News
UK university wins award for collaborative dementia project
The project explored the daily experiences and challenges of those with dementia

An innovative project exploring the daily experiences and challenges of those with dementia has been recognised for its contribution to society.
The University of Wales Trinity Saint David’s (UWTSD) Assistive Technologies Innovation Centre (ATiC) won the Benefitting Society award in this year’s Green Gown Awards UK and Ireland earlier this month, for its Seeing dementia through their eyes (Living with Dementia) project.
The project involved research by the ATiC team over a period of just over a year to inform a series of 10 new films from Newton-based eHealth Digital Media.
The films, about the daily lives and challenges of people living with dementia, focus on delivering support, training, and education for dementia patients, their families, carers, and healthcare professionals.
The project used advanced UX and human behavioural research tools, such as eye-tracking and facial expression recognition technology, in the creation and evaluation of the films.
Established in 2004, the Green Gown Awards celebrate the exceptional sustainability initiatives being undertaken by universities and colleges. The 2022 winners were announced at a ceremony held at Loughborough University on 8 November.
The Benefitting Society award recognised ATiC for its innovative research collaboration with Swansea enterprise eHealth Digital Media Ltd.
ATiC is an integrated research centre which puts user-centred thinking and strategic innovation tools into practice through its cutting-edge user experience (UX) and usability evaluation research facility located in Swansea’s Innovation Quarter in SA1.
Digital communications company eHealth Digital Media produce and deliver behavioural change content such as high-quality content information films through its established PocketMedic platform.
‘See the world through their eyes’
The ATiC team worked closely with eHealth Digital Media’s creative director, Kimberley Littlemore, whose parents – the late Clive, who sadly passed away a week before the awards and Pauline Jenkins, in their 80s – both lived with dementia and were her inspiration for the research project.
Cameras were set up around Clive and Pauline’s home to keep track of their daily lives. Additionally, the couple used wearable eye-tracking glasses while performing household activities, so the team could ‘see the world through their eyes.’
This footage helped the team to detect and understand any patterns and triggers over time and to pick out key moments, which could be analysed and discussed further by clinicians and academics in the field.
Littlemore said: “Demonstrating and sharing the lived experience of dementia, with its ups as well as its downs, has proven to be an inspirational way of delivering information and building confidence in carers and family members.
“Looking through the UX evaluation, it is so encouraging and rewarding to read that people feel more confident about supporting people to live well with dementia as a result of watching these films.
“We are very proud of our collaboration with ATiC to see dementia through the eyes of my parents. The eye tracking technology allowed us to demonstrate and share through film in a very human way what researchers had been describing in their papers about changes in visual perception in people living with dementia.
“I have nothing but admiration for my parents, who allowed me to share their journey. Something good is coming out of an incredibly challenging situation for us all.”
The films now are available on eHealth Digital Media’s PocketMedic platform, which delivers high-quality health information films ‘prescribed’ by clinicians to support their patients in managing their health. The films are also available to view free of charge in Wales thanks to funding from Cwm Taf Morgannwg University Health Board.
Understanding people
The Seeing dementia through their eyes (Living with Dementia) project was supported through Accelerate, a pioneering collaboration between three of Wales’ universities, Cardiff University (Clinical Innovation Accelerator), Swansea University (Healthcare Technology Centre), UWTSD (ATiC), and Life Sciences Hub Wales.
Professor Ian Walsh, Provost of UWTSD Swansea and Cardiff Campuses, and director of ATiC commented: “I’m delighted UWTSD’s commitment to sustainable development through its research activity has again been recognised in these prestigious national awards. It reaffirms the importance of partnership and collaboration between the University and enterprises in accelerating innovation and developing more sustainable models of practice.”
Tim Stokes, ATiC Innovation Fellow and project lead, added: “It all sounds highly technical but at the heart of it all, it simply involves understanding people. Understanding how they interact with each other; understanding their needs; and helping to develop the best health and wellbeing products, services, and systems – placing people at the heart of the research.
“Initially this project began life as a simple experiment that sprang from the idea of Kimberley wanting ‘to see dementia through her parents’ eyes’ – and we were literally able to help her do that by using our mobile retinal tracking glasses.
“It has helped us to understand how people with dementia live and understand what types of challenges they face on a daily basis.”
News
Dementia driving hospital discharge delays, new data shows

Nearly a quarter of older patients facing delayed hospital discharge have dementia, costing the NHS £328m in 2024/25, a new report has revealed.
Around 24 per cent of people aged 65 and over who are fit to be discharged but kept in hospital for a week longer than necessary are believed to have the condition, nearly 29,000 people in one year.
Figures published by Alzheimer’s Society show the impact worsens the longer people stay in hospital.
The proportion rises to almost a third (31 per cent) for patients kept in at least 21 days longer than they should be.
Michelle Dyson CB, chief executive of Alzheimer’s Society, said: “Every year, the NHS faces extreme winter pressures and we see time and time again the struggle to cope with the numbers of people needing urgent care.
“It is clear from these figures that dementia is a key part of the puzzle.
“People living with dementia are being left stranded in hospital, which is neither good for them nor the NHS.
“Tackling dementia care and support would make a huge difference to the NHS’s ability to cope at this time of year.
“Early diagnosis and access to appropriate services can help to prevent hospital admissions in the first place, while better care and support would also mean those in hospital could leave when they are well enough.
“The Government has a once-in-a-decade opportunity to fix this, as it prepares its new blueprint for dementia health and social care, the Modern Service Framework. Dementia is the UK’s biggest killer and the greatest challenge facing health and social care services.
“The new plan must rise to the magnitude of the challenge, improving care to keep people healthier for longer and ultimately reduce the devastation caused by dementia.”
NHS England data, analysed by HSJ Information and Alzheimer’s Society, shows keeping people living with dementia in hospital unnecessarily accounts for 584,080 bed days.
Delayed discharge happens when someone is medically fit to leave but cannot return home. Causes often include poor planning and limited dementia-appropriate follow-on support in health and social care.
The figures also show wide local variation. Suffolk and North East Essex ICB reports that one in five people (19 per cent) aged over 65 kept in hospital for 21 days longer than necessary were believed to have dementia.
This more than doubles at North Central London ICB, where 44 per cent of over 65s kept in longer than 21 days were believed to have dementia.
Staying in hospital unnecessarily increases the risk of complications. For people with dementia, unfamiliar wards can worsen confusion.
Risks include infections, falls, worsening cognitive function (thinking, memory and reasoning), poor mental health, malnutrition and dehydration.
Professor Martin Green OBE, chief executive of Care England, said: “The system is not working for people with dementia, and I am very grateful for the important work Alzheimer’s Society is doing to bring this issue to light.
“Social care should be seen as a critical partner to the NHS, receiving the funding needed to deliver the best outcomes for people living with dementia.
“This is particularly important in the context of winter pressures. The capacity in social care needs to be utilised in order to ease pressure on the NHS and deliver for patients.”
Research
Study shows clear link between CTE and dementia risk

A new study says CTE should be recognised as a cause of dementia, with those in the most advanced stages facing a 4.5-fold higher lifetime risk.
Chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) is a degenerative brain condition seen in some athletes.
Linked to repeated head impacts, it can cause memory loss, mood changes, poor coordination and suicidal thoughts. Diagnosis is only possible after death.
People with the most advanced CTE were 4.5 times more likely to develop dementia during life than people without CTE, researchers found.
Many former NHL and NFL players have been posthumously diagnosed with CTE, including Junior Seau, Frank Gifford and Ken Stabler.
The study from researchers at the Boston University CTE Center provides what the centre describes as the clearest evidence yet linking CTE to dementia risk.
The centre says these findings indicate CTE should be known as a cause of dementia.
“This study provides evidence of a robust association between CTE and dementia as well as cognitive symptoms, supporting our suspicions of CTE being a possible cause of dementia,” said Dr Michael Alosco, an associate professor of neurology and co-director of clinical research at the BU CTE Center.
“Establishing that cognitive symptoms and dementia are outcomes of CTE moves us closer to being able to accurately detect and diagnose CTE during life, which is urgently needed.”
Researchers studied brain tissue from more than 600 donors, the majority men.
The donors, primarily contact sport athletes, had known exposure to repetitive head impacts, but none had Alzheimer’s disease, Lewy body disease or frontotemporal lobar degeneration.
They found that 366 male donors had CTE. After examining the donor brains, they calculated the odds of developing dementia across CTE stages I to IV.
Donors with stages III and IV had the worst cognitive and functional symptoms, regardless of age or history of substance use treatment.
Lower stages were not associated with dementia, cognitive impairment or functional decline.
The team also found no link between less severe CTE and changes in mood or thinking, suggesting observed changes may stem from other effects of repetitive head impacts or unrelated medical or environmental factors.
“Understanding which brain changes drive cognitive decline is essential,” said Dr Richard Hodes, director of the National Institute of Health’s National Institute on Aging.
“This study shows that only severe CTE has a clear link to dementia, which provides an important distinction for researchers, healthcare providers and families.”
The study also found that dementia due to CTE is often misdiagnosed as Alzheimer’s disease.
Both conditions are marked by abnormal tau proteins that build up in brain cells and affect blood vessels, although the tau differs in each disease.
Of donors with CTE who had received a dementia diagnosis during life, 40 per cent were told they had Alzheimer’s disease but showed no evidence of it at autopsy.
A further 38 per cent of families were told the cause of dementia was unknown or could not be specified.
News
ATW’s research round-up: new Alzheimer trigger identified, UK university targets longevity. fibre not protein?…and more

A UK university will become one of the first in the country to make improving the health and well-being of the elderly one of its six ‘mission-led’ research priorities.
Bournemouth University’s choice to focus on pensioners is partly the result of the Labour Government’s wish for universities to specialise, whilst also reflecting the area’s demographics – the south-coast city has one of the one of the oldest populations in the world.
“Our demographics are much older than other places – about 10 years older on average compared to the rest of the UK,” explained Tom Wainwright, professor of orthopaedics at Bournemouth.
Vary your exercise
The university’s Orthopaedic Research Institute is already heavily involved in work with the surrounding area and its recently published study, in The Lancet, showed that over-65s with osteoarthritis who undertook group-based cycle classes enjoyed much better outcomes than those receiving one-to-one physiotherapy.
Research published in leading British doctors’ publication the BMJ Journal, which tracked 100,000 people over the last 30 years, has shown that mixed exercise routines can have a significant impact on overall health and longevity.
The study tracked the cohorts exercise habits over three decades and found that participants who engaged in the highest variety of exercises had a 19% lower risk of death, compared to those who engaged in the lowest variety.
Benefits were even bigger when looking at specific causes like heart disease, cancer, and respiratory illness, with risk reductions ranging from 13 to 41 percent.
“People naturally choose different activities over time based on their preferences and health conditions,” says Yang Hu, corresponding author and research scientist in the Harvard TH Chan Department of Nutrition.
“When deciding how to exercise, keep in mind that there may be extra health benefits to engaging in multiple types of physical activity, rather than relying on a single type alone.”
US researchers have identified over five dozen new potential blood-based metabolites which could predict a Type 2 diabetes risk, years in advance.
Key Alzheimer trigger identified
Scientists at Mass General Brigham and Albert Einstein College of Medicine, followed 23,634 participants for up to 26 years and over that time analysed 469 metabolites in blood samples, alongside additional genetic, diet and lifestyle data.
In doing so they identified 235 metabolites associated with higher or lower diabetes risk, including 67 new molecules previously unreported.
The researchers say their work supports a shift toward precision prevention strategies which are more reliable than current indicators such as BMI or family history.
Further research into the Alzheimer’s predicting APOE (apolipoprotein E) gene has left UK researchers with renewed conviction of their ability to develop preventive measures, earlier in life.
Researchers at University College London analysed nearly 470,000 people across four major studies, focusing on participants aged 60 and older with confirmed Alzheimer’s diagnoses and genetic data.
Whilst previous studies had identified the ε4 allele of APOE as the one most predictive of Alzheimer’s development the UCL researchers also highlighted how allele ε3 may also carry a significant risk
Dr Dylan Williams, the study’s lead author, explained that the APOE gene’s contribution to the prevalence of Alzheimer’s has been significantly underestimated for a long time, and that the ε3 allele has historically been misunderstood as having a neutral effect on risk.
He said: “Intervening on the APOE gene, or the molecular pathway between the gene and Alzheimer’s, could have huge potential for preventing or treating a large majority of cases.”
Fibre first
Researchers say that fibre – found in beans, lentils, chia seeds, oats, bran, and certain fruits – is emerging as the ‘new hero’ of nutrition science.
Longevity expert Dr Vassily Eliopoulos, MD, who trained at Cornell, highlights how protein has ruled diet trends for years, but says fibre is now stepping into the spotlight.
“Everyone’s chasing protein, but the next big longevity macro is fibre. And fibre might be the most under-appreciated longevity nutrient that you’re missing daily.”
Explaining why fibre plays such a crucial role, he highlights the connection between gut health and overall well-being.
“Here’s the secret, your gut microbes eat what you don’t digest. These microbes convert fibre into powerful compounds that protect the body. They turn fibre into short-chain fatty acids, which act as your body’s natural anti-inflammatory molecules,”
Dr Eliopoulos highlights how chronic inflammation is closely linked to ageing and disease and he recommends aiming for 30 to 40 grams of fibre a day.
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