LIVERPOOL.- To mark Dementia Awareness Week (18 24 May) National Museums Liverpools award-winning
House of Memories programme has gone digital.
My House of Memories App has been co-created with people living with dementia, and allows app-users to explore objects from the past and share memories together.
It will be launched at the Museum of Liverpool on Thursday 22 May, when carers and their VIP guests who are living with dementia will be invited to enjoy an afternoon of entertainment on a very special Celebration Day.
Funded by the Mi (More Independent) Partnership, which aims to help people live more independently through the use of technology, My House of Memories App is a digital app which uses a very simple format to stimulate memory.
The free App allows people to browse through objects from across the decades, brought to life with multimedia, to prompt reminiscence about a range of every day objects, from school life to sport. App-users can save objects to their own memory trees, memory boxes or memory timelines. Carers can also create personal profiles for different people, so that they can save their favourite objects and look at them again.
Carol Rogers, Executive Director of Education, Communities and Visitors at National Museums Liverpool said: Our House of Memories dementia awareness programme has been running since 2012, training more than 5,000 carers across Merseyside, the North and Midlands. In addition to the training we offer, we have also been working towards a way in which we can make use of technology to benefit the lives of people living with dementia.
Weve worked with some absolutely fantastic people - who are either living with dementia themselves, or caring for someone whos living with dementia to develop an app which is a useful tool in helping to enrich the lives of those who use it, and an enjoyable activity to share.
My House of Memories App has been developed in line with the Dementia Friendly Technology Charter, which is currently being created with the aim of enabling every person with dementia to have the opportunity to benefit from technology appropriate to their needs.
Dave Horsfield, Mi Programme Manager said: Liverpool (NHS) Clinical Commissioning Group is leading the way in pioneering technology that can change people's lives supporting them to live more confidently, healthily and independently. Our More Independent (Mi) programme, brings together a range of technology, tools and projects that are all about helping people do more for themselves and their family and its partnership with National Museums Liverpool to produce the House of Memories app is a great example of this in practice."
Carol Rogers continues: There are 800,000 people with dementia in the UK, and this number is set to rise to over 1 million by 2021. We have to do everything we can to help support these people and those who are caring for them, creating innovative options that are based on fantastic resources, which open to us across the country.
Our App uses objects from our social history collection at the Museum of Liverpool, but they are relevant and to people everywhere. The objects act as prompts to unlock peoples own collections of memories that might be tucked away at the back of their minds. The App will inspire and instigate conversation, and enhance the lives of those who use it.
The App has been co-produced with Innovate Dementia and individual members of their Regional Stakeholder Platform, and Mersey Care NHS Trust and members of the Mossley Hill Hospital Memory Group.