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Is dementia care and research given enough resources in Africa?

鈥淚n some cultures, there鈥檚 a presumption that if an elderly person is talking bizarrely or behaving unusually, they鈥檙e suspected of being witches or wizards.鈥

鈥淭he stigmatisation extends to the fact that in some cultures, there鈥檚 a presumption that if an elderly person is talking bizarrely or behaving unusually, they鈥檙e suspected of being witches or wizards or something like that.鈥

Three and a half million people are currently estimated to live with dementia in Africa.

Dementia is an umbrella term use to describe neurological conditions which lead to the loss of memory, language, and the ability to think clearly. People can start to struggle to get dressed. They can forget things they鈥檝e known all their lives: how to get home, or even who their loved ones are. And it can affect their behaviour.

But there鈥檚 been very little research done on African patients. And studies - especially using genetics - have been heavily reliant on Caucasian populations. This is why a group of scientists in Africa have set up the Africa Dementia Consortium to improve the research and knowledge of Dementia in Africa.

Mpho Lakaje speaks to one of the scientists involved, Professor Njideka Okubadejo, a Professor of Neurology at the College of Medicine, University of Lagos, as well as Sseku Safic from the Mount Meru Hospital in northern Tanzania, who has set up the only memory clinic in the country.

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