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Why do we value old objects over older people? Age UK is here to change how we age.
Here's how, with your support, Age UK is supporting older people through the cost of living crisis.
A range of products to help you make the most of later life are available through Age UK Trading, with profits given to the charity.
depending on the level of care provided. They range from nursing homes to homes for sufferers of dementia. Find out more from Age UK.
How Age UK Exeter's gardening group is helping older people with dementia and their carers find friendship, support, and hope.
see firsthand the difference their singing group makes to the lives of older people living with dementia.
with her local Age UK after she retired. She's now friends with an older person who is living with dementia.
Statistics New ONS publications Labour market stats Dividing line House of Commons Library (deposited papers) Dividing line Department for Work and Pensions Stats and surveys (Family Resources Survey, Households ... DirectGov House of Commons Hansard House of Lords Hansard World US Census Bureau World IDB Eurostat stats portal AARP International statistics database CIA World Factbook The Prevention of Falls Network for
isn’t adjusting quickly enough to help, or to see the potential older people offer. See the stats Age UK is here to change how we age From providing specialist, impartial advice to research and campaigning
essential public services. It’s time to make access to public services fair, for everyone. Key stats 2.1 million people aged 65 and over do not use the internet. 4.9 million people aged 65 and over don’t
your interest in research, "Join Dementia Research" and an invitation to an upcoming Age and Ageing CPD accredited event in October. Creative Adventures in Dementia The Dukes Theatre, in collaboration ... celebrating three years of its pioneering work for people with dementia by staging a major two-day festival from May 17-18, open to people living with dementia, family, friends, health and care professionals, artists
more, with many of them in extreme old age and struggling with disability, physical ill health, dementia and other forms of cognitive decline. Plus, research reveals that nearly a quarter of over 65s (24%) ... in care homes, applying to the EUSS is unlikely to be possible at the moment. Older people with dementia and other serious impairments will be reliant on relatives and friends, care home staff or possibly
doors at the Business Design Centre in London. Age UK was there to hear from people living with dementia and their families, to provide them with information and advice, and to learn about new developments ... I was struck by the variety of innovative products and services on offer for people living with dementia: soft, sensory dolls with heartbeats and weighted limbs, designed to soothe the person holding them;