friend of mine. Although I’ve never met Chris, we’re hoping to do a @DementiaFriends session at BPP Law School on 1 December 2014.
Norman McNamara (@norrms) doesn’t know he has influenced my book, but the chapter synthesising the competing needs of persons with dementia, their friends and family and others in the use of GPS trackers as smart technology involves a balanced proportionate response on the basis of human rights, as well as an understanding of the cognitive neurology of why people with dementia might want to walk out of their local environment.
Tony Jameson Allen (@TJA_evonet) is somebody who shares EXACTLY my sense of humour. I once had a nice pizza with Tony off Oxford Street, and I explained there my wish to give a coherent explanation of the basis of ‘sporting memories’ based on current neuroscience. I intend to weave in an explanation of musical playlists for reminiscence too here.
I would not of course be so grandiose as to call my friends here a ‘steering group’, but a number of principles have come to light.
I now do not feel it would be useful to anchor the book in a single policy document, however currently influential, as it is indeed true policy documents come and go. They are often highly biased to the interests of their authors or their ‘paymasters’.
I cannot promote global policy if emanating from a single charity. This really does run the risk of promoting charities at the expense of promoting awareness of issues to do with living well with dementia, although often the two may collide.
There are huge problems with firmly entrenching the book in England only. The narrative is hugely relevant to Scotland, Northern Ireland, and Wales, as well as Australia and Argentina, where indeed the audience may even in fact be more sympathetic.
I do not feel that my book on dementia should be intended as a ‘bible’ of policy written for policy wonks. The people I have always been most interested in influencing are people with dementia, people in the care and support network, students (who include future leaders of tomorrow both within and external to the workforce), and practitioners.
I have, paradoxically, no interest in influencing academics, in that I really share the pain of academics needing to advance their own research grants and their own agendas. One of the best things about not being paid to do my research is that I can look unemotionally at the issues.
The other ‘issue’ is that I do not wish to articulate a vision too far forward in the future. Jo pointed me in the direction of a THES fantastic article on writing a textbook. Otherwise, the book ends up being too speculative and quite unhelpful for people currently at the coalface.
I have had it up to my neck in people ‘seeking opportunities’ in dementia. I of course do not wish to be hypocritical.
At quite large cost to myself, in the sense I am paying for my own flight, accommodation and conference pass, I have agreed to do a book signing session for ‘Living well with dementia’ at the @AlzAssociation conference in Copenhagen later this month. The details are here.
I will also likewise on my own present my non-clinical research on policy at the @AlzheimerEurope conference in Glasgow later this year. The details are here.
But I wish people ‘seeking opportunities’ well. I understand their pressures as small enterprises. But I have an agenda of my own – to share with the outside world the various ins- and outs- of how a person living well with dementia can interact positively with his or her own environment. This is not the same as promoting ‘person-centred care’, currently in vogue. And this is certainly not the same as promoting ‘purse-centred care’ as my friend Kate calls it (#KoalaHugs).
Political parties come and go. The greatest challenge I feel for persons living with dementia, their friends and families comes from the politicians mucking things up for them.
I think fixating on a cure serves to promote a narrow set of interests.
Bear in mind I’ve been in this field on-and-off for the last seventeen years.
Don’t promote your agendas in my name, please.
I intend to promote the need of high quality wellbeing research at the SDCRN 4th Annual Conference on dementia in Glasgow today
This is the programme for today which I’m looking to enormously today.
I will be promoting heavily the cause of living well with dementia, to swing the pendulum away from pumping all the money into clinical trials into drug trials for medications which thus far have had nasty side effects.
In keeping with this, I have been given kind permission to give out my G8 Dementia Summit questionnaire to look at delegates’ perception of what this conference was actually about.
We need also not to lose sight of the current persons with dementia, to ensure that they have good outcomes in the wellbeing.
This can be achieved through proper design of care environments, access to innovations including assistive technology, meaningful communities and networks for people with dementia to be part of and to lead in, and proper access to advocacy support services and information which empower choice and control.
There’s a lot to do here – and we need to have high quality research into all of this arm of research too.
Coming back home to Scotland is like travelling back in time for me.
I was born in Glasgow on June 18th 1974, and my lasting memory of leaving Glasgow for London 37 years ago was how relatively unfriendly Londoners were in comparison.
Of course the train journey through the beautiful England-Scottish border countryside brought it back to me. There’s a lot to be said for getting out of London. It’s an honour to be here back in Scotland.
I had absolutely no idea I would have such a warm welcome here in Scotland. Still feeling incredibly emotional I’m here at all in Glasgow.
— shibley (@legalaware) March 24, 2014
@legalaware @tommyNtour @theRSAorg @PeterDLROW Enjoy the #SDCRN conference tomorrow all. I will be watching for tweets 
— SJ (@YeWeeStoater) March 23, 2014
@legalaware @YeWeeStoater @RealTaniceJudge Peters & Lee welcome home you’ve been gone 2 long come in& close the door http://t.co/LHQvVMprcc
— youcanmakedifference (@tommyNtour) March 23, 2014
Burst into tears on arriving home in #Glasgow just now @tommyNtour @YeWeeStoater @realtanicejudge pic.twitter.com/UG64xKc4GK
— shibley (@legalaware) March 23, 2014
@legalaware Lucky you. You will get a warm Scots welcome I’m sure!
— alison eaton (@doctorsnoddy) March 23, 2014
Penultimate stop in Carlisle. In my 40th year returning to #scotland at long last. pic.twitter.com/og6OAGSc66
— shibley (@legalaware) March 23, 2014
@legalaware @BarbaraACannon @Johnrashton47 Glad there are blues skies to greet you Shibley! Have a great conference!
— Dr ShirleyLockeridge (@DrShirleyLock) March 23, 2014
@legalaware welcome up north! Anything exciting?
— #hellomynameis Paul (@pauljebb1) March 23, 2014
At Penrith – nearly back home in Scotland @YeWeeStoater @tommyNtour pic.twitter.com/ZLpchE3YxE
— shibley (@legalaware) March 23, 2014
@DrShirleyLock @BarbaraACannon @Johnrashton47 now waving (not drowning) at Lancaster pic.twitter.com/ubphOxFF4W
— shibley (@legalaware) March 23, 2014
Welcome to Preston! pic.twitter.com/LQ1i67Dgx4
— shibley (@legalaware) March 23, 2014
Warrington still England surely? 3 hrs til Glasgow @BendyGirl pic.twitter.com/XFhyOKw5Ku
— shibley (@legalaware) March 23, 2014
Surprise surprise this Virgin train left on time from Euston at 1228 pm @SocialistHealth
— shibley (@legalaware) March 23, 2014
My book ‘Living well with dementia’ is here.
Contents
Dedication • Acknowledgements • Foreword by Professor John Hodges • Foreword by Sally Ann Marciano • Foreword by Professor Facundo Manes • Introduction • What is ‘living well with dementia’? • Measuring living well with dementia • Socio-economic arguments for promoting living well with dementia • A public health perspective on living well in dementia, and the debate over screening • The relevance of the person for living well with dementia • Leisure activities and living well with dementia • Maintaining wellbeing in end-of-life care for living well with dementia • Living well with specific types of dementia: a cognitive neurology perspective • General activities which encourage wellbeing • Decision-making, capacity and advocacy in living well with dementia • Communication and living well with dementia • Home and ward design to promote living well with dementia • Assistive technology and living well with dementia • Ambient-assisted living well with dementia • The importance of built environments for living well with dementia • Dementia-friendly communities and living well with dementia • Conclusion
Reviews
Amazing … A truly unique and multi-faceted contribution. The whole book is infused with passion and the desire to make a difference to those living with dementia…A fantastic resource and user guide covering topics such as communication and living well with dementia, home and ward design, assisted technology, and built environments. Shibley should be congratulated for this unique synthesis of ideas and practice.’
Professor John R Hodges, in his Foreword
‘Outstanding…I am so excited about Shibley’s book. It is written in a language that is easy to read, and the book will appeal to a wide readership. He has tackled many of the big topics ‘head on’, and put the person living with dementia and their families at the centre of his writing. You can tell this book is written by someone who ‘understands’ dementia; someone who has seen its joy, but also felt the pain…Everyone should be allowed to live well with dementia for however long that may be, and, with this book, we can go some way to making this a reality for all.’ –Sally-Ann Marciano, in her Foreword
My name is Shibley, and I’m addicted to buying my own book ‘Living well with dementia’
I’ve sat in more recovery sessions than you’ve had hot dinners….
.. possibly.
So I get a surge of dopamine whenever I receive yet more copies of my book from Amazon.
Worth every penny.
I am Shibley. and I’m addicted to buying my own book.
But I also have a weird habit of getting people I know to sign my copy of my book.
I get withdrawal symptoms from not having enough copies.
I also get tolerance – I need to have an increasing number of copies to get the same “kick” from my book.
Thanks enormously to the following ‘well wishers’, though, who have signed my book.
A huge thanks to Gill (@WhoseShoes) for her unflappable support of me and my book.
Here’s Gill’s blogpost.
And here we are!
I felt very happy to give a copy of my book to Prof Sube Banerjee, newly appointed Chair of Dementia at Brighton and Sussex Medical School. Sube has in fact been the lead for England for dementia – his work is quoted in my book, and I think he’s made an enormous contribution to the living well with dementia literature.
And what does the future hold for ‘living well with dementia’?
Other ‘signatories’ include:
I’ve known Lisa for yonks on Twitter. Lisa is one of the few people who’ve supported me through the bad times too.
But now you can ‘Look Inside’ to get a flavour of my book – as there is now a Kindle edition (thanks to Alice in my book publishers @RadcliffeHealth)
Here it is on Amazon.
Here is a sample chapter from my book ‘What is living well?’
‘Living well’ is not some bogus mantra for the hell of it. It is an ideological standpoint which serves to promote the dignity of our fellow citizens who happen to also have a clinical diagnosis of dementia.
And here are the “beautiful people” who came to my book launch at the Arlington Centre, Camden, one afternoon in February. I can’t believe that this wasn’t even a month ago now!
One of the happiest days, as well, was giving Joseph a copy of my book as a gift.
Joseph was in fact my carer when I could hardly walk or talk, when I was in physical recovery from meningitis on ITU (where I was unconscious in 2007).
And those were the days…
And THIS is the famous poppy.
This picture was taken by Twitter pal, @charbhardy, first amongst equals in the #dementiachallengers.
After I said I was buying my own copies, @KateSwaffer asked:
But Kate has read a copy of my book from cover to cover:
And as @Norrms says – how can ‘living well with dementia’ fail?
My book launch of “Living well with dementia” – special guest messages from Peter, Kate and Norman
I held a private book launch for guests of mine, who are interested in dementia at the grassroots level.
The talk was dedicated to Charmaine Hardy (@CharBHardy), whose husband has a very rare type of dementia known as primary progressive non-fluent aphasia. The publishers picked her poppy to be the cover of my book.
This for me, as was later suggested, as the book itself is dedicated to the memory of my late father (who did not have dementia but had a severe back pain which severely limited his quality of life in his final years.)
A special mention to Thomas Whitelaw (@tommyNTour) – a true gentleman and a Scot (!)
It was wonderful to meet Darren (@MrDarrenGormley) for the first time. Darren’s clearly someone who sees the person; with superb empathy skills, Darren and colleagues will need to be the change catalysts to break down obstructive silos.
It was a massive honour Beth Britton (@BethyB1886) could make it. Beth, like many in the room, of course knows this subject inside-and-out, and I am personally grateful to Beth for campaigning for the use and validation of more effective assessment of wellbeing approaches.
Here are some happy photos of my book launch.
I really couldn’t have been happier.
I am strongly against promoting my thesis about wellbeing with involvement of people as marketing ‘window dressing’
On the other hand, it gives me enormous pride to present to you the video presentations recorded by Norman McNamara, Kate Swaffer and Dr Peter Gordon which I played to my guests at the Arlington Centre in Camden on Saturday.
Friends of mine, who happen to be currently living with dementia, are also reading the book.
I mention during my presentations the ‘Purple Angels’, including Lynette Richards, Julie Line, Kim Pennock, Jane Moore, and of course Norman McNamara.
And no I am not a retainer from Ostrich Care! x
I feel it would have been it would have been “defeating the object”, if the book could not be read by people living lives with dementia.
Dr Peter Gordon is the only one of the three who does not have a dementia. He is a Consultant Psychiatrist working in this field. It was incredibly nice of him to put together his film for me, shown below.
Kate Swaffer (@KateSwaffer)
Norman McNamara (@norrms)
Dr Peter Gordon (@peterDLROW)
Living Well with Dementia from omphalos on Vimeo
Contents
Dedication • Acknowledgements • Foreword by Professor John Hodges • Foreword by Sally Ann Marciano • Foreword by Professor Facundo Manes • Introduction • What is ‘living well with dementia’? • Measuring living well with dementia • Socio-economic arguments for promoting living well with dementia • A public health perspective on living well in dementia, and the debate over screening • The relevance of the person for living well with dementia • Leisure activities and living well with dementia • Maintaining wellbeing in end-of-life care for living well with dementia • Living well with specific types of dementia: a cognitive neurology perspective • General activities which encourage wellbeing • Decision-making, capacity and advocacy in living well with dementia • Communication and living well with dementia • Home and ward design to promote living well with dementia • Assistive technology and living well with dementia • Ambient-assisted living well with dementia • The importance of built environments for living well with dementia • Dementia-friendly communities and living well with dementia • Conclusion
Sample chapter
The slides of the presentations
Reviews
Amazing … A truly unique and multi-faceted contribution. The whole book is infused with passion and the desire to make a difference to those living with dementia…A fantastic resource and user guide covering topics such as communication and living well with dementia, home and ward design, assisted technology, and built environments. Shibley should be congratulated for this unique synthesis of ideas and practice.’
Professor John R Hodges, in his Foreword
‘Outstanding…I am so excited about Shibley’s book. It is written in a language that is easy to read, and the book will appeal to a wide readership. He has tackled many of the big topics ‘head on’, and put the person living with dementia and their families at the centre of his writing. You can tell this book is written by someone who ‘understands’ dementia; someone who has seen its joy, but also felt the pain…Everyone should be allowed to live well with dementia for however long that may be, and, with this book, we can go some way to making this a reality for all.’ –Sally-Ann Marciano, in her Foreword
Extracts from my talks
This talk was given by me (Dr Shibley Rahman) on Saturday 15th February 2014 to a group of personally invited guests. Guests included persons with dementia, carers (past and present), campaigners, academics in social care, innovation and service provision, dementia club coordinators, and dementia nursing specialists.
1. This is the first segment of the first talk.
Particular things to look out for include:
James Murray-White (@sky_larking) 6 mins
Beth Britton (@BethyB1886) 7 mins
and their @AlzheimersBRACE work
Norman McNamara’s message at 15 mins
@mason4233 (Chris Roberts)’s tweet at 19 mins
2. I start off by thanking Prof John Hodges for his kind Foreword (0) and a clear description from Sally Marciano (@nursemaiden) why she, kindly, felt the book might be helpful. I am honoured at Sally’s personal contribution to my book.
I introduce the topic of personhood, using Tom Kitwood’s seminal work as a brief introduction only, but clearly the topic is huge. I then touch upon the practical difficulties academics and practitioners have had for their definitions of ‘living well’, and the implications therefore for its measurement.
There’s a clearly a debate to be had about why diagnosis might have been so problematic, using @edanaming’s research (Edana Minghella) as a springboard. At around 9’55”, I then use the problems in giving a potential diagnosis of dementia to a person is LGB or T as an illustration.
Gill Phillips (11′ 30″) kindly gives a brief description of the background and philosophy behind ‘Whose Shoes’, a modern application of personalisation which allows service users, including persons and patients with dementia, a say on what they wish to achieve from their person-centred care.
At around 16’30” Lucy Jane Masters (@lucyjmasters), a specialist nurse in dementia, explains the remarkably successful ‘Dementia is my business’ initiative, innovative badges which have acted as an ‘ice breaker’ for bringing about a cultural change in dementia care even amongst health professionals.
This next segment concludes with a brief discussion of the ethical issues of diagnosis, through Dr Peter Gordon’s contribution (@PeterDLROW). I use Peter’s letter to the BMJ as an introduction to the seminal four ethical principles of Beauchamp and Childress (1979), i.e. autonomy, beneficence, non-maleficence and justice. I also include Peter’s video which I will also separately upload elsewhere.
3. I then give an overview of some essential topics germane to this academic debate.
The contributions by the medics have not been a complete farce.
There’s been a lot of scrutiny about the ethical framework regarding dementia from people who are medically qualified, such as Dr Peter Gordon (@peterDLROW), Consultant in dementia. This was been necessary to neutralise some of the potent fraudulent memes in the media from elsewhere.
There’s been wonderful work too by @nchadborn on including service users’ views and opinions into the design of health services, from an applied perspective, as part of Nottingham University.
And the cognitive neurologists have been important in delineating the diverse cognitive presentations of dementia. Prof Facundo Manes’ group in Buenos Aires (@manesf) have been identifying how social cognition in the behavioural variant of frontotemporal dementia can be heavily dependent on context. As an example of this, I explain the Ebbinghaus Illusion and Titchener circles. Prof Manes is a colleague of ours in cognitive neurology, and wrote one of the Forewords to my book.
4. Particular things to look out for now include:
12″ Personal dedication to Charmaine Hardy [@CharBHardy] from England for the poppy on the front cover of my book, and being a key member of the #dementiachallengers
15″ The “Purple Angels” in raising dementia awareness and dementia friendly communities worldwide narrative. Jane Moore and Norman McNamara jointly designed this motif.
21″ beginning of the message by Kate Swaffer (@KateSwaffer), based in Adelaide, Australia, to my guests. (this is the beginning of the pre-recorded message; the second half of the message is in a different video.)
5. This last segment of my recordings contains the second part of Kate Swaffer’s message to my guests, and my film ‘Love is a wonderful thing’ for my community of delegates for the book launch.
The book
The book’s Amazon page, with some testimonials, is here.
The publishers’ page (Radcliffe Publishers) is here.
Independent blogposts by Gill Phillips (one of my guests) about my book launch at the Arlington Centre
These blogposts capture for me what was an extremely happy occasion for me.
‘Living well with dementia’ – the launch of Dr Shibley Rahman’s ground-breaking book
In the shoes of … | Dr Shibley Rahman. An intriguing and unique academic
Twitter’s telling me some of you have received my book at last!
Thanks to Rhona Light (“@Hippiepig“) for giving me feedback on my book. She was the very first to receive it.
Rhona’s copy of her book arrived yesterday.
@legalaware Sorry I can’t tweet a pic as it says over memory limit but it is super. Poppy cover with CPD cert logo and forewords attrib.
— Rhona Light (@Hippiepig) January 28, 2014
@legalaware Good quality paper and very clear print. You will be pleased.
— Rhona Light (@Hippiepig) January 28, 2014
@legalaware Proper medical textbook quality x
— Rhona Light (@Hippiepig) January 28, 2014
@legalaware it is very well structured. I think that it is very well sub-headed. It is highly accessible for a non-medical person like me.
— Rhona Light (@Hippiepig) January 28, 2014
@legalaware It is very readable – your style is great and it is wonderful to read a book that is so well researched and balanced. This will
— Rhona Light (@Hippiepig) January 28, 2014
@legalaware be the standard textbook for courses. Just stunning.
— Rhona Light (@Hippiepig) January 28, 2014
Thanks also to @KateSwaffer for her supportive comments about my book.
@Hippiepig @legalaware I agree even though I’m only half way through this wonderful book
— Kate Swaffer (@KateSwaffer) January 28, 2014
And Rose got it too (@RoseHarwood1):
@legalaware @dementia_2014 @nursemaiden @WhoseShoes @charbhardy It’s arrived! Can’t wait to get stuck in!
x pic.twitter.com/RccxttOCQF
— Rose Harwood (@RoseHarwood1) January 29, 2014
If you buy the book off Amazon, please remember not to buy it directly from them or you could be waiting 9-11 days. Here’s the link to the book on Amazon. I bought it today from “The Book Depository” as my complimentary copies hadn’t arrived. But I know it’s selling well. Yesterday it reached #3 in the UK. And I was honoured to receive this tweet from Prof Simon Wessely, who is at the Maudsley/Institute of Psychiatry, and President-Elect of the Royal College of Psychiatrists.
@legalaware am impressed..looking forward to it hitting number 1 — Simon Wessely (@WesselyS) January 27, 2014
I’ll be presenting the book to 25 guests in private in Camden on Saturday 15th February 2014. This includes of course Charmaine Hardy whose poppy is on the front cover:
@piponthecommons @legalaware thanks it’s Shibley written it
— Charmaine Hardy (@charbhardy) January 29, 2014
@kgimson @ILoveLincs @legalaware thank you I’m so proud x
— Charmaine Hardy (@charbhardy) January 29, 2014
This is the book @legalaware has written with my photo on the front cover. I’m so proud pic.twitter.com/4koQ12nnq5
— Charmaine Hardy (@charbhardy) January 29, 2014
Thanks a lot to Pippa Kelly too (@piponthecommons)
@charbhardy @legalaware Congratulations to you both! Great achievement. Wonderful cause.
— Pippa Kelly (@piponthecommons) January 29, 2014
And I look forward to going out for dinner with them in the evening in Holborn.
My presentation for my book launch of ‘Living well with dementia’ for 15/2/14
This is a talk I will be giving in Camden at 3pm to guests of mine, to celebrate the launch of my book on living well with dementia.
Two 'Legal Recruit' books on online tests for law students, pub date 1 Nov 2011
It is important to note that, whilst ‘Legal Recruit’ is an important key initiative from the BPP Legal Awareness Society to encourage a business culture in law, ‘Legal Recruit’ is absolutely nothing to do with BPP media, nor indeed represents any official teaching or guidance from BPP.
Book 1 – Practical verbal reasoning questions for law students (111 pages)
This book has carefully designed verbal reasoning questions, of the ‘True’, ‘False’, or ‘Cannot Say’ variety. Two questions follow each of the passages together with full explanations, and reading passages cover a variety of subjects, including biology, business, economics, education, engineering, environment, geography, geology, health and safety, human relations, medicine, modern languages, physics, technology, and transport. Readers of this title will benefit from the general explanation as to how to do these tests, and from the worked examples, such that they feel much more comfortable when they come to do such tests for real for training contract or vacation placement applications. The book will also be also of interest for applicants to corporates who use these tests for recruitment purposes. This title has a publication date of 1 November 2011, and is only available to download for £7.50 from the Legal Recruit website.
Book 2 – Practical situational judgements questions for law students (77 pages)
This book has carefully-designed questions in six competences commonly assessed in situational judgement tests. Situational judgement tests are used by some law firms to ascertain the suitability of a law student for a training contract. These competences are problem solving, proactive attitude, commitment to excellence, communication and negotiation, teamwork, and attention-to-detail and leadership. The book will also be also of interest for applicants to corporates who use these tests for recruitment purposes. Getting focused on these competences will help law students to understand the relevance of these skills to recruitment and their general professional life. This title has a publication date of 1 November 2011, and is only available to download for £7.50 from the Legal Recruit website.