34th International Conference of Alzheimer’s34th Virtual International Disease International Conference of VIRTUAL Alzheimer’s Disease International 2020 19 - 21 March 2020 ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE INTERNATIONAL VIRTUAL INTERNATIONAL 10–12Singapore December 2020 CONFERENCE 10-12 DECEMBER 2020 Hope in the age Hopeof dementia in the age. New science.of New dementia knowledge. New solutions. New science. New knowledge. New solutions.

Sponsorship Prospectus SponsorshipPartner with ADI, the organisation that empowers Pro Alzheimerspectus associations Conferenceto promote and offer care and support for people with dementia and their carers, Partnerwhile with workingADI, the globallyorganisa tionto focus that attentionempowers on Alzheimer dementia. associations programme while working globally to focus attention on dementia. www.adi2020.org www.adi2020.org @ADIConference #ADI2020 Twitter Alzheimer’s @alzdisint #ADI2020Disease International Facebook-square alz.org.sg /alzheimersdiseaseinternational @alz_sg Facebook-square /alz.org.sg Twitter @alz_sg www.adi2020.org

CONTENTS

WELCOME LETTERS

BLESSINGS FROM HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS...... 4

WELCOME LETTER FROM PRINCESS YASMIN AGA KHAN...... 5

WELCOME LETTER FROM QUEEN SOFIA OF SPAIN ...... 6

WELCOME LETTER FROM LUIS GUILLERMO SOLÍS RIVERA ...... 7 WELCOME FROM ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE INTERNATIONAL AND ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE ASSOCIATION, SINGAPORE...... 8

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ...... 10

EXHIBITORS...... 11

ADI MEMBERS’ SHOWCASE...... 11

PLENARY SPEAKERS...... 13

SYMPOSIA

THURSDAY 10 DECEMBER ...... 23

FRIDAY 11 DECEMBER...... 24

SATURDAY 12 DECEMBER...... 26

ON DEMAND CONTENT...... 28

PROGRAMME AND PRODUCT SHOWCASE ...... 28

NETWORKING...... 29

WORKSHOPS

ADI WORKSHOPS...... 30

ADI MEMBER WORKSHOPS...... 31

ADI CARE WORKSHOPS ...... 32

LIVE SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME

OVERVIEW...... 34

THURSDAY 10 DECEMBER ...... 37

FRIDAY 11 DECEMBER...... 40

SATURDAY 12 DECEMBER...... 43

ON-DEMAND SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME...... 47

ON-DEMAND SESSIONS: RELEASE DATES...... 60

POSTER PRESENTATIONS...... 62

FILM ROOM...... 84

CONFERENCE COMMITTEES ...... 88

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BLESSINGS FROM HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS

Pope Francis WELCOME LETTERS

4

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WELCOME LETTER

Princess Yasmin Aga Khan

President of Alzheimer’s Disease International WELCOME LETTERS

Dear friends,

As President of Alzheimer’s Disease International (ADI), I am delighted to have this opportunity to welcome you to the 34th Virtual International Conference of ADI.

ADI’s decision to move their conference to a virtual platform was not an easy one, but one which opens up great opportunities to reach a wider global audience who would not ordinarily be able to attend and right at a time when togetherness is so important to us all. 5 The WHO’s Global plan of action on the public health response to de- mentia was adopted in 2017 and offers a roadmap for governments to develop effective policies on dementia, that are so crucial to the millions of people impacted by the condition. All governments must make demen- tia a priority by developing national dementia plans and including dementia into their COVID-19 response plans. The pandemic has highlighted the vulnerabilities of people living with dementia – and also carers – to social isolation. In many cases people have been left to shoulder the burden of difficult decisions around whether or not to send their loved ones to hospital.

This conference is about hope and it will indeed provide a ray of hope for those affected by dementia, an issue which is close to my heart. It is now more important than ever that we come together as a community.

My best wishes for a great conference.

Princess Yasmin Aga Khan President, Alzheimer’s Disease International

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WELCOME LETTER

Queen Sofia of Spain ADI Ambassador WELCOME LETTERS

6

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WELCOME LETTER

Luis Guillermo Solís Rivera

Former President of Costa Rica, ADI Ambassador WELCOME LETTERS

7

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WELCOME FROM ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE INTERNATIONAL AND ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE ASSOCIATION, SINGAPORE

“An ADI conference is always “On behalf of the Alzheimer’s an important event. An Disease Association in opportunity for the global Singapore, let me extend thinkers and doers to come a warm welcome to all the together and take stock of attendees of the ADI Virtual everything that has happened International Conference in the two years before and 2020. Even as the world scan the horizon for future faces unprecedented trends. But this year is different. challenges amid the COVID- The havoc wreaked on our 19 pandemic, our work to

WELCOME LETTERS communities and work by serve the needs of persons COVID-19 has been huge, with dementia and their we have lost so many loved ones to this pandemic. caregivers must remain steadfast. We hope you The dementia community has been hit the hardest. will find the conference sessions enriching and we We have come together as never before and truly wish you a successful and fruitful conference.” understood why our efforts need to be made on a 8 global scale. I think we have grown up as a movement Dr Ang Peng Chye, President, and our passion and resilience has shone through. Alzheimer’s Disease Association (Singapore) We will have to climb mountains next year and we must do it together, supporting and encouraging each other along the way. I wish you all a thought “It is my pleasure to welcome all delegates to this provoking and engaging conference. Your thoughts unique, multi-disciplinary and actions will inspire our work in the next two years. platform that brings together Together, we will succeed. Thank you for taking part.” the global dementia Paola Barbarino, CEO community. For the next few Alzheimer’s Disease International days, you can look forward to a rich exchange of views and experiences regarding dementia care, showcases “As Chair of Alzheimer’s of the latest developments Disease International in dementia diagnosis, I welcome this virtual treatment and research, as Conference as an opportunity well as inspiring stories to reach out to even more shared by persons with dementia and their care people across the world who partners. Together, we hope to offer clarity during are committed to improving these uncertain times, and to make significant strides the lives of people with in our quest to build a dementia-inclusive world.” dementia and their carers. The first two decades of Jason Foo, Chief Executive Officer, this century have shown Alzheimer’s Disease Association (Singapore) great advances in thinking about dementia – prevention, the potential of early intervention, rehabilitation and models of care to better achieve person centred care. COVID has sharpened our understanding of what stigma and social isolation mean and the importance of protecting the human rights of people with dementia. So together at this ADI Conference let us reflect on how we can translate what we know into dementia plans and action. I hope you enjoy the experience of this virtual conference.” Glenn Rees, Chair Alzheimer’s Disease International

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About Alzheimer’s Disease About Alzheimer’s Disease International (ADI) Association (ADA)

Alzheimer’s Disease Alzheimer’s Disease

International (ADI) is the Association (ADA), Singapore ABOUT ADI AND ADA international federation was formed in 1990 because of Alzheimer associations of a growing concern for the around the world, in needs of persons living with official relations with the dementia and their caregivers. World Health Organisation Through their work, the (WHO). ADI currently has Association hopes to reduce 102, each member being the Alzheimer association in stigma by increasing awareness and understanding of their country who support people living with dementia and dementia; enabling and involving persons living with dementia their families. ADI believes that the key to winning the fight to be integrated and accepted in the community; and leading against dementia lies in a unique combination of global in the quality of dementia care services for persons living solutions and local knowledge. As such, it works locally, with dementia and their families. Striving towards a dementia by empowering Alzheimer associations to promote and inclusive society through their four strategic service pillars; offer care and support for people living with dementia and Centre-Based Care, Caregiver Support, Academy and their carers, whilst working globally to focus attention on Community Enabling, the Association aims to advocate and dementia. There are more than 50 million people estimated inspire the society to regard and respect persons living with 9 to be living with dementia around the world and this number dementia as individuals who can still lead purposeful and is set to reach 152 million in 2050. ADI’s vision is prevention, meaningful lives. care and inclusion today, and cure tomorrow.

Contact details Contact details Alzheimer’s Disease Association Alzheimer’s Disease International 20 Bendemeer Road 57a Great Suffolk Street #01-01 BS Bendemeer Centre London Singapore 339914 SE1 0BB Phone: +65 6293 9971 Email: [email protected] Phone: +44 20 7981 0880 Email: [email protected] Web: www.alz.org.sg

Web: www.alzint.org Twitter: @alz_sg Facebook: /alz.org.sg/ Twitter: @AlzDisInt LinkedIn: /company/alzsg Facebook: /alzheimersdiseaseinternational LinkedIn: /company/alzdisint

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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Sponsors

DIAMOND SPONSOR GOLD SPONSORS ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS SILVER SPONSOR BRONZE SPONSORS

10

Symposia

Thursday 10 December 09:35–10:35 Friday 11 December 09:05–10:05 Saturday 12 December 09:35–10:35 Supported by:

Diademsrl

Thursday 10 December 09:35–10:35 Friday 11 December 12:50–13:50 Saturday 12 December 13:20–14:20 supported by:

Thursday 10 December 13:30–14:30 Friday 11 December 12:50–13:50 Saturday 12 December 13:20–14:20

Please see pages 23–26 for Thursday 10 December 13:30–14:30 Friday 11 December 15:00–16:00 programme content

Bursaries Media Partners

Bursaries for Early Career Researchers

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EXHIBITORS

Ageing Alzheimer’s Disease Data Initiative (ADDI)

Arjo ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Book stand: Remember those who cannot remember Brain Bank Singapore Cerecin Pte Ltd Danone Nutricia Eden in Oz and NZ Generation Connect (GenConnects) Global Alzheimer’s Association Interactive Network (GAAIN) Homage IOS Press Memory Lane Games Ltd Obie by EyeClick 11 RHA Academy Pte Ltd Schwabe Pharma Asia Pacific Splaine Consulting Swedish Care International TaurRx Therapeutics Vintage Radio

ADI MEMBERS’ SHOWCASE

4get-me-not Alzheimer’s Organization Alzheimer’s Association Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Disorder Association – Alzheimer’s Alzheimer’s SA Alzheimer’s Alzheimer’s Society AlzRus Foundation Corporación Alzheimer Demensia Brunei Fundación Alzheimer de Venezuela Fundashon Alzheimer Bonaire Iran Dementia & Alzheimer’s Association Lanka Alzheimer’s Foundation Madagascar Alzheimer Masoandro Mody Panhellenic Federation of Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Disorders TADA, Chinese Taipei The Alzheimer Society of Ireland

Twitter @AlzDisInt @alz_sg #ADI2020 The AD Workbench is where collaboration drives innovation.

The Alzheimer’s Disease Workbench is a secure, cloud-based platform where the global community of Alzheimer’s Disease scientists and researchers can share data, expand our collective knowledge and accelerate the development of new treatments.

Together, we can  nd answers for the more than 40 million living with Alzheimer’s Disease and related dementias.

Explore the AD Workbench. Visit Alzheimersdata.org/ad-workbench www.adi2020.org

PLENARY SPEAKERS

Dr Hamed Al Sinawi (Oman) Paola Barbarino (United Kingdom)

Dr Hamed Al Sinawi Paola is CEO of Alzheimer’s is a senior consultant Disease International (ADI). PLENARY SPEAKERS geropsychiatrist at Sultan Prior to this, she was CEO Qaboos University in of LIFE and occupied Muscat and the Chairman senior positions with Cass and Founder of Oman Business School, Tate, Alzheimer’s Society. He British Library and IIED. She completed his residency is a board member of the and higher psychiatry World Dementia Council, training in London and a trustee of The Postal established a memory Museum and of Lauderdale clinic in Oman in 2011. House. Previously she was Along with his clinical non-executive director of work, Dr Al Sinawi trains the Non-Communicable residents at the Omani Disease Alliance (NCDA), Board of Psychiatry and supervises research conducted a trustee of Shelter, the housing/homelessness charity, 13 by residents and medical students. His research interests and of MLA London. She holds a degree cum laude in include geriatric psychiatry, mental health stigma and Classics from Federico II Napoli University, an MA in Field medical . He also organises regular health and Analytical Techniques in Archaeology and an MA education campaigns in dementia to the general public in Library and Information Science both from University and health care professionals. College London.

Dr Alireza Atri (USA) Fiona Carragher (United Kingdom)

Dr Atri is the senior scientist Fiona Carragher joined in the Alzheimer’s Prevention Alzheimer’s Society in Initiative at Banner Sun January 2019. As Director Health Research Institute of Research and Influencing and Chair of Alzheimer’s and a member of our Disease International’s Executive Leadership Team, (ADI’s) Medical and Fiona plays a pivotal role Scientific Advisory Panel. in the Society vision to Dr Atri is an internationally create a world without renowned cognitive dementia. Fiona has neurologist, clinician- overall responsibility for our researcher and educator Research and Influencing in the fields of Alzheimer’s strategy; leading our growing disease and related and ambitious world-class dementias (ADRD). His research programme and research utilises mathematical/statistical methods, portfolio and our work to strengthen our position as the biomarkers, and clinical trial/effectiveness methodologies national charity leader on dementia health, social care to focus on early detection, risk reduction, and treatment policy and societal change. and care of AD/ADRD. He boasts a BS in Mathematics, MS in Biomathematics and a PhD in Biomathematics, Prior to joining Alzheimer’s Society, Fiona was the Deputy from UCLA; concurrent with an MD, UCSF, amongst many Chief Scientific Officer for NHS England, providing other qualifications. leadership for the 50,000 healthcare science professionals in the NHS and expert advice to the health system on Dr Atri advises and has led several large international science, innovation and diagnostics. She led a broad investigational medicines/clinical trials programs for AD. portfolio of policy responsibilities including establishing He serves as Co-Chair of the Alzheimer’s Association US the UK Antimicrobial Resistance Diagnostics programme national best clinical practices workgroup (AADx-CPG and the system-wide Action Plan on Hearing Loss. She workgroup) on the evaluation of cognitive behavioural is a passionate advocate for women in health and led syndromes, Alzheimer’s disease and ADRD. Dr Atri is the establishment of the first Women in Science and also the vice chair of ADI’s medical and scientific advisory Engineering fellowship programme in the NHS. panel (MSAP).

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PLENARY SPEAKERS

Fiona is a Consultant Clinical Biochemist by background Dr Nils Dahl () and a Fellow of the Royal College of Pathologists. She has worked in multi-professional teams for two decades at Nils Dahl is a Senior Policy Guy’s and St Thomas’ Hospital, the Royal Hospital for Sick Advisor at Germany’s Children, Edinburgh and Kings College Hospital London, Federal Ministry of Health. with a focus on providing high quality, innovative services. One of his main tasks is to coordinate Germany’s Fiona is committed to ensuring that we reach every National Dementia Strategy person who has a dementia diagnosis and wants our and related research help. She wants to change the conversation on dementia, projects. mainstream the rights of people affected by dementia and drive the research agenda, working tirelessly to improve Before joining the Federal care and find a cure. PLENARY SPEAKERS PLENARY Ministry, he worked for the State Department of Health and Social Affairs of North Dr Christopher Chen (Singapore) Rhine-Westphalia (which is the most populous of the 16 Dr Christopher Chen is a states of Germany) and completed the (interdisciplinary) 14 senior clinician-scientist, doctoral programme ‘Age(ing): Cultural Concepts and associate professor Practical Realisations’ at Heinrich-Heine University in the departments of Dusseldorf. Pharmacology and Psychological Medicine, His PhD thesis dealt with the topic of social isolation in old Yong Loo Lin School age, particularly in relation to the growing number of lonely of Medicine, National deaths (kodokushi) in Japan. University of Singapore, and Director of the Memory Aging and Cognition Centre Jason Foo (Singapore) of the National University Healthcare System. Mr Jason Foo is the Chief Executive Officer His pre-clinical studies of Alzheimer’s Disease were conducted at Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge Association (ADA) in University and his clinical training was at New College, Singapore, a social service Oxford University. He was elected the Janssen Junior agency set up in 1990 Research Fellow at Worcester College, Oxford University as a result of the growing and was a visiting research fellow at the department of concern for the dementia Neurochemistry, Institute of Neurology, London. prevalence affecting Singapore. With a vision Since returning to Singapore, Dr Chen has developed of building a dementia multi-disciplinary research programmes with extensive inclusive society in international collaborations. His major research and clinical Singapore, ADA provides a interests are in neuroimaging, molecular biology and whole host of programmes treatment of stroke and dementia resulting in over 350 and services to tackle peer-reviewed publications. He is the principal investigator the challenges of dementia and to support people with for several trials including the SINgapore GERiatric dementia and their families. intervention study (SINGER) to reduce physical frailty and cognitive decline; serves on journal editorial boards; Jason had served on the board of ADA as a volunteer and has been a member of trial steering committees and for 22 years before taking on the role of Chief Executive advisory panels. Officer in 2012. He is a Chartered Accountant by training with more than 25 years of experience in senior positions Dr Chen is currently President of the Asian Society Against in the banking and financial industry before making the Dementia, Secretary-Treasurer of the Asian & Oceanian career switch to the social services sector. Association of Neurology and immediate Past Chair of the International Society for Vascular Behavioural and Cognitive Disorders.

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PLENARY SPEAKERS

Lorène Gilly () In 2007 Ms Kestel joined the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO/WHO) as the Sub-regional Mental Lorène Gilly is Head of Health Advisor for the English Speaking Caribbean Public Affairs at France Countries, based in Barbados. In 2011 Ms Kestel was PLENARY SPEAKERS Alzheimer and Related appointed to the position of the Regional Mental Health Diseases. For more than Advisor at the headquarters in Washington DC, providing 30 years, this department technical cooperation in the mental health field to the has been working to entire region. In 2015 she became the Unit Chief for raise awareness within Mental Health and Substance Use at PAHO/WHO. Over the political world. By the years, Ms Kestel has contributed to and co-authored speaking out for the millions publications in the area of mental health. Since 2019 Ms of families affected, the Kestel has been the WHO Director of the Department of organisation constantly Mental Health and Substance Use. reminds public decision- makers that taking care of people living with dementia Dr Seong Yoon, Kim (South ) and their caregivers is still an issue today, especially in our Dr. Seong Yoon, Kim aging European countries. 15 graduated from Seoul National University in Dévora Kestel () 1985, and undertook psychiatric residency and Dévora Kestel is a senior geropsychiatry research mental health policy fellowship training in Seoul specialist with more than National University Hospital 25 years of international from 1989–1994. experience in , Since 1995, he has been the Caribbean and Latin working as a house staff America, implementing and and professor in the advising governments on Department of Psychiatry national policies related to of Asan Medical Center and mental health systems. She the Medical College, University of Ulsan. Establishing and is a strong advocate for the running a Dementia and Memory Disorder clinic since rights of people with mental 1997, he is now working as a Director of Geropsychiatry health issues. Section and Memory Disorder Clinic. Ms Kestel obtained her MSc in Psychology from the Since his research fellowship in McLean Hospital in Universidad Nacional de La Plata, in Argentina, and Boston in the early 2000’s, he has been actively involved her MSc in Public Health at the London School of in new drug clinical trials, development and validation Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, UK. After completing of neuropsychological tools, establishment of geriatric her university studies in Argentina, she worked for 10 cohorts for epidemiological and clinical studies, structural years in the development and supervision of community- and functional neuroimaging, biomarker studies on based mental health services in Trieste, . In 2000 she Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias, writing more joined the World Health Organization (WHO) as a mental than 150 peer reviewed journal articles and 10 books health officer first in Kosovo and then in Albania where and chapters. He is working as an active member of she became the WHO Representative to Albania. In both the national dementia cohort research network (CRCD: countries, she worked closely with the Ministries of Health Clinical Research Centers for Dementia) and has been the to help establish comprehensive community-based mental PI of Korean Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative health systems. (ADNI) study during 2004–2015.

Recently, he has worked as a visiting scholar to UC Irvine Memory Impairment and Neurological Disorders (UCI MIND) as well as serving as the national expert consultant and as President of the Korean Association of Geriatric Psychiatry.

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PLENARY SPEAKERS

Prof. Miia Kivipelto (Finland) Prof. Martin Knapp (United Kingdom)

Miia Kivipelto, MD, PhD, Martin Knapp is Professor of is a professor in clinical Social Policy and Director of geriatrics at Karolinska the Personal Social Services Institutet (KI), Center for Research Unit at the London Alzheimer Research and School of Economics and senior geriatrician and Political Science (LSE). He Director for Research & has also been Director of the Development of Theme National Institute for Health Aging at Karolinska Research (NIHR) School for University Hospital, Social Care Research since

PLENARY SPEAKERS PLENARY Stockholm, Sweden. 2009. Part of her Nordic Brain Network multidisciplinary Prof. Knapp has been research team (around 100 working for many years in researchers and clinical the fields of long-term care, social care, and mental health policy and practice. His 16 staff) is located at the University of Eastern Finland and Imperial College London, UK, where she has part current research emphases are primarily dementia, child time positions as professor. Her frontline research and adult mental health, autism and long-term social care. findings have been published in leading journals (300+ Much of his work has an economic focus, and in all of it publications, h-index 66) and she has received numerous he seeks to tease out the policy and practice implications. prestigious awards. He has published almost 600 peer-review journal papers and 15 books. His work has had numerous impacts on Prof. Kivipelto’s translational research focuses on the policy and practice in these areas. prevention, early diagnosis and treatment of cognitive impairment, dementia and Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Through epidemiological studies, Prof. Kivipelto has Dishen Kumar (Indonesia) identified various lifestyle and vascular risk factors for dementia and interactions with genetic factors. Prof. Dishen is a Broadcast Kivipelto is the PI of the landmark Finnish Geriatric Engineer and Presenter Intervention Study to Prevent Cognitive Impairment and for Astro Awani Channel. Disability (FINGER) randomised controlled trial (RCT), He is the host of ‘Health which is the first large-scale trial showing that a multi- Matters with Dishen Kumar.’ domain lifestyle-based intervention can reduce the risk The television show aims of cognitive impairment among at risk persons in the to raise awareness on general population (Lancet 2015). FINGER has caused health and wellness issues a paradigm shift, i.e. cognitive decline is no longer an from the perspectives of inevitable consequence of aging but can be prevented physicians and patients. with multi-domain interventions. This pragmatic model After graduating from is now tested and adapted worldwide. Based on these University Malaysia Sabah collaborations, Prof. Kivipelto has launched the World with a bachelor’s degree Wide FINGERS Initiative, a unique interdisciplinary network in Electrical and Electronic to share experiences, harmonise data, and plan joint Engineering, Dishen had the international initiatives for the prevention of cognitive opportunity to work in a construction company. However, impairment/dementia (25 countries have already joined). he quickly realised that it was not his passion and found She is also founder of the FINGERS Brain Health Institute an opportunity to enter the Media and Broadcasting aiming to find novel solutions to promote brain health and industry through Astro Awani. prevent cognitive impairment and dementia. While working closely wit Dishen realised he wanted Prof. Kivipelto is often invited to leading global dementia to be in front of it. Starting on a web show called V!VA, conferences and task forces, including the G8 Dementia Dishen has hosted Personaliti Malaysia Memilih and is a Summit, OECD mapping for big data in Alzheimer contributing writer for Awani Review. Juggling life as an research, WHO ministerial meeting in global actions engineer and presenter, Dishen hopes to inspire others to against dementia and WHO dementia risk reduction pursue their passion. guidelines working group, among others.

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PLENARY SPEAKERS

Prof. Gill Livingston (United Kingdom) With a passion for digital communication and transformation, he became a Scottish Government Digital Gill Livingston is professor of Champion in 2016. psychiatry of older people in PLENARY SPEAKERS Chris has run his own marketing and business University College London, development consultancy, Future Marketing, as well as Division of Psychiatry; Head a successful hospitality business. His pro-bono work of Research in mental health includes start up and third sector business advice. care of older people; and consultant psychiatrist, Camden and Islington NHS Foundation Trust (FT), UK. Dr John C. Morris (USA)

She led the Lancet John C. Morris, MD, International Commission is the Harvey A. and on Dementia Prevention, Dorismae Hacker Friedman Intervention and Care, Distinguished Professor of launched in 2017. It Neurology; professor of contained the first life course analysis of potentially pathology and immunology; 17 modifiable risks in dementia. She works to the professor of physical commission’s strapline, ‘Acting now on dementia therapy; professor of prevention, intervention, and care will vastly improve occupational therapy; and living and dying for individuals with dementia and their director of the Charles families, and in doing so, will transform the future for F. and Joanne Knight society.’ Prof. Livingston also leads the new update to Alzheimer’s Disease the Lancet standing commission, and will discuss new Research Center at material from it. Washington University School of Medicine. Her other research includes the START project Dr Morris’ research interests include healthy aging which successfully reduced depression in carers in a and Alzheimer dementia, antecedent biomarkers for randomised controlled trial, demonstrating clinical and Alzheimer’s disease, and trials of investigational drugs for cost effectiveness and long-term effectiveness. She the treatment of Alzheimer dementia. has also researched interventions in care homes; non- pharmacological interventions for sleep in dementia; and Dr Morris has authored four books and more than 600 dementia and interventions in minority ethnic groups. published articles (current h-index 127). He is a member of several professional societies and serves on numerous scientific and community advisory boards. He has Chris Lynch (United Kingdom) received many honours and awards, including the MetLife Award for Medical Research in Alzheimer’s Disease (2004); Chris Lynch is Deputy CEO the Potamkin Prize for Research in Pick’s, Alzheimer’s, of Alzheimer’s Disease and related dementias (2005); and the Carl and Gerty International and Director Cori Faculty Achievement Award, Washington University of Policy, Communications (2010). In 2013, he received the Peter H. Raven Lifetime and Publications. Chris has Achievement Award from the Academy of Science of over 25 years’ experience in St. Louis, the Washington University School of Medicine communications, marketing, Second Century Award, and was the 2013 Medical & business development, Scientific honouree from the Alzheimer’s Association. policy, publications and He is ranked in the top 1% of investigators in the field events, working in the of neuroscience and behaviour by Essential Science private, public and not-for- Indicators database. profit sectors.

On the director team at Alzheimer Scotland, Chris had responsibility for communications, external affairs, marketing, membership, events, international liaison and digital strategy, plus key fundraising activity.

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PLENARY SPEAKERS

Emily Ong (Singapore) Dr Violet Okech (Kenya)

Emily Ong lives in Singapore Violet Okech-Helu is a and used to be a preschool consultant psychiatrist and teacher, Special Educational counsellor with more than Needs (SEN) learning 15 years’ experience in the consultant and trainer. At field of mental health. She 51, she was diagnosed with chairs adult psychiatry and mild cognitive impairment coordinates mental health and the possibility of young research at the Department onset-dementia. After of Mental Health, Kenyatta overcoming the initial grief, National Hospital (KNH),

PLENARY SPEAKERS PLENARY she is determined to use her Nairobi, Kenya. She is an lived experience to conduct honourary lecturer in the dementia community Department of Psychiatry, education and advocate for University of Nairobi. direct support for people Dr Okech played a key role in mental health services 18 with dementia. development in Kenya and East as the Founding Emily Ong is co-facilitator of ‘Voices for Hope’ – a step-up President of the Eastern Africa Young Psychiatrists and programme by Singapore Alzheimer’s Disease Association Trainees Association (EAYPTA) and was the first female to for people with dementia and their care partners. She be the National Vice Chairperson of the Kenya Psychiatric is the Committee Advisor to the dementia inclusive Association. community project of the Kebun Baru Community Club. Emily is very active in her dementia education work She is an expert in gender, HIV care and public mental through her personal Facebook Page, ‘Living with Mild health and policy. She is an alumnus of the Johns Hopkins Cognitive Impairments and YOD.’ Her passion and University, USA – where she received a master’s in devotion in re-framing dementia as an acquired disability public health (MPH) degree and the Fulbright Hubert. H. and the need to provide direct post-diagnostic support to Humphrey Fellowship Program – and of the University of people with dementia can be seen through her advocacy Nairobi, Medical School. talks and partnership with Singapore National Neuro She is the Kenya Psychiatric Association Ambassador to Institute and Apex Harmony Lodge. Emily is a member of ADI. Dr Okech is passionate about women’s mental health, the Global Dementia Observatory (GDO) Focus Group and mood disorders, dementia care and promoting quality, Dementia Alliance International. dignified care for the elderly.

Mario Possenti (Italy) Michael Schmieder (Switzerland) Mario Possenti is the For 30 years, Mr Schmieder General Secretary of has led the Sonnweid in Federazione Alzheimer Wetzikon, Switzerland. He Italia and represents the has developed models organisation at both a for caring for people with national and international dementia. At the end of level. He is the Project 2015, he handed over Leader for the Dementia the management of the Friendly Community Sonnweid. Since then he programme in Italy and has worked as a consultant manages the Federazione and speaker. In the same membership programme, year, he published the supporting existing member book ‘Dement, aber nicht associations and working bescheuert’ with Uschi with emerging organisations. Entenmann. He also a member of the ‘Table for Dementia’ by the Minister of the Health for monitoring the application of the national dementia plan.

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PLENARY SPEAKERS

Assoc. Prof. Joyce Simard (USA) After treatment and progression of health, he started working with programming burglar alarms for a small Joyce Simard, MSW, is an company. In 2011, he was diagnosed with colon cancer Adjunct Associate Professor which he later recovered from. In 2012, he had a surgery PLENARY SPEAKERS at the School of Nursing, because of a metastasis in his lung. University of Western Sydney Mr. Szydlowski was diagnosed with early Alzheimer’s Australia. She is patron and in 2009 and started taking the drug Aricept against the founder of Namaste Care progression of Alzheimer’s the same year. In 2018, he was International and patron of enrolled in a special programme regarding Alzheimer’s Soul Midwives and Hope which ended in March 2019. In July 2019, he had better for Home, a voluntary results regarding his cognitive abilities than his results at organisation in the United the same type of test in 2018. Kingdom. Prof. Simard is a private geriatric consultant Mr. Szydlowski married Alina Hanczyc in 1981 and they residing in Land O Lakes, have two children. His hobbies are bridge, classical music Florida in the winter and and sports. Prague, Czech Republic during the summer months. She has been involved in 19 long-term care for over 40 years serving as an Alzheimer’s Eileen and Dubghlas Taylor (Australia) disease specialist for many healthcare companies providing services in skilled nursing homes, assisted living The couple live in Australia communities and hospice organisations throughout the and are retired Social world. In January of 2013, Provider Magazine recognised her Workers, who are actively as one of ‘20 To Watch’ for her leadership and commitment involved in dementia to improving the lives of residents in long-term care facilities. advocacy both nationally Prof. Simard has written numerous articles and chapters and internationally. Both in healthcare books and has authored three books: are on advisory committees ‘The Magic Tape Recorder’ – a book for children about for Dementia Australia Alzheimer’s disease – and ‘The End-of-Life Namaste (DA). Eileen is secretary Care Program for People with Dementia,’ now in its for Dementia Alliance second edition. She has been involved with grants International (DAI), hosting studying the outcomes of Namaste Care with the School their online weekly support of Nursing, University of Western Sydney, Australia; St. group for Australia and New Christopher’s Hospice (United Kingdom); the University Zealand. Both Eileen and of Worcester (United Kingdom); and Lancaster University Dubghlas are cofounders of (United Kingdom). Prof. Simard is a popular speaker for the Dementia Awareness Advocacy Team (DAAT). organisations all over the world, and is known for bringing a light touch to serious subjects. Jason van Genderen (Australia)

Roman Szydlowksi (Sweden) Obsessive rule breaker, creative agitator, and Mr. Roman Szydlowski was smartphone cinematic born in 1944 in the village advocate. of Wolnowacha in Ukraine, Jason’s story started on the the son of Karol and Regina global stage of Tropfest NY Szydlowski who fled to in 2008, with an unexpected Soviet Union from Poland short film win shot on a during WWII. Nokia N95 for $57. In 2020 He was enrolled in the Royal he survived home isolation Institute of Technology by capturing charming in Stockholm studying videos documenting life with electrical engineering from his 87-year-old mother living 1970–1974. He worked for with Alzheimer’s disease Ericson as an object leader and vascular dementia. Over 50,000,000 views later he’s regarding mobile base been featured on shows such as ‘Good Morning America’ stations. He was diagnosed with prostate cancer in 2002 and ‘The Late Late Show with James Corden’. and had contractual retirement.

Twitter @AlzDisInt @alz_sg #ADI2020 34th Virtual International Conference of VIRTUAL Alzheimer’s Disease International 2020 10-12 December 2020 ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE INTERNATIONAL VIRTUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE 10-12 DECEMBER 2020

PLENARY SPEAKERS

His passion for smartphone filmmaking carries through Assoc. Prof. Wee Shiong, Lim (Singapore) from his popular festival shorts and workshops right through to the commercial work he champions at his Assoc. Prof. Lim is a own production studio – Treehouse Creative – Australia’s senior consultant at the very first iPhone content creation agency. They now department of geriatric consult for some of the world’s leading media brands and medicine and Director of broadcasters. the Institute of Geriatrics and Active Ageing, Tan Equally at home presenting a TEDx lecture or inspiring an Tock Seng Hospital. He auditorium of conference attendees – Jason is currently is Faculty Advisor to the launching his digital workshops programme to help National Healthcare Group educate and empower marginalised storytellers anywhere. Health Outcomes Medical

PLENARY SPEAKERS PLENARY Education Research (NHG- HOMER); Adjunct Associate Prof. Ladislav Volicer (USA) Professor of Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, NUS; Dr Volicer is currently the council member, Chapter Courtesy Full Professor 20 of Clinician Educators; Fellow of the American Geriatric at the School of Aging Society; and Associate Fellow of the Association for Studies, University of South Medical Education in Europe. He is also adjunct faculty of Florida, Tampa, FL; Visiting the Centre for Healthcare Innovation and a member of the Professor at the Third Research Management Committee, Geriatric Education Faculty of Medicine, Charles and Research Institute. University, Prague, Czech Republic; and Adjunct Assoc. Prof. Lim was awarded the outstanding alumni Professor at the University award 2016 from the from the Massachusetts General of Western Sydney. He Hospital Institute of Health Professions, Boston, USA. studied medicine at the His enthusiasm in his role as ‘Geriatrician Educator Charles University in Researcher’ is evidenced by his comprehensive track Prague, Czechoslovakia, record of scholarly work, including over 150 peer-reviewed and received his PhD in publications; editorial board member of the Journal of pharmacology at the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences. Nutrition, Health and Aging and guest associate editor for Frontiers in Medicine and Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience; In 1969, Dr Volicer moved to the USA and started reviewer for major national grants, international journals teaching pharmacology and doing research at the Boston and conferences; and research and teaching awards in University School of Medicine. In 1979, he moved his the fields of Geriatric Medicine and Health Professions laboratory to the Edith Nourse Rogers Memorial Veterans Education. He is Chair of the scientific committee for the Hospital in Bedford, MA, and became involved in research Asia Pacific Geriatrics Conference in 2016, and Co-Chair and care for individuals with dementia. of the local Scientific Programme Committee for ADI 2020.

As medical director, he established one of the first Assoc. Prof. Lim has completed fellowships in dementia Dementia Special Care Units and introduced the concept and cognitive disorders at Washington University, St of structured palliative care for patients with advanced Louis; the Successful Aging Programme at St Louis dementia. Goals of care on this unit were quality of University, and Trans-disciplinary Frailty Research to life, dignity and comfort instead of prolongation of life Achieve Healthy Ageing at the University of Adelaide. As at all costs. Dr Volicer investigated various aspects of principal investigator of the seminal GERI-LABS and dementia care, including behavioural symptoms, medical GERI-LABS2 studies, he leads a multi-disciplinary team complications and eating difficulties. He is recognised as of researchers in conducting cutting-edge research an international expert on advanced dementia care. He in the areas of frailty and sarcopenia. His passion and has published over 250 articles and chapters, and has dedication in raising regional interest and standards in edited four books on clinical management of dementia. the field of geriatric medicine, frailty and sarcopenia are He is a past chair of the American Medical Directors evident in his involvement with the Asia Pacific Geriatrics Association Ethics Committee, section editor for the Network; the Asian Working Group for Sarcopenia; and Journal on Nutrition and Aging and serves on the Editorial a co-author of the widely-cited Asia-Pacific Clinical Board of the Journal of American Medical Directors Practice Guidelines for frailty. Association.

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PLENARY SPEAKERS

In the area of dementia research, Assoc. Prof. Lim Edna Williams (British Virgin Islands) has been instrumental in demonstrating the salience of the multidimensional approach to caregiver burden. A Caribbean , born In particular, his seminal work on the ‘worry about in St. Kitts, she has lived PLENARY SPEAKERS performance’ caregiver burden has also been replicated in England and the United in fields outside of dementia. His research in the area States. For the past 25 of caregiving is now focusing on the complementary years she has resided in the and protective role of mastery against adverse caregiver British Virgin Islands. Her outcomes. He is also the lead author of the highly cited experiences in developing Cochrane review on the role of omega-3 supplementation mental health programmes in prevention of dementia. His other areas of interest in the in the United States and a area of cognitive disorders include cognitive frailty, delirium, further 25 years as a Human and mild cognitive impairment. Resources Business Partner with a background of organisational development Dr Huali Wang () and planning, has equipped her with the passion and Dr Wang obtained a skills to initiate the Alzheimer’s Movement in the British 21 Bachelor of Medicine Virgin Islands. She is the Founding Director of the Virgin from Peking University Islands Alzheimer’s Association. (formerly, Beijing Medical University) in 1994, and MD/PhD from Peking Masahiko Yamamoto (Japan) University in 2001. She was trained in International Masahiko Yamamoto is an Mental Health Research at office manager at Asahi Harvard Medical School, Shimbun Social Welfare and neuropsychology and Organization, Osaka office. neuroimaging of dementia Masahiko has been trying at University of California, to build and spread the Irvine. spirit of Dementia Friendly Communities in Japan since Dr Wang is one of the national pioneers for managing he joined the organisation. memory clinics and building service capacity for dementia He has organised care. She set up the first dementia caregiver support international conferences group in China in 2000 and developed and tested a about Dementia Friendly community-based family caregiver support programme Communities to introduce in Beijing. Now, she directs a training programme for the latest innovations community doctors and service providers, and a train- around the world. More the-trainer programme for dementia caregivers support in recently, his aim has been to make his newspaper China. The care model has been partly adopted by WHO company, Asahi Shimbun, dementia friendly. Masahiko Western Pacific Regional Office to develop the toolkit for used to be a photojournalist and was awarded the most community-based dementia care in low- and middle- honourable Japan Newspaper Publishers and Editors income countries. Association award in 2005 on his photo reporting of the Japan Railway Company train crash.

Twitter @AlzDisInt @alz_sg #ADI2020 Biogen is a proud sponsor of the ADI Conference At Biogen, we are pioneering new science that takes us deep into the body’s nervous system, and stretches wide across digital networks and patient communities, to better understand, and preserve, the underlying qualities of our essential human nature. biogen.com www.adi2020.org

SYMPOSIA: THURSDAY 10 DECEMBER

Thursday 10 December 09:35–10:35 Thursday 10 December 13:30–14:30

Dementia as a disability and the relevance of Envisioning the AD healthcare system of the WORKSHOPS & SYMPOSIA the Conventions – Dementia future – Roche sponsored symposium Alliance International (DAI) – Head Foundation sponsored symposium The overarching objectives of the symposium are to: Dementia Alliance International held • Review the current journey taken an historical side event in 2019 at by patients with Alzheimer’s the United Nations 12th Session disease (AD) and share of the Conference of State Parties perspectives on how it could evolve with the potential (COSP12) on the Convention approval of disease-modifying therapies (DMTs). on the Rights of Persons with • Discuss the hopes and expectations of the AD Disabilities (CRPD). Watch this community on the impact that potential DMTs may important side event as have on the AD healthcare system. DAI highlights dementia • Explore the opportunities and obstacles that may arise as a condition causing as a result of DMTs being available, and how these may disability, and highlighted the be overcome. 23 need for rehabilitation and • Initiate discussion and promote collaboration to drive other support to promote change in the AD healthcare system. increased independence and a higher quality of life for people with dementia. This event was also the first to have Speakers: ever been held themed specifically about dementia in the 12 years of the COSP. Jo Browning Welcome and introduction It is imperative we all work towards ensuring that dementia is recognised by all as a condition causing Paola Barbarino, CEO, Alzheimer’s Disease International acquired cognitive and other disabilities, and therefore The Alzheimer’s disease patient journey of the future one that once diagnosed, people with dementia must be provided with full and equal access to the CRPD and other Conventions, and to Universal Health Care. Paola Barbarino, Dr Stéphane Epelbaum, Prof. John Beard and Dr Geoff Kerchner. Panel discussion Speaker: Kate Swaffer, CEO and Chair, Dementia Alliance International • Perspectives on the patient journey before and after DMTs • How to drive change in the AD healthcare system Thursday 10 December 09:35–10:35 Jo Browning Collaborations and contribution in Alzheimer’s Summary and closing disease field – Eisai sponsored symposium Thursday 10 December 13:30–14:30 Eisai has been engaging with dementia by cooperating with area COVID-19 transforms dementia care municipal governments and area landscape in Qatar – The World Innovation medical associations. Summit for Health (WISH) and Hamad Medical Corporation sponsored symposium In this session, Eisai invites the Mayor of Iki City, Nagasaki Prefecture, Kyushu Distinct in Japan and a medical doctor working in Oita Prefecture to discuss how the Public-Private-Partnership (PPP) approach can contribute to the health of residents to support a dementia inclusive and preventative society. Speakers: Chair: , Chief Digital Officer Eisai, President, Keisuke Naito Dr Hanadi Al Hamad, National Lead Qatar National Dementia Total Inclusive Ecosystem Business Unit Dementia Plan, National Lead Healthy Ageing , Executive Director of Nursing Speakers: Ms Maryam Motowa , Deputy – Qatar National Dementia Aoi Yoshiiwa, Clinical Professor, Oita University, Oita, Japan Dr Mani Chandran Plan Task Force Hirokazu Shirakawa, Mayor of Iki City, Nagasaki, Japan

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SYMPOSIA: FRIDAY 11 DECEMBER

Friday 11 December 09:05–10:05 Neurological Institute, Cleveland Clinic; and Director of the Cleveland Clinic Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health Film showcase: ADI & ITN Productions film Anne Fagan, Prof. of Neurology at Washington University launch “Hope in the age of dementia” School of Medicine in St. Louis , Prof. of Clinical Neuroscience, Head Join us for the showcase premiere of the new ADI & ITN Giovanni Frisoni of Memory Clinic, University Hospital of and documentary film “Hope in the age of dementia” University of Geneva “Hope in the Age of Dementia” focuses on the latest advances in care, research, and technology, showcasing Friday 11 December 12:50–13:50 organisations which are driving change and innovation around the world. Anchored by news presenter Global Coalition on Aging and ADI: 30 Global Sharon Thomas, the programme explores topics cities – Dementia Innovation, supported by Lien such as: promising signs of treatment and diagnostic

WORKSHOPS & SYMPOSIA Foundation breakthroughs, leading research in low and middle- income countries, innovation around health and care services, including a dementia friendly ambulance service. Global Coalition on Aging & ADI, supported by Lien Foundation, are 24 This showcase will be introduced by Sharon Thomas, ITN delighted to host a Town Hall style host and Paola Barbarino, CEO, Alzheimer’s Disease symposium looking at the innovation International (ADI) and include interviews with some of the readiness of 30 global cities. An organisations in the film expert panel will gather to discuss Featured: and take your questions on the Lien Foundation supported report • Roche “Dementia Innovation Readiness • TauRx Index 2020: 30 Global Cities”. • Biogen • The University of Auckland By mid-century, the number of those aged 65 or older • Geras Solutions is set to double, and nearly two-thirds of the world’s • National University of Ireland, Galway population will live in urban areas, up from just over • The Welsh Ambulance Services half today. There are over 50 million people living with dementia globally, a figure set to triple by 2050; every 3 seconds someone in the world develops dementia. Given Friday 11 December 09:05–10:05 these shifts across society, the need for local city based leadership to address dementia is clear. AlzoSure® a simple blood test that predicts clinical Dementia/Alzheimer’s before Cognitive During COVID-19 we have seen how important cities Impairment (>6 years before diagnosis): have been in managing the pandemic. With their large concentration of population, cities have an opportunity significant implications on the diagnostic and a challenge to drive best practice. pathway and treatment with disease-modifying agents for patients – Diadem sponsored Cities can and should play a vital role in improving symposium dementia diagnosis rates, post-diagnostic support, quality of care, addressing stigma, and crucially in enabling new and existing funding models for dementia research. The panel will discuss the scientific background of the new biomarker, the Featured cities: Amsterdam, Auckland, Bangalore, test performance, initial clinical validation Bangkok, Beijing, Berlin, Buenos Aires, Cape Town, and how it could fit and impact the Copenhagen, Doha, Geneva, Glasgow, Helsinki, Hong clinical pathway for Alzheimer’s to try Kong, Jakarta, London, Manchester, City, Diademsrl and determine this new and unique New York, , Rome, Sao Paolo, Seoul, Singapore, tests suitability and potential to improve Stockholm, Sydney, Taipei, Tel Aviv, Tokyo and Vancouver. patients treatment and long term outcomes. Chair: Chris Lynch, Deputy CEO, ADI

Chairs: Paul Kinnon, Chief Executive Officer, Diadem Speakers: and Simona Piccirella, Board of Directors, Diadem Melissa Mitchell, Executive Director, Global Coalition on Speakers: Aging , Chairman and Co-Founder, Jeff Cummings, Chief Medical Advisor. Prof. of George Vradenberg Neurotherapeutics and Drug Development in the UsAgainstAlzheimer’s

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SYMPOSIA: FRIDAY 11 DECEMBER

Huali Wang, Vice President and Vice Secretary-General, Friday 11 December 15:00–16:00 Alzheimer’s Disease Chinese Exploring cross-cultural approaches to WORKSHOPS & SYMPOSIA Ricardo Allegri, Head of Department of Instituto de Investigaciones Neurologicas (FLENI) informal care: value, burden, and bright spots – Biogen sponsored symposium Hanadi Al Hamad, Senior Consultant Geriatrics, Hamad Medical Corporation This moderated discussion Premkumar Raja, Alzheimer’s and Related Disorders will feature panellists in Society of (ARDSI) – Bangalore Chapter & conversation with one Co-founder, Nightingales Medical Trust another about global trends in informal care, caregiver Kate Swaffer, CEO and Chair, Dementia Alliance International burden, and caregiver advocacy. Brief presentations will be followed by a lively discussion of cross-cultural approaches to informal care, the burden and quality of Friday 11 December 12:50–13:50 life impact experienced by informal caregivers, and the value that informal caregivers provide to people living The time for Tau is now: Early diagnosis and with Alzheimer’s disease. Tau-focused treatment in Alzheimer’s disease 25 – TauRx sponsored symposium Speakers: Sue Peschin, President and CEO, Alliance for Aging Description: The search for disease- Research modifying therapies for Alzheimer’s , Executive Director, Global Coalition on disease (AD) targeting amyloid- has Melissa Mitchell β Aging been largely unsuccessful. There is now increasing interest in the tau Meryl Comer, Co-Founder, WomenAgainstAlzheimer’s tangle pathology as an alternative. Martin Prince, Head of Section of Epidemiology, Institute TauRx has led the field in understanding how the of Psychiatry, King’s College London misfolding of tau protein drives dementia. Its lead product, hydromethylthionine (LMTX®), blocks tau aggregation and is the most advanced tau-focussed program globally. Results to date support its potential to produce a large treatment effect. It is a convenient oral tablet that is well tolerated and without risk of producing amyloid-related brain damage. Such a treatment, which could be used early in the disease process, will need be complemented by novel diagnostics tools that are accessible, inexpensive, and easy to use. TauRx and GT Diagnostics have partnered to develop such tools. In this symposium we will discuss the results to date and how we aim to transform the diagnosis and treatment of AD.

Speakers:

Dr Serge Gautier, Director of the Alzheimer’s Disease Research Unit, McGill Centre for Studies in Ageing,

Prof. Claude Wischik, CEO, TauRx Pharmaceuticals Ltd Prof. Bjoern Schelter, CEO, Genting TauRx Diagnostics Centre

Prof. Tan Maw Pin, Professor of Geriatric Medicine, University of Malaya

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SYMPOSIA: SATURDAY 12 DECEMBER

Saturday 12 December 09:35–10:35 Speakers: Bharath Du, Foundation for Research and Advocacy in Taking dementia related design from research Mental Health, India into practice – supported by British Land Hoai Le, Hyper Island, Following the launch of the Joanna Klaptocz, Newcastle University 2020 World Alzheimer Report Nirupama Natarajan, Schizophrenia Research on dementia related design, Foundation India join this panel discussion and , University of New South Wales Q&A to hear more about how Claire Burley to embed dementia-related Esther Hui, University College London (UCL) design in all of our developments. Join the report leads, plus hear about two exciting projects – Canada Water, a Saturday 12 December 13:20–14:20

WORKSHOPS & SYMPOSIA large-scale urban development in London and Desert Rose House, an Australia/Saudi Arabia joint initiative. Brain health and gender: It’s time to act! We’ll discuss how to integrate design into national and – AARP sponsored symposium local dementia plans; how Alzheimer Scotland worked 26 with architects and designers to re-imagine their day care The symposium will focus resource centres; hear why it is vital that people with on brain health and gender dementia are involved at all stages of design planning; and as a life course priority, pose the question of how to make dementia design part specifically around reducing of the education curriculum. risk and raising awareness, including: We will also discuss how design has contributed to • The importance of early education (brain plasticity) and some of the dreadful issues seen in care homes and how raising awareness design can help mitigate against future infectious disease • The structure of women’s brains – are they different and pandemics. does this make women more vulnerable to Alzheimer’s and dementia? Chair: Chris Lynch, Deputy CEO, Alzheimer’s Disease • The influence and impact of hormones International • Brain health in low- and middle-income countries – challenges and innovations Panellists include: • What can we do to increase our brain health throughout our lives, but especially as we age? Richard Fleming, World Alzheimer Report Co-lead Kirsty Bennett, World Alzheimer Report Co-lead Chair: Sarah Lock, Senior Vice President for Policy, AARP John Zeisel, World Alzheimer Report Co-lead Speakers: Dennis Frost, Dementia advocate , Chief Scientific Officer, Global Council on , Joint Head of Canada Water and Lindsay Chura Emma Cariaga Brain Health Executive Committee, British Land , Executive Director, Women’s Brain , Academic Program Director, JoAnne Korten Kishan Kariippanon Health Initiative Bachelor of Public Health, University of Wollongong , Co-founder and Chief Scientific , Deputy Director, Alzheimer Scotland Maria Teresa Ferretti Joyce Gray Officer, Women’s Brain Project , Director, Summer School, TEDI Design Sarah Campbell , Executive Lead of Brain Health Scotland School Anna Borthwick , Dementia Advocate, Global Brain , CEO and Chair, Dementia Alliance Wambui Karanja Kate Swaffer Health Institute International

Saturday 12 December 13:20–14:20

Early career researcher highlights – IFPMA sponsored symposium

This session will highlight the important work of some of the early career researchers, who bring with them new thinking and determination in the dementia field.

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Wellness Nordic Relax® Chair

Proven to benefit people living with dementia through a calming multi-sensory experience

View our on-demand presentation (ID: 918) to learn about our latest study: Build in soothing music and tactile stimulation, three Novel therapeutic chair proven to benefit dementia patients. Find it in the automatic programmes offering non-pharmacological intervention programme schedule. calming sensory experience.

You can also visit our virtual booth during the conference to explore our Wellness Nordic Relax Chair.

For more information visit www.arjo.com 34th Virtual International Conference of VIRTUAL Alzheimer’s Disease International 2020 10-12 December 2020 ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE INTERNATIONAL VIRTUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE 10-12 DECEMBER 2020

SYMPOSIA: PROGRAMME AND ON DEMAND CONTENT PRODUCT SHOWCASE

On demand content The showcase sessions will highlight engaging and innovative programmes delivered by ADI members around Beyond Care Facility Operations: Creating the world along with programme and product sponsored Resilient, Engaged and Communicative presentations. Highlighted below are the sponsored Teams Focused on Patients, Family and presentations. Teamwork during COVID19 pandemic – Swedish Care International Thursday 10 December 12:20–13:20 Memory Lane Games showcase Sweden’s unique national COVID-19 strategy had earlier brought many challenges for care providers in the country Digital health apps for remote delivery of that later became relevant to care organisations worldwide. dementia care

WORKSHOPS & SYMPOSIA This symposium will address COVID-19 challenges and solutions for organisations willing to provide person-centred Using gamification and personalisation and AI to “turn dementia care based on a palliative approach. Swedish memories into games” to delight and engage dementia Silviahemmet care philosophy will be introduced as well, with patients and their carers, Memory Lane Games is launching 28 cases from nursing homes, hospitals and home care operators localised dementia care app pilots with select ADI members both in Sweden, Germany and . including Uganda Alzheimer’s Association and will be discuss how other Associations can apply. Speakers: Friday 11 December 11:40–12:40 Petra Tegman, CEO, Swedish Care International Madelen Bäcklin and Susanne Blesch, Unit Managers of Danone Nutricia showcase Geriatric department, Handens Hospital, Sweden Management of Early Alzheimer’s Disease & Mild Daniela Fonseca de Almeida Gomez, Medical Manager, Cognitive Impairment – A Local Experience Sociedade Beneficente Alemã Residencial (SBA), Brazil

Marie-Luise Bertels, Managing Partner, St Anna Stift Introduced by Professor Miia Kivipelto and featuring Kroge, Germany Dr Kaysar Mamun from Singapore General Hospital

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NETWORKING

Join our networking sessions to meet delegates and sponsors to have a chance to say hi, just as you might may

have done in an in-person event, as you grabbed a drink WORKSHOPS & SYMPOSIA or snack, or chatted to the person next to you in a session. Don’t miss out on these opportunities. Decide which hosted session you would like to join and meet delegates and hosts for just a few minutes before you can join another networking session. An opportunity to introduce yourself and you can chose to follow up with the people you met through the platform once the networking has finished to continue that chat.

Thursday 10 December 15:35–15:55

Memory Lane Games

Friday 11 December 06:40-07:00 29 Brain Bank

Friday 11 December 16:00–16:20

TauRx

Saturday 12 December 06:40-07:00

Homage Schwabe Pharma Asia Pacific

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WORKSHOPS: ADI WORKSHOPS

Thursday 10 December 14:35–15:35 Chair: Glenn Rees, Chair, Alzheimer’s Disease International (ADI) The global burden of dementia: a roundtable update on incidence, prevalence and cost Speakers: Datin Jacqueline Wong, Honourary Advisor – demensia Join ADI CEO Paola Barbarino and experts from WHO, Brunei IHME (Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation), Karolinska Institute, LSE, Kings College, and Università Dishen Kumar, host HEALTH MATTERS – astroAWANI della Svizzera Italiana as they discuss and debate issues Michael Dirk Maitimoe, Executive Director, Alzheimer’s around dementia incidence, prevalence, and cost – and Indonesia the impact of COVID-19 Amalia Fonk-Utomo, Deputy Director, Alzheimer’s Indonesia Chair: Paola Barbarino, CEO, Alzheimer’s Disease WORKSHOPS & SYMPOSIA International (ADI) Maizatul Omar, Dementia Care Skills Lead Trainer and ‘Dementia Friends Brunei’ Champion, demensia Brunei Speakers: Vipawan Jarukitpipat (Ampere), Senior Student, 30 Emma Nichols, Researcher, Institute for Health Metrics Faculty of Information and Communication Technology, and Evaluation Mahidol University, Thailand

Anders Wimo, Adjunct professor in Geriatric General Janice Chia, Founder and Managing Director, Ageing Asia Medicine, Karolinska Institute Friday 11 December 15:00–16:00 Emiliano Albanese, Head of the Division of Public Mental Health and Aging, Institute of Global Health Best practices and lessons learned on effective Tarun Dua, Medical Officer, World Health Organization fundraising initiatives – The Asia Pacific success (WHO)

Adelina Comas-Herrera, Assistant Professorial ADI’s fundraising Alzheimer University (AU) workshop Research Fellow at the Personal Social Services Research in the Asia Pacific region started in 2017. This has Unit, London School of Economics helped members to strengthen their strategy and the sustainability of their organisation. This workshop will Martin Prince, Head of Section of Epidemiology, Institute consider the principles of fundraising as well as learning of Psychiatry, Kings College London from the achievements and best practices from members in the Asia Pacific region. Thursday 10 December, On-demand content Chair: Nikki Bayliss, Head of Development, ADI

Youth Engagement Programme (YEP) – An Speakers: International Symposium; Young People and Steve Graves, Marketing Director, Nutricia Dementia: Challenges and Opportunities DY Suharya, Regional Director, Asia Pacific Regional Office, ADI The first Youth Engagement Programme (YEP) was held in conjunction with the Asia Pacific Regional Meeting and Amalia Fonk-Utomo, Deputy Director Alzheimer’s Conference in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia in August 2019 Indonesia/ Chair Alzheimer’s Indonesia Netherlands and involved 17 youth presenters from the Asia Pacific , Head of Fundraising, Alzheimer’s Region. It was a successful showcase of intergenerational Sherwan Sharip Disease Association (Singapore) solidarity and also provided a platform for engagement opportunities beyond country borders. Maggie Lee, Executive Director, Hong Kong Alzheimer’s Disease Association Youth participation and inclusivity is critical for dementia communities, as young people play a role in volunteerism, Peter Braun, Adjunct Assistant Professor, University of advocacy and awareness of dementia. Moving forward Southern California (USC) with the momentum from the Asia Pacific Regional Meeting last year, we continue to inspire youth to become advocates for persons living with dementia, volunteer in Dementia Friendly Community initiatives, at the same time to support their peers who are young carers.

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WORKSHOPS: ADI MEMBER WORKSHOPS

Thursday 10 December, On-demand content Thursday 10 December, On-demand content WORKSHOPS & SYMPOSIA Twinning session Francophone roundtable (Session in French)

The ADI Twinning Programme was launched back in 2005 There are currently 13 Francophone Alzheimer and aims to harness global knowledge and disseminate associations within the ADI network. This includes it throughout the world. The programme is relaunching 8 members: Belgium, Canada, France, Lebanon, this year, as a time-bound approach enabling peer-to- Madagascar, Mauritius, Switzerland and Tunisia; peer exchange of knowledge and experience on a specific 4 associations on our Membership Development project between two partners. By encouraging members Programme (MDP): Burundi, Cameroon, Morocco and to work together, share experiences and knowledge, we Senegal and 1 association which will be part of our MDP know that global dementia care and quality of life for next summer, Mali. people living with dementia and their carers across the During ADI’s first ever Francophone roundtable, globe will increase. representatives introduce their associations, which The session focuses on 3 different Twinnings, all at challenges this year has brought about, as well as their different stages of development: plans for 2021. The session ends with a discussion setting objectives for the Francophone group going forward. 1. Indonesia and the Netherlands, with Amalia Fonk 31 Utomo from Alzheimer Indonesia and Jos van de Poel from Alzheimer Nederland

2. Ireland and Kenya, with Fergus Timmons from the Alzheimer Society of Ireland and Elizabeth Mutunga and Wambui Karanja from Alzheimer’s & Dementia Organisation Kenya (ADOK): The Dementia Education Exchange Project Ireland Kenya (DEEPIK)

3. Ireland and Madagascar, with Tina Leonard from the Alzheimer Society of Ireland and Muriel Rason- Andriamaro from ONG Madagascar Alzheimer Masoandro Mody: Creating a newsletter

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WORKSHOPS: ADI CARE WORKSHOPS

Thursday 10 December, On-demand content Thursday 10 December, On-demand content

Strategies to support informal The long-term care COVID-19 journey: carers of people with dementia what happened and where do we go from here? A fireside chat Four well respected and experienced researchers on support for informal carers will address three issues. COVID-19 had a massive impact on people living with First, whether there is enough evidence to determine dementia living in long-term care facilities and in the effective interventions to support informal carers of people community. What happened and what have we learned? with dementia. Second, if so what approaches may be Where do we go from here? Four experts bring their most effective. Lastly, future priorities for research and unique perspective on clinical experience, research translation into practice. The seminar will show that findings, advocacy work, and the impact on carers to support for informal carers has evolved a long way over this relaxed fireside chat, where we take a deep dive into WORKSHOPS & SYMPOSIA the last three decades, that a person-centred approach issues and impact, hoping to inspire change and a better to assessing individual carer needs is vital and that multi- way forward. modal approaches work. The importance will be stressed of partnership between researchers and service providers Chair: Wendy Weidner, Research and Policy Project 32 to translate evidence into practice. Lead, Alzheimer’s Disease International (ADI)

Chair: Glenn Rees, Chair, Alzheimer’s Disease Speakers: International (ADI) Aida Suarez-Gonzalez, Postdoctoral Research Speakers: Associate, Dementia Research Centre, UCL , Professor, National Institute of Mental Laura Gitlin, Distinguished University Professor, Dean, Suvarna Alladi College of Nursing and Health Professions, Drexel Health and Neuro Sciences (NIMHANS) University Adelina Comas-Herrera, Assistant Professorial Research Fellow at the Personal Social Services Research Rose Marie Droes, Professor of Psychosocial Care for People with Dementia, Department of Psychiatry, VUmc, Unit, London School of Economics Amsterdam University Medical Centre Nicci Gerrard, Journalist and author of What dementia teaches us about love Claudia Cooper, Professor of Psychiatry of Older People’s Psychiatry, Division of Psychiatry, University College London (UCL)

Henry Brodaty, Scientia Professor, University of New South Wales, Centre for Healthy Brain Ageing

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33

Twitter @AlzDisInt @alz_sg #ADI2020 34th Virtual International Conference of VIRTUAL Alzheimer’s Disease International 2020 10-12 December 2020 ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE INTERNATIONAL VIRTUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE 10-12 DECEMBER 2020

OVERVIEW: LIVE SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME

Thursday 10 December Start End Live strand 1 Live strand 2 07:00 08:00 Opening ceremony 08:00 09:30 Plenary 1: Dementia why we all need to do more

09:30 09:35 Break Symposium: Dementia as a disability and the Symposium: Collaborations and contributions in relevance of the United Nations Conventions – Alzheimer's disease field 09:35 10:35 Dementia Alliance International Sponsored by Eisai OVERVIEW: Sponsored by Head Foundation 10:35 10:40 Break 10:40 12:10 Plenary 2: The road to awareness and friendliness

LIVE SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME 12:10 12:20 Break 12:20 13:20 Registries parallel spotlight Programme and product showcase 13:20 13:30 Break 34 Symposium: COVID-19 transforms dementia care Symposium: Envisioning the Alzheimer’s disease landscape in Qatar 13:30 14:30 healthcare system of the future Sponsored by The World Innovation Summit for Sponsored by Roche Health (WISH) and Hamad Medical Corporation 14:30 14:35 Break The global burden of dementia: a roundtable 14:35 15:35 Programme and product showcase update on incidence, prevalence and cost 15:35 15:55 Sponsor networking

Friday 11 December 06:40 07:00 Sponsor networking 07:00 08:55 Plenary 3: The science of risk reduction 08:55 09:05 Break Symposium: AlzoSure® a simple blood test that predicts clinical Dementia/Alzheimer’s before Film showcase: ADI & ITN Productions film launch Cognitive Impairment (>6 years before diagnosis): 09:05 10:05 "Hope in the age of dementia" implications on the diagnostic pathway and treatment with disease-modifying agents for patients Sponsored by Diadem 10:05 10:10 Break 10:10 11:35 Plenary 4: The journey: Diagnosis, treatment, care and support 11:35 11:40 Break 11:40 12:40 Programme and product showcase ADI accreditation project launch 12:40 12:50 Break Symposium: The time for Tau is now: Early Global Coalition on Aging and ADI: 30 Global diagnosis and Tau-focused treatment in Alzheimer’s cities – Dementia Innovation 12:50 13:50 disease Supported by Lien Foundation Sponsored by TauRx 13:50 13:55 Break

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A birdseye view of STrengthening Responses to

13:55 14:55 Programme and product showcase LIVE SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME dementia in DEveloping countries (STRiDE) 14:55 15:00 Break Symposium: Exploring cross-cultural approaches Symposium: Best practices and lessons learned to informal care: Value, burden, and bright spots 15:00 16:00 on effective fundraising initiatives – The Asia Pacific OVERVIEW: Sponsored by Biogen success 16:00 16:20 Sponsor networking

Saturday 12 December 06:40 07:00 Sponsor networking 07:00 08:30 Plenary 5: Hope springs on solid foundations: Research, innovation, data and information systems 08:30 08:35 Break 08:35 09:35 Plenary 6: COVID-19 and dementia panel discussion Symposium: Taking dementia related design from research into practice 09:35 10:35 35 Supported by British Land 10:35 10:40 Break 10:40 11:40 Dementia and the equitable society parallel spotlight Diagnosis parallel spotlight 11:40 11:45 Break 11:45 13:15 Plenary 7: Supporting those who care 13:15 13:20 Break Symposium: Early career researcher highlights Symposium: Brain health and gender: It’s time 13:20 14:20 Sponsored by IFPMA to act Sponsored by AARP 14:20 15:00 Closing ceremony

Please note: all times are GMT. Twitter @AlzDisInt @alz_sg #ADI2020 TURNING MEMORIES INTO GAMES DIGITAL HEALTH APPS FOR DEMENTIA

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LIVE SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME: THURSDAY 10 DECEMBER

Opening ceremony

07:00 08:00 LIVE SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME Chair: Paola Barbarino (United Kingdom) Speakers: • President Halimah Yacob (Singapore) • Sing Out Loud! (Singapore) • Glenn Rees (Australia) • Emily Ong (Singapore) • Peng Chye Ang (Singapore)

Plenary 1: Dementia: why we all need to do more 08:00 09:30 Chair: Glenn Rees (Australia) From global plan to national impact; why we all need to do more • Paola Barbarino (United Kingdom) Progress on the Global action plan on dementia • Devora Kestel (Switzerland) Introducing Germany’s National Dementia Strategy • Nils Dahl (Germany) 37 Q&A

09:30 09:35 Break

Dementia as a disability and the relevance of the United Nations Conventions – 09:35 10:35 Dementia Alliance International – Head Foundation sponsored symposium Chair: Kate Swaffer (Australia)

Collaborations and contributions in Alzheimer’s disease 09:35 10:35 field – Eisai sponsored symposium Chair: Keisuke Naito (Japan) Speakers: • Aoi Yoshiiwa (Japan) • Hirokazu Shirakawa (Japan)

10:35 10:40 Break

Plenary 2: The road to awareness and friendliness 10:40 12:10 Chair: Dale Goldhawk (Canada) Welcome from ADI's ambassador • Luis Guillermo Solís Rivera (Costa Rica) Why raising awareness and challenging stigma is still a top priority • Chris Lynch (United Kingdom) Media’s role in raising dementia awareness • Dishen Kumar (Malaysia) Understanding and acceptance of dementia: Where are we now? • Emily Ong (Singapore) How we are making our newspaper dementia friendly • Masahiko Yamamoto (Japan) Q&A

12:10 12:20 Break

All Dementia as a public health priority Symposium

Dementia awareness and friendliness

Please note: all times are GMT. Twitter @AlzDisInt @alz_sg #ADI2020 34th Virtual International Conference of VIRTUAL Alzheimer’s Disease International 2020 10-12 December 2020 ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE INTERNATIONAL VIRTUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE 10-12 DECEMBER 2020

LIVE SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME: THURSDAY 10 DECEMBER

Registries parallel spotlight 12:20 13:20 Chair: Thomas Cueni (Switzerland) Registries and observational longitudinal studies of brain aging in Québec: does participant engagement increase satisfaction and retention rate? • Serge Gauthier (Canada) Enhancing service integration and referral through "Taipei dementia registry and case management system" • Lin Hui-Ya (Taiwan) Towards building a citizen science community: An Australia-wide dementia research participation and public engagement platform • Yun-Hee Jeon (Australia) Q&A LIVE SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME Programme and product showcase 12:20 13:20 Chair: Rosie Houghton (United Kingdom) 38 Memory lane games – digital health apps for remote delivery of dementia care • Bruce Elliott (United Kingdom) • Charlie Robinson (United Kingdom) • Peter Quayle (United Kingdom) Spominčica – Alzheimer Slovenija – Dementia friendly points • Štefanija Lukič Zlobec (Slovenia) Alzheimer's Disease Association Singapore and TADA, Chinese Taipei – Voices for Hope study trip • Ruth Wong, Alzheimer’s Disease Association Singapore (Singapore) • Li-Yu Tang, TADA, Chinese Taipei

13:20 13:30 Break

Envisioning the Alzheimer's disease healthcare system of the future 13:30 14:30 Roche sponsored symposium Chair: Jo Browning (Switzerland) Welcome and introduction • Jo Browning (Switzerland) The Alzheimer’s disease patient journey of the future • Paola Barbarino (United Kingdom) Panel discussion: Perspectives on the patient journey before and after DMTs (Disease Modifying Therapies) How to drive change in the Alzheimer’s disease healthcare system • Paola Barbarino (United Kingdom) • Stéphane Epelbaum (France) • John Beard (Australia) • Geoff Kerchner (Switzerland) Summary and closing • Jo Browning (Switzerland)

Information systems for dementia All Symposium

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LIVE SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME: THURSDAY 10 DECEMBER

COVID-19 Transforms dementia care landscape in Qatar – The World Innovation

13:30 14:30 LIVE SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME Summit for Health (WISH) and Hamad Medical Corporation sponsored symposium Speakers: • Hanadi Al Hamad (Qatar) • Maryam Motowa (Qatar) • Mani Chandran (Qatar)

14:30 14:35 Break

The global burden of dementia: a roundtable update on incidence, prevalence and cost 14:35 15:35 Chair: Paola Barbarino (United Kingdom) Speakers: • Tarun Dua (Switzerland) • Emma Nichols (USA) • Maëlenn Guerchet (France) • Anders Wimo (Sweden) • Adelina Comas-Herrera (United Kingdom) • Emiliano Albanese (Italy) • Martin Prince (United Kingdom) Q&A 39

Programme and product showcase 14:35 15:35 Chair: Laura Dabas (France) The Alzheimer Society of Ireland – Hear our voice • Clodagh Whelan and Sean Mackell (Ireland) Alzheimer’s Disease Chinese – dementia friendly exercises • Huali Wang (China) Fundación TASE (Trascender con Amor, Servicio y Excelencia) – Memory walk • Cristina Calderón () Barbados Alzheimer’s Association – Youth Arm • Carissa Nicholls (Barbados)

Sponsor networking 15:35 15:55 • Memory Lane Games

Symposium Dementia research and innovation All

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LIVE SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME: FRIDAY 11 DECEMBER

Sponsor networking 06:40 07:00 • Brain Bank Singapore

Plenary 3: The science of risk reduction 07:00 08:55 Chair: Katrin Seeher (Switzerland) Multi-domain prevention: the new treatment paradigm • Miia Kivipelto (Sweden) Mind-ADmini – a multi-domain intervention to prevent progression to dementia: participants’ experiences of being involved in the pilot – video • Roman Szydlowski (Sweden) From FINGER to SINGER – the Singapore experience • Christopher Chen (Singapore)

LIVE SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME What policies might prevent dementia? • Gill Livingston (United Kingdom) Q&A 40 08:55 09:05 Break

Film showcase: ADI & ITN Productions film launch "Hope in the age of dementia" 09:05 10:05 Chairs: Sharon Thomas and Paola Barbarino (United Kingdom) • Martin Traber (Switzerland) • University of Auckland (New Zealand) • Sonya Miller (Switzerland) • Rickard Forsman (Sweden) • Antonella Santuccione Chadha • Fiona Keogh (Ireland) (Switzerland) • Alison Johnstone (United Kingdom)

AlzoSure® a simple blood test that predicts clinical dementia/Alzheimer’s before cognitive impairment (>6 years before diagnosis): implications on the diagnostic 09:05 10:05 pathway and treatment with disease-modifying agents for patients Diadem sponsored symposium Chairs: Paul Kinnon and Simona Piccirella (Italy) • Jeff Cummings (USA) • Anne Fagan (USA) • Giovanni Frisoni (Switzerland)

10:05 10:10 Break

Plenary 4: The journey: diagnosis, treatment, care and support 10:10 11:35 Chair: Jason Foo (Singapore) Welcome from ADI's ambassador • Queen Sofia(Spain) Making sense of detection of cognitive disorders: How early is early enough? • John Morris (USA) Social customs, expectations and religion in shaping the care provided • Hamed Al Sinawi (Oman) How to build a human friendly environment • Michael Schmieder (Switzerland) Getting a dementia diagnosis and caregiving resources in Africa • Violet Okech (Kenya) Q&A

Symposium Dementia risk reduction All Dementia diagnosis, treatment, care and support

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LIVE SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME: FRIDAY 11 DECEMBER

11:35 11:40 Break LIVE SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME Programme and product showcase 11:40 12:40 Chair: Dale Goldhawk (Canada) Danone showcase – management of early Alzheimer’s disease & mild cognitive impairment – a local experience • Miia Kivipelto (Sweden) and Kaysar Mamun (Singapore) Alzheimer’s New Zealand – Move • Catherine Hall (New Zealand) 4get-me-not Alzheimer's Organisation Dubai – virtual ideathon • Desirée Vlekken (Dubai)

ADI accreditation project launch 11:40 12:40 Chair: Paola Barbarino (United Kingdom) Introduction • DY Suharya (Indonesia) 41 Overview of the process • Mary Flynn (United Kingdom) Website overview • Taylor Paatalo (United Kingdom) Why accreditation is important for Kiang Wu Nursing College and Macau Alzheimer’s Disease Association • Alice Tsang (Macau)

12:40 12:50 Break

Global Coalition on Aging and ADI: 30 global cities – Dementia Innovation, 12:50 13:50 supported by Lien Foundation Chair: Chris Lynch (United Kingdom) Speakers: • Ricardo Allegri (Argentina) • Melissa Mitchell (USA) • Hanadi Al Hamad (Qatar) • George Vrandenberg (USA) • Premkumar Raja (India) • Huali Wang (China) • Kate Swaffer (Australia)

The time for Tau is now: Early diagnosis and Tau-focused treatment 12:50 13:50 in Alzheimer’s disease – TauRx sponsored symposium Speakers: • Serge Gauthier (Canada) • Bjoern Schelter (United Kingdom) • Claude Wischik (United Kingdom) • Tan Maw Pin (Malaysia)

13:50 13:55 Break

All Symposium

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LIVE SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME: FRIDAY 11 DECEMBER

Programme and product showcase 13:55 14:55 Chair: Laura Dabas (France) Alzheimer Scotland – Action on Dementia – Dementia dogs • Joyce Gray and Fiona Corner (United Kingdom) Alzheimer’s Association Lebanon – Karaoke and Anghami music streaming platform collaboration • Georges Karam (Lebanon) Alzheimer’s Association (US) • Carlos Londono (USA) World Alzheimer's Month 2020 • Chris Lynch (United Kingdom)

LIVE SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME A birdseye view of STrengthening Responses to dementia 13:55 14:55 in DEveloping countries (STRiDE) Chair: Adelina Comas-Herrera and Martin Knapp (United Kingdom) 42 • The STRiDE team

14:55 15:00 Break

Exploring cross-cultural approaches to informal care: value, burden, and bright spot 15:00 16:00 Biogen sponsored symposium Chair: Meryl Comer (USA) Speakers: • Sue Peschin (USA) • Martin Prince (United Kingdom) • Melissa Mitchell (USA)

Best practices and lessons learned on effective fundraising initiatives 15:00 16:00 The Asia Pacific success Chair: Nikki Bayliss (United Kingdom) The journey in fundraising, the company’s perspectives • Steve Graves (United Kingdom) Successful Fundraising Activities from ADI members • DY Suharya (Indonesia) Community based fundraising in Indonesia and overseas diaspora • Amalia Fonk-Utomo (The Netherlands) Towards a dementia inclusive society • Sherwan Sharip (Singapore) Building partnerships with corporates for fundraising, public education and dementia friendly community development • Maggie Lee (Hong Kong) Principles of fundraising • Peter Braun (USA)

Sponsor networking 16:00 16:20 • TauRx

All Symposium

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LIVE SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME: SATURDAY 12 DECEMBER

Sponsor networking 06:40 07:00 • Homage LIVE SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME • Schwabe Pharma Asia Pacific Plenary 5: Hope springs on solid foundations: 07:00 08:30 Research, innovation, data and information systems Chair: Henry Brodaty (Australia) Research development in dementia: updates and advances • Alireza Atri (USA) National Dementia Plan of Korea. Past 15 years, and coming 5 years • Seong Yoon Kim (South Korea) Hope: Oops!, there goes another rubber tree plant • Eileen and Dubhglas Taylor (Australia) Q&A

08:30 08:35 Break 43 Plenary 6: COVID-19 and dementia panel discussion 08:35 09:35 Chair: Paola Barbarino (United Kingdom) Doing dementia differently • Jason van Genderen (Australia) Advocating in the time of a pandemic – the French experience • Lorène Gilly (France) Worst hit: dementia during Coronavirus • Fiona Carragher (United Kingdom) • Michelle Anlacan () Flexibility and adaptability during World Alzheimer’s Month • Edna Williams (British Virgin Islands) Dementia and COVID-19: the use of new and old resources to face future challenges • Mario Possenti (Italy) Reflections in a pandemic world • Jason Foo (Singapore) • Huali Wang (China) Q&A

Taking dementia related design from research into practice – supported by British Land 09:35 10:35 Chair: Chris Lynch (United Kingdom) Speakers: • Emma Cariaga (United Kingdom) • John Zeisel (USA) • Kishan Kariippanon (Australia) • Joyce Gray (United Kingdom) • Richard Fleming (Australia) • Kirsty Bennett (Australia) • Dennis Frost (Australia) • Sarah Campbell (United Kingdom)

10:35 10:40 Break

Symposium Dementia research and innovation Dementia as a public health priority

Dementia diagnosis, treatment, care and support

Please note: all times are GMT. Twitter @AlzDisInt @alz_sg #ADI2020 34th Virtual International Conference of VIRTUAL Alzheimer’s Disease International 2020 10-12 December 2020 ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE INTERNATIONAL VIRTUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE 10-12 DECEMBER 2020

LIVE SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME: SATURDAY 12 DECEMBER

Dementia and the equitable society parallel spotlight 10:40 11:25 Chair: Lydia Lanman (Switzerland) DETERMIND protocol: Exploring and addressing inequalities in dementia care • Ben Hicks (United Kingdom) Enabling adventures with dementia: the journey towards Brisbane Airport becoming “dementia friendly” • Maria Therese O’Riley (Australia) Q&A

Diagnosis parallel spotlight 10:40 11:40 Chair: Antonella Santuccione Chadha (Switzerland) Pseudodementia, pseudopseudodementia and pseudodepression

LIVE SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME • Henry Brodaty (Australia) Nothing about us without us in diagnosis: personal perspectives of bvFTD • Juanita Hughes (Australia) 44 Profiles of the different diagnostic outcomes at the NHSCT Memory Service • Frances Duffy (United Kingdom) Q&A

11:40 11:45 Break

Plenary 7: Supporting those who care 11:45 13:15 Chair: Serge Gauthier (Canada) Welcome from ADI's ambassador • Queen Silvia (Sweden) Challenges of converting economic evidence into better policy and practice • Martin Knapp (United Kingdom) Celebration of caregiving in dementia: beyond burden to mastery • Wee Shiong Lim (Singapore) Namaste Care program for maintaining quality of life in advanced dementia • Joyce Simard (USA) • Ladislav Volicer (USA) Q&A

13:15 13:20 Break

Dementia as a public health priority Dementia diagnosis, treatment, care and support

Support for dementia carers

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LIVE SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME: SATURDAY 12 DECEMBER

Early career researcher highlights – IFPMA sponsored symposium

13:20 14:20 LIVE SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME Chair: Nikki Bayliss (United Kingdom) CST international – a mixed method implementation research of CST in LMICs – India site update • Bharath Du (India) • Hoai Le (Vietnam) Cognitive Stimulation Therapy (CST) for people with dementia in Tanzania: An implementation research programme • Joanna Klaptocz (United Kingdom) Use of social robots in dementia care in India • Nirupama Natarajan (India) Improving quality of life for people living with dementia through better care and prevention of changed behaviours and psychological symptoms • Claire Burley (Australia) The development and evaluation of virtual individual cognitive stimulation therapy, an 45 evidence-based teletherapy for people with mild to moderate dementia • Esther Hui (United Kingdom) Brain health and gender: It’s time to act! AARP sponsored symposium 13:20 14:20 Chair: Sarah Lock (USA) Speakers: • Lindsay Chura (USA) • Anna Borthwick (United Kingdom) • JoAnne Korten (Canada) • Wambui Karanja (Kenya) • Maria Teresa Ferretti (Switzerland)

Closing ceremony 14:20 15:00 Chair: Paola Barbarino (United Kingdom) • Jason Foo (Singapore) Hope in the age of dementia • Rohani Rahmat and Mohamed Said (Singapore) Piano solo • Noriyo Washizu (Japan)

Symposium All

Please note: all times are GMT. Twitter @AlzDisInt @alz_sg #ADI2020 A NEW ENERGY IN NEUROSCIENCE

PLANNED PROGRAMMES IN ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE, MIGRAINE AND EPILEPSY

CERECIN: A LEADER IN TARGETING BIOENERGETICS

& METABOLISM IN CNS DISEASE Ketone bodies act as crucial energy substrates for the brain and peripheral tissues, as well as important cellular signalling molecules. Cerecin’s investigational ketogenic compounds leverage this highly conserved physiological process to target a broad range of neurological diseases.

MEET OUR TEAM AT ADI

Judy Walker, MD FRCPC Samuel Henderson, PhD Bruce Morimoto, PhD Lilian Chow, MRDM Chief Medical Officer Chief Scientific Officer VP Drug Development VP Clinical Operations and Regulatory Affairs

ABOUT CERECIN Cerecin is a global healthcare company with almost 20 years of leadership as an innovator in brain health research. We are engaged in the development of novel, evidence-based therapeutics focused on improving the lives of those suffering from neurological diseases. These investigational compounds target conditions ranging from age-associated memory impairment to some of the most devastating neurological diseases.

Cerecin is headquartered in the US, Singapore, and Australia. Charles Stacey, MD President & CEO

Explore how we are developing innovative brain health solutions at: www.cerecin.com

© 2020 Cerecin AC-20-895 11/20 A NEW www.adi2020.org ENERGY IN NEUROSCIENCE ON-DEMAND SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME COVID-19 and dementia I ON-DEMAND SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME 1-01 Chair: David Jeffreys (United Kingdom) Lyneta Russell and 950 COVID-19 and dementia care and support in New Zealand Kathy Peri (New Zealand) PLANNED PROGRAMMES IN Investigating the burden and needs of informal caregivers of people ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE, MIGRAINE 981 with dementia during the COVID-19 epidemic in a severely hit region in Martina Lattanzi (Italy) AND EPILEPSY Southern Europe Impact of day care service suspension in COVID-19 pandemic on 939 the caregiving stress of caregivers of people with dementia and the Bel Wong (Hong Kong) CERECIN: A LEADER IN functional status of people with dementia TARGETING BIOENERGETICS A qualitative exploration of the experiences of family caregivers of Jayeeta Rajagopalan 990 & METABOLISM IN CNS DISEASE persons with dementia during the COVID-19 pandemic in India. (India) Julie Watson and Getting on with life in the midst of a pandemic – the development and Ketone bodies act as crucial energy substrates for the brain 944 Agnes Houston (United evaluation of the online GO programme 47 and peripheral tissues, as well as important cellular signalling Kingdom) molecules. Cerecin’s investigational ketogenic compounds The story of an emerging crisis: understanding the impact of COVID-19 Emily Cousins (United 925 leverage this highly conserved physiological process to target on care home residents living with dementia Kingdom) a broad range of neurological diseases. COVID-19 and dementia II 1-02 Chair: Aida Suarez-Gonzalez (Spain) MEET OUR TEAM AT ADI Long-term effects of COVID-19 public health measures on UK social Clarissa Giebel (United 936 support service usage and mental well-being in dementia and ageing Kingdom) Are modifiable dementia risk factors exacerbated by COVID-19 957 Sarang Kim (Australia) containment measures? Young caregivers: COVID-19 online support created via Kristine Newman 923 recommendations of rural and urban communities (Canada) Consequences of social isolation on nursing home residents during the Marleen Prins (The 961 visitor ban in Dutch nursing homes Netherlands) Sarah Wallcook The pressure to participate digitally during the COVID-19 pandemic: an 963 and Elin Jakobsson issue of justice Judy Walker, MD FRCPC Samuel Henderson, PhD Bruce Morimoto, PhD Lilian Chow, MRDM (Sweden) Chief Medical Officer Chief Scientific Officer VP Drug Development VP Clinical Operations Rapid development of a COVID-19 specific decision- for people with Emily West (United and Regulatory Affairs 978 dementia and their families Kingdom) Dementia and the equitable society II ABOUT CERECIN 1-03 Chair: Daisy Acosta (Dominican Republic) Cerecin is a global healthcare company with almost 20 years of leadership Developing a theory of change to address the challenge of dementia 264 Erica Breuer (Australia) as an innovator in brain health research. We are engaged in the development care across and in middle-income countries of novel, evidence-based therapeutics focused on improving the lives of those Quantifying access to dementia care: a review on concept and 630 Xinxin Cin (Hong Kong) suffering from neurological diseases. These investigational compounds target measurement of service accessibility conditions ranging from age-associated memory impairment to some of the Helen Rochford- most devastating neurological diseases. Promoting human rights based approach through the active involvement Brennan and Clodagh 846 of people with dementia Whelan (United Cerecin is headquartered in the US, Singapore, and Australia. Charles Stacey, MD Kingdom) President & CEO

Dementia as a public health priority Explore how we are developing innovative brain health solutions at: www.cerecin.com Twitter @AlzDisInt @alz_sg #ADI2020 © 2020 Cerecin AC-20-895 11/20 34th Virtual International Conference of VIRTUAL Alzheimer’s Disease International 2020 10-12 December 2020 ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE INTERNATIONAL VIRTUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE 10-12 DECEMBER 2020

ON-DEMAND SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME

Sarah Drew and Emily The consequences of providing unpaid care to people living with 867 Freeman (United dementia in middle-income countries Kingdom) Dementia and I 1-04 Chair: Elina Suzuki (France) Jacqueline Hoogendam 620 Dementia policy in the Netherlands 2021–2030 (The Netherlands) Toward the development of a dementia plan – the Vietnam situational Tuan Anh Nguyen 831 analysis (Australia) Narendhar Ramasamy 690 Journey towards a country plan-Indian experience (India) Evaluating the 7 action steps of Indonesia’s dementia national strategy Yuda Turana ON-DEMAND SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME 610 and the role of Alzheimer’s Indonesia Organization (Indonesia) 48 Sarajevo statement on dementia in western Balkan countries – Example Osman Ku uk (Bosnia 141 č of Regional cooperation and Challenge for policy makers and Herzegovina) 451 Macao dementia policy as the 27th globally: challenges and prospects Lek Long Lo (Macau) Dementia and public policy II 1-05 Chair: William Wan (Singapore) Preparedness of health systems in six countries to deliver a disease- 309 Soeren Mattke (USA) modifying treatment for Alzheimer’s disease Knowledge comes first, nationwide caregiver and health professional's Štefanija Luki Zlobec 794 č education programme (Slovenia) Qatar national dementia plan – the first in an Arab nation “How did we Hanadi Al Hamad 947 get there?” (Qatar) Delisting of "anti-Alzheimer's drugs": an exclusive survey confirms the 280 Lorène Gilly (France) distress caused to people with dementia and their caregivers Where does dementia policy belong? Exploring the Caribbean policy Rochelle Amour 800 landscape (Jamaica) Economics of dementia 1-06 Chair: Anders Wimo (Sweden) Economic impact of behaviour support services for people living with 435 Tom Morris (Australia) dementia in Australia A preliminary survey of people with dementia and financial exploitation 360 Su-Yuan Chan (Taiwan) in Taiwan 346 US healthcare spending on dementia – 1996–2016 Joseph Dieleman (USA) Making dementia carers count in economic studies: what does the Kim-Huong Nguyen 761 clinical research us? (Australia) Morgan Griffith-David 455 The economic cost of dementia to English businesses (United Kingdom)

Dementia as a public health priority

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ON-DEMAND SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME

The global policy environment ON-DEMAND SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME 1-07 Chair: Jacqueline Hoogendam (The Netherlands) Developing person public involvement (PPI) in Irish dementia research: Laura O'Philbin and 500 empowering people with dementia and caregivers to exercise their right Kevin Quaid (Ireland) to be involved in research that impacts them Nothing about us without us: creating the first Canadian charter of rights 231 Riley Malvern (Canada) for people with dementia 755 Dementia, disability and the CRPD Kate Swaffer (Australia) Dementia and the global mental health agendas – synergistic Emiliano Albanese 882 opportunities in the SDGs era (Italy) 525 What can we do for the right of work for people with dementia in Taiwan Li-Yu Tang (Taiwan) Hidden no more: dementia and disability, an All Party Parliamentary Ella Robinson (United 454 Group (APPG) inquiry Kingdom) 49 Attitudes and awareness I 2-01 Chair: Mary Michael (USA) Alister Robertson (New 751 Alzheimer’s New Zealand Dementia Declaration: Our lives matter Zealand) Dementia Stigma Reduction (DESeRvE): randomised controlled trial to 432 Sarang Kim (Australia) reduce dementia-related stigma in the general public The first national survey of attitudes of stigma against dementia in Rosie Ching 693 Singapore (Singapore) Maxine Pritchard 477 Becoming a global dementia friendly bank (United Kingdom) Attitudes towards people with memory related diseases as volunteers in Emmaleena Niemi 482 Finland (Finland) Exploring how the dynamics of story support people with dementia to Alison Ward (United 488 give voice to their expenses and raise awareness of what it means to Kingdom) live with dementia Attitudes and awareness II 2-02 Chair: Adelina Comas-Herrera (United Kingdom) Maree McCabe 838 Designing a new future for dementia in Australia (Australia) Remember Me film festival breakthrough: medical students’ perspective Michael Nathaniel 853 on breaking dementia stigma from younger age Budiarso (Indonesia) The lived experience of registered nurses providing care for people with Duangrat Monthaisong 774 dementia in Thailand (Thailand) Stephen Antwi (United 650 Exploring the experiences of living with dementia in Ghana Kingdom) Understanding, beliefs and treatment of dementia in Pakistan: a case Asghar Zaidi (South 629 study of the disease in low- and middle-income countries Korea) Karen Louise 587 Understandings and experiences of dementia in Fiji Johnston (Australia)

Dementia as a public health priority Dementia awareness and friendliness

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ON-DEMAND SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME

Community partnerships/public-private-people partnerships 2-03 Chair: Wendy Weidner (United Kingdom) Developing a dementia tracking solution – involving people with Diana Schack Thoft 398 dementia and their carer (Denmark) Alice Hardy (United 464 Insurance united against dementia Kingdom) Meera Pattabiraman 583 Kerala State initiative on dementia – a pioneering successful model (India) Temitope Hannah 702 Dementia not witch craft: public lecture to create awareness Farombi (Nigeria) Noriyo Washizu 708 Learning from trials and errors (Japan) ON-DEMAND SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME 896 "Ca' Nostra": a film that tells a co-housing for people with dementia Andrea Fabbo (Italy) 50 Dementia friendliness 2-04 Chair: Meera Pattabiraman (Chennai) Collaborative citizen engagement to create dementia-friendly 893 Casey Acklin (USA) communities: assessment to action Exploring participation of older people living with and without dementia Sophie Nadia Gaber 135 in Sweden and the UK (Sweden) Build up a dementia friendly generation. Involvement of adolescent Francesca Arosio 374 students in “Abbiategrasso Dementia Friendly Community” project (Italy) Maria O'Reilly 347 I-D-Air travel: international dementia-air travel and Alison Warren (Australia) Diverse populations 2-05 Chair: Paul Attea (USA) A dementia education workshop to support people with dementia in Joanne Brooke (United 243 prison Kingdom) Dementia in minority ethnic populations: what and whom are we Moise Roche (United 563 researching? Kingdom) In our right mind: Alzheimer’s and other dementias’ impact in Renee Chenault Fattah 749 communities of colour (USA) Amalia Fonk Utomo 402 Accessing Indonesian immigrant as minority group in The Netherlands (The Netherlands) Prioritising prisons and dementia? Exploring the double stigma of Sophie Gaber 134 people with dementia in prisons (Sweden) Youth engagement programme (YEP) – an international symposium 2-06 young people and dementia: challenges and opportunities Chair: Glenn Rees (Australia) Speakers: • Amalia Funk-Utomo (Indonesia) • Datin Jacqueline Wong (Malaysia) • Maizatul Omar (Brunei) • Dishen Kumar (Malaysia) • Vipawan Jarukitpipat (Thailand) • Michael Dirk Maitimoe (Indonesia) • Janice Chia (Singapore)

Dementia awareness and friendliness

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Cognitive reserve presentation ON-DEMAND SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME 3-01 Chair: Danielle Goldfarb (USA) Multi-year square dancing is associated with superior executive function 146 but not memory in middle-aged and older Chinese women: a propensity Jing Liao (China) score matching analysis Risk reduction and prevention 3-02 Chair: Ricardo Allegri (Argentina) Maintain your brain: a randomised controlled trial of an internet-based Henry Brodaty 225 lifestyle intervention to prevent cognitive decline and dementia (Australia) Association of dietary patterns with cognition in older adults: findings 711 Sophie Chen (Australia) from Sydney memory and aging study Association between hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and cognitive 362 function in a community dwelling older women: Bushehr Elderly Health Farshad Sharifi(Iran) (BEH) program 51 DePEC – Dementia Prevention and Enhanced Care: The feasibility of a mixed-methods, dietary intervention study to reduce salt intake and Andrea McGrattan 229 increase high-nitrate vegetable consumption among middle-aged and (United Kingdom) older Malaysian adults with high blood pressure Primary prevention workshop "Caring my brain" of A.L.M.A. association: Noemí María Medina 862 fight against Alzheimer's disease, Argentina (Argentina) Risk factors I 3-03 Chair: Francesca Mangialasche (Sweden) Sex difference in risk factors for dementia and cognitive decline: results Jessica Gong 228 from the ADVANCE study in diabetes (Australia) 170 Hearing impairment and dementia in later life: 10/66 cohort study Ji Hee Kim (South Korea) Sex difference of cognitive function trajectories and their determinants 759 in older adults: evidence from the Chinese longitudinal healthy longevity Lihui Tu (China) survey Social network and cognitive functioning in the oldest old – Results from Susanne Roehr 390 the AgeCoDe/AgeQualiDe cohort (Germany) Lovatiana 757 Clinical profile of dementias seen in consultation in Antananarivo Andriamboavonjy (Madagascar) How does rural-to-urban migration influence the cognitive ageing 389 Jin Zhao Xie (China) trajectories of Chinese older adults: a prospective cohort analysis Risk factors II 3-04 Chair: Elizabeth Mutunga (Kenya) Cognitive health expectancies of cardiovascular risk factors for cognitive 138 Lidan Zheng (Australia) decline and dementia Risk prediction models to predict dementia in type II diabetes: a scoping Wardah Khalid (United 484 review Kingdom) Role of sex in the association between childhood socioeconomic Katrin Wolfova (Czech 552 position and cognitive performance in later-life Republic)

Dementia risk reduction

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ON-DEMAND SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME

Cognitive impairment reversely associated with statins consumption and 471 high density lipoprotein: the results of Bushehr Elderly Health Program Farshad Sharifi(Iran) (BEHP) Association between sleep duration and cognitive function among Chinese 842 Ming Zhang (China) older adults: results from the Chinese longitudinal healthy longevity survey Association of dietary salt intake and cognition in middle-aged and older 590 Devi Mohan (Malaysia) adults: a systematic review

Diagnosis II 4-01 Chair: George Vradenburg (USA) Prediction of patients with mild cognitive impairment conversion to 632 Sung-Han Lin (Taiwan) Alzheimer’s disease using diffusion tensor imaging

ON-DEMAND SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME Peter Daniel Fransquet 535 Blood based DNA methylation biomarkers of dementia (Australia) 52 A critical review of DSM-V cognitive impairment and dementia definition Roberto Ventura 857 and a rational proposal to the found voids (Uruguay) Diagnostic tools 4-02 Chair: Lenny Shallcross (United Kingdom) Validation of a brief app-based dementia screening tool for rural primary Stella-Maria Paddick 413 healthcare workers in rural Tanzania (United Kingdom) Tau Ming Liew 285 A 4-item case-finding tool to detect dementia in older persons (Singapore) Endpoints of neurodegeneration for diagnosis of mild cognitive Georgios Ponirakis 634 impairment and dementia: volumetric MR brain imaging and corneal (Qatar) confocal microscopy Diagnostic accuracy of Everyday Ability Scale for India (EASI) for 613 Thomas Iype (India) dementia in a rural population, South India Diagnostic accuracy of the 10/66 dementia assessment tool in M ori, ā Adrian Martinez Ruiz 284 Fijian-Indian, Samoan and Tongan Elders with memory problems living (New Zealand) in South Auckland, New Zealand Towards novel tools for discriminating healthy adults from people with Marianna Tsatali 638 neurocognitive disorders: A pilot study utilising the REMEDES for (Greece) Alzheimer (R4Alz) battery Dignity and spirituality 4-03 Chair: David Jolley (United Kingdom) Islam and mental disorders of the elderly: religious texts, beliefs system Suhad Daher-Nashif 700 and caregiving practices (Qatar) Implementing a risk negotiation conversation tool into practice: Claudia Meyer 684 experiences of a community aged care organisation (Australia) 914 The development of dementia friendly churches in Taiwan Li-Yu Tang (Taiwan)

Dementia risk reduction Dementia diagnosis, treatment, care and support

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End of life and palliative care ON-DEMAND SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME 4-04 Chair: Petra Tegman (Sweden) Guiding early decision making for palliative approaches and end-of-life 719 Anne Kenny (USA) care in persons living with dementia What causes misalignment between caregivers’ overall goal of care and Hazirah Mohamad 616 their preference for potentially life extending interventions for persons (Singapore) with severe dementia? Uptake of, knowledge about and self-efficacy in advance care planning 640 does not differ among types of nursing home staff and is lowest in Joni Gilissen (Belgium) dementia Cross-cultural conceptualisation of a good end of life with dementia: a Mayumi Nishimura 334 meta-qualitative study (Japan) Supporting persons with dementia to age and die in place – a case 802 vignette to illustrate a home healthcare model with palliative care for Cinthia Lim (Singapore) 53 advanced dementia Design, architecture and the built environment I 4-05 Chair: Richard Fleming (Australia) Independence and autonomy in a familiar environment at the world’s Natasha Chadwick 415 first residential aged care microtown (Australia) Re-orienting an environmental assessment tool for use with people living 313 Dennis Frost (Australia) with dementia The built environment and its impact on embodied selfhood: social 497 Nancy Brown (Israel) engagement in a day centre for persons with dementia Participation in the community among people with and without Habib Chaudhury 145 dementia: destinations and perceptions of challenges (Canada) Dementia-friendly acute care environments: approaches for research Gesine Marquardt 333 and design (Germany) Design, architecture and the built environment II 4-06 Chair: Kirsty Bennett (Australia) Interior architecture and design for the enhancement of spaces used by Gilly Susan Craft 948 those with dementia and Alzheimer's (United Kingdom) Towards an integrative agenda for research on dementia-friendly and Kishore Seetharaman 954 inclusive neighbourhood design (Canada) Nursing homes, C0VID-19, and designing for dementia: finding a 980 Thomas Grey (Ireland) balance between quality of life, infection control, and resilience The neighbourhood, Canberra: transforming residential care for people Jane Forbes 959 living with dementia in Canberra, Australia Thompson (Australia) Helen Beazley 967 Caring home not care home (Australia) Juliet Holt Klinger and 919 Current controversies in residential dementia care design Laura Busalacchi (USA)

Dementia diagnosis, treatment, care and support

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ON-DEMAND SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME

Young onset dementia and mild cognitive impairment 4-07 Chair: Kate Swaffer (Australia) Liana Apostolova 713 Advancing clinical and biomarker research in AD: the LEAD study (USA) B Sally Rimkeit, Brigid The Younger Onset Dementia Aotearoa Trust (YODAT): strategic Ryan, Rob Calder and 607 management plan 2020 Joanne Loveridge (New Zealand) Comparing advance care planning in young-onset dementia in the USA Romy Van Rickstal 481 vs Belgium: challenges relate to societal context (Belgium) Factors influencing fear of falling in individuals with different types of 376 Ya-Yuan Yang (Taiwan) mild cognitive impairment ON-DEMAND SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME Social cognitive performance in older adults with and without mild Russell Jude Chander 618 54 cognitive impairment (Australia) Early detection of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) among community Iris Rawtaer 672 living seniors: feasibility of an in-home sensor monitoring system to (Singapore) detect changes in behaviour patterns Models of care 4-08 Chair: Brian Lawlor (Ireland) 887 Tunisian Alzheimer’s disease care pathway Goudier Riadh (Tunisia) Transforming every day care for people living with advanced dementia Dawn Brooker (United 383 in care homes: findings from the process evaluation of Namaste Care Kingdom) Intervention UK Roshaslina Rosli 351 Challenges and research priorities for dementia care in Malaysia (Malaysia) Towards a dementia friendly hospital – treatment of acute patients with Ursula Sottong 909 dementia as comorbidity in a special care unit, “Station Silvia”: results of (Germany) a 3-years evaluation study Bernadette Rock 666 Evaluating & planning of future day care for people with dementia (Ireland) 311 Reducing hospital readmissions of persons with dementia Michael Splaine (USA) Post-diagnostic support 4-09 Chair: Ngaire Kerse (New Zealand) Post-diagnostic dementia care and support in low and middle income Susan Moloney (United 326 countries: the Malaysia perspective Kingdom) Effective post diagnostic primary care-led dementia care: identifying Alison Wheatley 558 core components of care (United Kingdom) From plan to impact to quality improvement: a review of national and Marie Poole (United 493 international approaches to improve diagnosis and post-diagnostic Kingdom) support for people living with dementia What works?: A process evaluation of translation of dementia care Lenore de la Perrelle 598 guidelines into practice (Australia)

Dementia diagnosis, treatment, care and support

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ON-DEMAND SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME

Lara Suzanne ON-DEMAND SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME Exploring the information needs of people with mild dementia and their 147 Hitchcock (New care partner, post-diagnosis at a New Zealand memory clinic Zealand) Intermediate burden predicts increased risk of caregiver stress at 1-year: Sabrina Lau 821 longitudinal follow-up of ZBI burden clusters (Singapore) Social isolation, loneliness, depression and the consequences 4-10 for people with dementia and carers Chair: Noriyo Washizu (Japan) Perceptions and experiences of family caregivers in caring for a person 144 Asmah Husaini (Brunei) with dementia in Brunei, a country with collectivistic family values 310 Living alone with dementia Kate Gordon (USA) Diagnosis Alzheimer. the beginning of social isolation, loneliness and Tania Martinez San 582 depression Martin (Spain) Juan Camilo Urazan 55 717 Aging and depression, correlation in a sample of Bogotan older adults () T&SCon: the potential of technology to support social connectedness for Louise McCabe 373 people with dementia (United Kingdom) Well-being and quality of life 4-11 Chair: Chris Lynch (United Kingdom) Aparador de Recuerdos: an exploration merging visual art into a Verlyn Anne Basaysay 205 functional design to address cognitive decline among Filipino elderly Kim (Philippines) Enhancing the value of care for patients with dementia in the acute Poh Peng Tay 385 hospital (Singapore) Using GPS safer walking technology to promote identity and well-being Esme Wood (United 233 through engagement in meaningful outdoor occupations Kingdom) Routine measurement of quality of life in care homes: feasible, Laura Jane Hughes 387 achievable, and usable (United Kingdom) Suzanne Lesley Implementation of Namaste Care for people with severe dementia living 379 Mumford (United in care homes in the UK Kingdom) Christine Thelker 268 Dementia and wellbeing: helping us thrive (Canada) Psychosocial interventions 4-12 Chair: Nori Graham (United Kingdom) CST-international: development of an implementation plan for Brazil, Aimee Spector (United 639 India and Tanzania Kingdom) The indescribable pain: using metaphor to help people with young onset 636 Weichu Huang (Taiwan) dementia to grieve their loss in dramatherapy Imelda Anthony 174 One tribe, one space – the art of authentic inter-generational interactions (Singapore) Implementation of an evidence-based intervention for family carers of Sarah Amador (United 788 people living with dementia in the third sector – widening access to Kingdom) START (Strategies for RelaTives)

Dementia diagnosis, treatment, care and support

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ON-DEMAND SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME

Work as therapy for people with young onset and early stage dementia: Dian Karnina 522 impact and implications on community-based clients and caregivers (Singapore) Educational intervention for primary care to improve the prevention and Paloma Roa-Rojas 574 detection of dementia in two Latin-American countries: the PREDES- (Mexico) dementia trial The long-term care COVID-19 journey: what happened 4-13 and where do we go from here? A fireside chat Chair: Wendy Weidner (United Kingdom) Speakers • Aida Suarez-Gonzalez (Spain) • Suvarna Alladi (India) • Adelina Comas-Herrera (United Kingdom) ON-DEMAND SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME • Nicci Gerrard (United Kingdom)

56 Education, training and formal carers 5-01 Chair: DY Suharya (Indonesia) Leadership and innovation in hospital care: the role of the Alzheimer Ruth Louise Mantle 511 Scotland dementia nurse consultant in the delivery of education and and Sandra Shields training in hospitals (United Kingdom) A qualitative study exploring the skills, training and support needs of Monica Leverton 476 home care workers supporting people with dementia living at home (United Kingdom) Building knowledge and understanding of dementia in aged care Kathleen Doherty 594 personnel: the Understanding Dementia massive open online course (Australia) Managing sexual behaviours in dementia – a guide for caregivers in Intan Sabrina 210 nursing homes and the community Mohamad (Malaysia) 784 Strategies for effective training of family and professional care partners David Troxel (USA) Sube Banerjee (United 739 Time for dementia: understanding medical student outcomes Kingdom) Informal carers training 5-02 Chair: Maree McCabe (Australia) AD-autonomy – training program for maintaining the autonomy of 796 David Krivec (Slovenia) persons with dementia The McGill University dementia caregiver workshop – using simulation to José A. Morais 332 educate caregivers (Canada) Jayne Goodrick and Transforming the skills and resilience of informal dementia carers through 910 Claire Goodchild the provision of immersive, evidence-based 3-day residential courses (United Kingdom) Debbie Lee de Fiddes 529 Animation – training of the future? and Kirsty Bennett (Australia) Elizabeth Kasimu 785 Self-stigma cause for decreased self-care among caregivers Mutunga (Kenya)

Dementia diagnosis, treatment, care and support Support for dementia carers

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Informal carers support ON-DEMAND SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME 5-03 Chair: Andrew Ketteringham (United Kingdom) Sube Banerjee (United 741 C-DEMQOL: development of a new measure of carer quality of life Kingdom) Lessons from a pragmatic trial of virtual dementia friendly rural Irene Blackberry 814 communities in Australia (Australia) Constance Dimity 844 Support for carers of people with dementia: a primary care perspective Pond (Australia) Finding meaning in Chinese dementia family caregiving: a grounded Rebecca Cho Kwan 218 theory study Pang (Hong Kong) Family carers of people with dementia in care homes: trends in Marleen Prins 366 involvement, perceived role, role overload and self-efficacy (Netherlands) Strategies to support informal carers of people with dementia 5-04 Chair: Glenn Rees (Australia) 57 Home and community based interventions for care: what is evidence? Laura Gitlin (USA) Are we ready for translation, wide-scale dissemination? Rose-Marie Droes (The Innovation and technology in care support Netherlands) Claudia Cooper The translation of research into practice (United Kingdom) Henry Brodaty Where now? (Australia)

Registries II 6-01 Chair: Lee-Fay Low (Sydney) A comprehensive review on the Korean dementia actions using the Ok-jin Rhee (South 665 Global Dementia Observatory framework Korea) Data collection in large, multisite and multilingual epidemiological 892 Aliaa Ibnidris (Italy) studies of dementia using electronic data capturing systems Can we use routinely collected health and social care data to estimate Susan Yates (New 359 the prevalence of dementia in New Zealand? Zealand)

Epidemiology 7-01 Chair: Martin Knapp (United Kingdom) Predicting dementia risk in low- and middle-income countries: external Eduwin Pakpahan 219 validation of current prediction models (results from the DePEC program) (United Kingdom) Daisy Acosta 677 Past present and future of the 10/66 dementia research group (Dominican Republic) Prevalence and incidence of mild cognitive impairment and dementia in 676 Juan Llibre () elderly people with frailty in , China and India Prevalence of and risk factors for dementia in Botahtaung township, Aye Chann Maung 880 Yangon Region, Maung (Myanmar) Preferences regarding the return of research findings in a population- Marta Fadda 889 based study on dementia: implications for the informed consent (Switzerland)

Support for dementia carers Information systems for dementia Dementia research and innovation

Twitter @AlzDisInt @alz_sg #ADI2020 34th Virtual International Conference of VIRTUAL Alzheimer’s Disease International 2020 10-12 December 2020 ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE INTERNATIONAL VIRTUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE 10-12 DECEMBER 2020

ON-DEMAND SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME

Demographic and clinical characteristics of patients with cognitive Ahmed Mohammed 308 impairment attending geriatric clinic in Oman Al-Harrasi (Oman) Other syndromes and new and future treatments 7-02 Chair: Wee Shiong, Lim (Singapore) The care and support needs of people with dementia who are using Alys Wyn Griffiths 391 cancer services (United Kingdom) HIV-Associated Neurocognitive Disorders (HAND) in a cART-treated cohort of adults aged 50 and over in Kilimanjaro, Tanzania: The first Sherika Ranasinghe 651 longitudinal follow up study of HAND in an older population in sub- (United Kingdom) Saharan Africa Transcranial Pulse Stimulation, TPS reduces significantly the Alzheimer’s Pavel Novak 392 disease symptoms (Switzerland) ON-DEMAND SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME Judith Walker 913 What is ketosis and why it matters in Alzheimer’s disease 58 (Singapore) Alzheimer’s disease: evaluating natural products as disease-modifying Anthony Tsarbopoulos 214 agents (Greece) Non-pharmacological interventions 7-03 Chair: John Grosvenor (United Kingdom) Dietary interventions for people with dementia – can these improve the 485 Palle Larsen (Sweden) cognitive functions: a scoping review Arts and dementia programme evaluation : the impact on well-being 673 Kate Tan (Singapore) indicators, caregiver outcomes and attitudes towards dementia Min-Jiuan Shiu 521 Cognitive and fitness community program for people with dementia (Taiwan) 624 SENSE-COG Asia: a feasibility study of a hearing intervention in dementia Iracema Leroi (Ireland) This is our story: Aotearoa/ New Zealand experiences of living with Catherine Hall (New 155 dementia Zealand) Debbie Rozario 918 Novel chair benefits residents with dementia (Sweden) Innovation, technology and entrepreneurship 7-04 Chair: Sultana Afdhal (Qatar) Natalie Elliott and 975 Ask us about dementia – a pilot study Rebecca Cicero (United Kingdom) Utilizing the electronic technology to reach the goals of the dementia Zhong-Han Lee 591 action plan (Taiwan) Empowering partnerships between people with dementia and Stephani and Robert 316 researchers: a network building and training initiative Savage Shivers (USA) 917 Global innovations in creating dementia friendly social health communities Janice Chia (Singapore) The development of thinkability: an individual Cognitive Stimulation Harleen Rai (United 305 Therapy (iCST) touch-screen app for people with dementia Kingdom) Recognition of facial expression of emotions by persons with rarer types Nirupama Natarajan 644 of dementia in India (India)

Dementia research and innovation

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ON-DEMAND SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME

WS-01 STrengthening Responses to dementia in DEveloping countries (STRiDE) ON-DEMAND SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME Including people living with dementia in planning for dementia using 868 Saadiya Hurzuk (India) theory of change workshops in India: A STRiDE initiative Christine Wayua 840 Barriers to dementia care in rural Kenya Musyimi (Nairobi) Lessons learned preparing for qualitative fieldwork with unpaid family Marissa Stubbs 878 carers in Jamaica – a middle income country (Jamaica) The cross-cultural adaptation of the STRiDE toolkit: towards the generation Roxanne Jacobs 703 of prevalence, impact and dementia care cost estimates in South Africa (South Africa) Claudia I Astudillo- 799 Overview of the evidence on dementia epidemiology in Mexico García (Mexico) How can we improve the healthcare provided for people with dementia Fabiana da Mata 705 in Brazil? Views from policymakers, people living with dementia and their (United Kingdom) carers 59 Analysis of dementia policy stakeholders in Indonesia as part of the Imelda Theresia 843 STRiDE project (Indonesia) Twinning session WS-02 Chair: DY Suharya (Indonesia) Speakers: • Laura Dabas (France) • Muriel Rason-Andriamaro (Madagascar) • Amalia Fonk Utomo (The Netherlands) • Tina Leonard (Ireland) • Jos van de Poel (The Netherlands) • Wambui Karanja (Kenya) • Liz Mutunga (Kenya) • Fergus Timmons (Ireland) International collaboration for dementia care in India: WS-03 Building capacity, developing a model, and responding to the pandemic Chair: Peter Braun (USA) Speakers: • Nikki Bayliss (United Kingdom) 786 • Nils Pieter de Mol van Otterloo (USA) • Meera Pattabiraman (Singapore) • Peter Braun (USA) • Narendhar Ramasamy (India) • DY Suharya (Indonesia) WS-04 Francophone roundtable Speakers: • Mamadou Coume (Senegal) • Laura Dabas (France) • Edith Emery (Cameroon) • Sabine Henry (Belgium) • Mustapha El Alaoui Faris (Morocco) • Lorène Gilly (France) • Bougou Coulibaly (Mali) • Leila Alouane (Tunisia) • Nyamiye Hermenegilde (Burundi) • Karine Begey (Switzerland) • Benoit Durand (France) • George Karam (Lebanon) • Khadhar Ghalia (Cameroon) • Muriel Rason Andriamaro (Madagascar) • Norbert Ngalaha (Cameroon) • Ameenah Sorefan (Mauritius) • Abdou Ibrahima Traore (Cameroon)

Twitter @AlzDisInt @alz_sg #ADI2020 34th Virtual International Conference of VIRTUAL Alzheimer’s Disease International 2020 10-12 December 2020 ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE INTERNATIONAL VIRTUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE 10-12 DECEMBER 2020

ON-DEMAND SESSIONS: RELEASE DATES

Thursday 10 December Friday 11 December The global policy environment Dementia and public policy I Attitudes and awareness I Attitudes and awareness II Risk factors I Risk factors II Post-diagnostic support Dignity and spirituality Informal carers support Diagnosis II Other syndromes and new and future treatments Education, training and formal carers Community partnerships/public-private-people Economics of dementia partnerships Dementia friendliness Design, architecture and the built environment I Diagnostic tools Epidemiology Well-being and quality of life ON-DEMAND SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME COVID-19 and dementia I Non-pharmacological interventions Youth engagement programme (YEP) – an 60 COVID-19 and dementia II international symposium young people and Design, architecture and the built environment II dementia: challenges and opportunities The long-term care COVID-19 journey: what Saturday 12 December happened and where do we go from here? A fireside chat. Dementia and public policy II Strategies to support informal carers of people Diverse populations with dementia Risk reduction and prevention STrengthening Responses to dementia in Social isolation, loneliness, depression and the DEveloping countries (STRiDE) consequences for people with dementia and carers International collaboration for dementia care in Informal carers support India: Building capacity, developing a model, and Innovation, technology and entrepreneurship responding to the pandemic Dementia and the equitable society II Twinning session End of life and palliative care Francophone roundtable Psychosocial interventions Registries II Young onset dementia and mild cognitive impairment Cognitive reserve Models of care

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SG-NOTPR-0013 34th Virtual International Conference of VIRTUAL Alzheimer’s Disease International 2020 10-12 December 2020 ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE INTERNATIONAL VIRTUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE 10-12 DECEMBER 2020

POSTER PRESENTATIONS

Dementia as a public health priority Overview of the Korean National Dementia Management Delivery Youjoung Kim (South 242 System Korea) Process and outcomes of an integrated health and social care model 296 supporting older people with dementia and family carers in the Cheng Shi (Hong Kong) community: evidence from a mixed-methods study Impact of proposals by liaison committee among dementia 403 stakeholders and supporters groups in Japan for the realisation of a Naoko Hara (Japan) friendly society where people can live alongside "dementia" How to protect people with dementia from financial exploitation? 417 Su-Yuan Chan (Taiwan) POSTER PRESENTATIONS Recommendations from multidisciplinary professionals of Taiwan Promoting participatory dementia-friendly policies by learning from 441 people with dementia and their families—The case of new Taipei city’s Ran-Chou Chen (Taiwan) dementia prevention and care action plan 62 Klara Lorenz (United 489 Exploring current and future models of care through case vignettes Kingdom) Case management model for employment service in a dementia center 490 Wen-Chuin Hsu (Taiwan) in Taiwan Ki Jung Kim (South 504 The public guardianship system for people with dementia in South Korea Korea) Support center for people with dementia and their families in Wen-Shan 510 Shu-Chun Lee (Taiwan) community The experience of setting-up a shop by people with young-onset 527 Yu-Chen Chang (Taiwan) dementia in Taiwan Valuing expert experience: involving people with lived experience of Lenore De La Perrelle 599 dementia and care partners in translational research (Australia) 605 Socio-economic benefits of a dementia care centre Tak Bin Chau (Malaysia) Suzanne Marie Dyer 615 Does Australia rely too heavily on providing aged care in institutions? (Australia) Advocacy, education and cooperation: a nursing college’s efforts and 637 Jian Wei Wu (Macau) impact on the development of dementia policy in Macau Fabiana A F Da Mata 656 Mapping the provision of dementia care in Brazil (Brazil) 686 Human rights of people living with dementia in care homes Kate Swaffer (Australia) Cross-cultural adaptation of screening measures for elder abuse in Roxanne Jacobs (South 704 South Africa Africa) State responsibility for dementia in Korea: is it relevant to a supported Cheolung Je (South 707 decision making system? Korea) Tools to inform policy: Chinese communities’ action in response 724 to dementia (TIP-CARD) – the situation of Hong Kong Special Gloria Wong (China) Administrative Region 736 Lessons learned from dementia advocacy Canada Lisa Poole (Canada) Employment support in people with dementia: a cases analysis in 766 Huang-Ju Chi (Taiwan) Taiwan

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Dementia as a public health priority Association of history of coronary artery disease with cognitive 768 Mitra Moodi (Iran) impairment: data from Birjand Longitudinal Aging Study (BLAS)

Katie Gambier-Ross POSTER PRESENTATIONS 771 Staying safe ‘going out’ – the experience of people with dementia (United Kingdom) Kate Swaffer and Daniela 781 The many voices of dementia advocacy Fernandez Gomora (United Kingdom) From human rights to practical reasons: exploring the case inclusive 813 Jennifer Carson (USA) dementia care Benefits of carnival games for people with dementia and their families in 839 Shu-Chun Lee (Taiwan) the community Social security systems and care services for individuals with dementia Sang Kyoung Kahng 847 in Korea: the missing links (South Korea) Citizenship and rights in the later stages of dementia: an auto- Daniella Greenwood 858 ethnographic examination of aged care practice. (Australia) 63 Caregivers' insights for policy and practice: an NGO-funded study on Suzanne H. Hammad 870 dementia care (Qatar) The economic impact of Alzheimer’s dementias through a hospital 895 Sina Haj Amor (Tunisia) cohort in Tunisia Raul Fernando Gutierrez 897 Primary caregiver resentment of patients with dementia (Mexico) Hector Riquelme 899 Primary caregiver guilt of patient with dementia (Mexico) 900 Stigma and family burden in Alzheimer’s disease Celina Gomez (Mexico) The 'will and preference' paradigm and what it means to a person with Yue-En Chong 920 dementia – is this realised by the Mental Capacity Act in Singapore? (Singapore) Evaluating the experiences of Admiral Nurses during the COVID-19 Gayle Madden (United 921 pandemic Kingdom) Impact of COVID-19 related social support service closures on people Clarissa Giebel (United 922 with dementia and carers Kingdom) Exploring the experiences of families affected by dementia during the Emily Cousins (United 924 COVID-19 pandemic Kingdom) Delivering ethical care during the COVID-19 pandemic: considerations Emily Cousins (United 926 relating to care home residents living with dementia in the UK Kingdom) COVID-19 pandemic: worsening of caregiver stress and understanding Chin Yee Cheong 927 their needs in caring for persons with dementia (Singapore) 928 The costs of agitation: a literature review Mary Michael (USA) The hopes of people with dementia and their families in Japan during 929 Naoko Hara (Japan) the COVID-19 pandemic 930 Digital parties Fusun Kocaman (Turkey) 931 The COVID-19 health crisis and elderly people with dementia in Italy Luca Croci (Italy) Social, health, and economic impacts of COVID-19 on dementia care: 932 Carolyn M. Parsey (USA) interviews from Washington state

Twitter @AlzDisInt @alz_sg #ADI2020 34th Virtual International Conference of VIRTUAL Alzheimer’s Disease International 2020 10-12 December 2020 ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE INTERNATIONAL VIRTUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE 10-12 DECEMBER 2020 Dementia as a public health priority Health and demographic surveillance systems (HDSS): potential Daniel Reidpath (United 934 COVID-19 dementia registries for low- and middle-income countries Kingdom) (LMIC) Impact of COVID-19 pandemic control measures on persons with 935 Zi Ying Koh (Singapore) dementia and their caregivers: an audit study Offline and online (virtual) activities during World Alzheimer’s Month Michael Dirk Roelof 938 2020 in the pandemic COVID-19 era Maitimoe (Indonesia) Stichting Alzheimer Indonesia Nederland: online activities during Tania M. Setiadi 942 COVID-19 pandemic (Indonesia) Optimising online singing groups for people with dementia: guidelines Becky Dowson (United 943 based on current practice Kingdom)

POSTER PRESENTATIONS Experiences of informal carers during the COVID-19 pandemic Katarzyna Małgorzata 958 restrictions in Australia – preliminary results from a qualitative study. Lion (Australia) Ahmad Iqbal Hafiyuddin Community awareness programme for elderly care during COVID-19 964 Sofian(Brunei 64 pandemic in Brunei Darussalam Darussalam) Muhammad Hanif Osteomyelitis-related sacral pressure wounds and mortality among fully 966 Ahmad (Brunei dependent people with dementia during COVID-19 pandemic Darussalam) Dr Pravija Manikoth 968 “RAHA"– rises amidst COVID-19 pandemic in Qatar (Qatar) A scoping review of support structures and policies for older persons Suzanne H. Hammad 969 with ADRD since COVID-19: spotlight on the GCC region (Qatar) Stephen Michael Fay The power of creativity in quarantine: the challenges and triumphs of 970 and Liliana Hincapie online creative narrative programmes in Medellín, Colombia (United Kingdom) 973 COVID-19 And the brain – a neural hypothesis Kavita Verma (India) 976 Concerns of family carers during COVID-19 N Aker (United Kingdom) Decision-making for place of care and death in older people: a rapid Emily West (United 979 review of current evidence, and implications for COVID-19 Kingdom) Nurse practitioners in long term care homes in the time of COVID-19: a Katherine Mcgilton 982 qualitative study (Canada) Charting through new normal: adapting outpatient services to meet the 983 Tolulola Taiwo (Canada) needs of patients and care partners in the COVID-19 era The impact of COVID­-19 on formal and informal dementia care in Hong 984 Ruizhi Dai (Hong Kong) Kong 985 Project Alzheimer’s Value Europe | PAVE Lydia Lanman (USA) Moving towards a holistic value assessment of innovative Alzheimer’s 986 Drew Holzapfel (USA) therapies

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Dementia awareness and friendliness Building an inclusive dementia-friendly community in Singapore using Angeline Lim and Mary- 140 an asset-based approach Ann Khoo (Singapore)

Perspectives of staff, in a social service agency, toward persons living POSTER PRESENTATIONS 183 Lay Lay Pee (Singapore) with dementia Hamza Khaled Nouri 184 Breaking the myth of Alzheimer’s in Jordan (Jordan) 185 Good chat challenge! Lay Lay Pee (Singapore) Christian Gossan 189 Improving dementia awareness using interactive video simulation (Australia) Knowledge, friendliness, and willingness of engagement in caring for 223 Ming-Jen Lin (Taiwan) people living with dementia among the students in a medical university Christian Gossan 249 Improving dementia awareness using interactive video simulation (Australia) Awareness of dementia friendly community is associated with quality of 254 Hui-Chuan Hsu (Taiwan) life among the older adults: a case from Xinyi District of Taipei, Taiwan 65 Christine Thelker 269 Fundraising from the perspective of a person with dementia (Canada) "Radio Alzheimer!" A new information channel for people with dementia, 277 Joël Jaouen (France) their caregivers and the general public Psychometric properties of Chinese version of dementia knowledge 293 Yayi Zhao (China) assessment scale Improving the involvement of people with dementia in developing Harleen Rai (United 306 technology-based interventions: a narrative synthesis review and best Kingdom) practice guidelines Multi-stakeholder engagement is needed to build evidence around Carole Leone White 317 better palliative care for families living with dementia (USA) Rita Vanmala 318 Lived experience of dementia in Indian families living in New Zealand Krishnamurthi (New Zealand) Community awareness programmes by medical students for dementia, Shyh Poh Teo (Brunei 337 disability and volunteerism Darussalam) Defining dementia-friendly research: engaging people with lived Maria K Howard 339 experience as collaborators and advisors (Canada) Jacqueline Arabia 343 Crossing social and intergenerational barriers in social inclusion (Colombia) The effect of Dementia Friends on attitudes towards dementia in Nicolas Farina (United 348 adolescents: a pilot study Kingdom) Strengths and weaknesses of Dementia Friendly program in Italy. A 378 Mario Possenti (Italy) network of 25 community Perceptions and attitudes towards dementia among university students Alys Wyn Griffiths 388 in Malaysia (United Kingdom) Amalia Fonk Utomo (The 401 Twinning program Netherlands-Indonesia Netherlands) Breaking down the stigma of dementia while providing a people-first Natasha Chadwick 412 approach at the world's first residential aged care microtown (Australia)

Twitter @AlzDisInt @alz_sg #ADI2020 34th Virtual International Conference of VIRTUAL Alzheimer’s Disease International 2020 10-12 December 2020 ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE INTERNATIONAL VIRTUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE 10-12 DECEMBER 2020 Dementia awareness and friendliness Promoting public dementia literacy through interdisciplinary 445 collaboration and technology adoption—the case of New Taipei City’s Ran-Chou Chen (Taiwan) Dementia Friends Medical and nursing students’ preferences for working with people with Molly Hebditch (United 446 dementia; a systematic review Kingdom) Student nurses’ preferences for working with people with dementia; a Molly Hebditch (United 447 longitudinal study Kingdom) Knowledge, attitude, and preventive practice on dementia care among 449 Lek Long Lo (Macau) high school students in Macao Transforming ambulance services through co-production and effective Alison Johnstone 462 partnerships (United Kingdom)

POSTER PRESENTATIONS Increasing participation of Black, Asian and minority ethnic Richard Oxley (United 463 communities in dementia research Kingdom) Delia Beck (United 494 Movement for change – Sport England initiative 66 Kingdom) Kasper Bormans 508 Dementia and the triangle of hope (Belgium) Patient and Public Involvement (PPI) for dementia research in LMIC: 567 Iracema Leroi (Ireland) developing capacity and capability in South Asia Role of hope Ek ASHA in creating awareness and a dementia friendly 569 Sushma Chawla (India) society Indonesian millennials’ stigma towards dementia and the importance of 578 Aditya Putra (Indonesia) exposure to dementia in formal education Impact of stigma on dementia towards the urge of screening from Jovita Stephanie 581 Indonesian millennial generation’s perspective (Indonesia) Breaking dementia stigma in younger generation through film in industry Michael Nathaniel 585 4.0 Budiarso (Indonesia) Establishing Zhongzheng dementia-friendly community with care, 619 Zhong-Han Lee (Taiwan) humanity, respect and technology 641 Establishing the National Federation of Alzheimer’s Associations in Iran Elaheh Zaheri (Iran) Dementia care providers' practices, attitudes, and knowledge in treating Dustin Zachary 659 LGBT communities Nowaskie (USA) Christine Wayua 664 Local idioms of dementia and stigma: a Kenyan perspective Musyimi (Kenya) A walk through dementia: a virtual reality tool to promote dementia Ben Hicks (United 668 awareness Kingdom) The impact of exposure to dementia in formal education towards 669 Aditya Putra (Indonesia) Indonesian millennials’ attitude on screening 674 Awareness of dementia from the perspective of informal caregivers Merle Varik (Estonia) 709 The Open Door Café: powerful, person-driven peer support Casey Acklin (USA) Yun Ni and Rachel Lim 716 Memories Café: breaking through dementia stigma with community arts (Singapore) Sociodemographic factors determining cognitive performance among 725 Asmuje Nf (Malaysia) participants of the Malaysian elders longitudinal research (MELoR) study

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Dementia awareness and friendliness Occupational therapy at long-term care services for people with 731 Chun-Jui Su (Taiwan) dementia and their families

Tara Puspitarini Sani POSTER PRESENTATIONS 787 Perspectives and experiences of healthcare practitioners in Indonesia (Indonesia) 791 Creating a center of excellence in a residential memory care setting Darrick Lam (USA) ‘Dementia friendly spots’ a national awareness raising campaign and Štefanija Luki Zlobec 795 č support network in local communities (Slovenia) Making it work: partnership models for Therapy Through Work (TTW) for 805 Sion Teng (Singapore) people with young onset & early stage (YES) dementia 807 A survey of dementia café in local areas of Japan Motoharu Kawai (Japan) Raising awareness of the link between surgical menopause and 809 Emily Ong (Singapore) dementia 824 Stigma related to dementia in India: current status and challenges Saadiya Hurzuk (India) 830 Cohousing for people living with dementia: an Italian experience Andrea Fabbo (Italy) 67 Imelda Theresia 845 Family stigma and caregiver burden in dementia care in Indonesia (Indonesia) Research on family care system of the disabled elderly and family 871 Hui-Chin Teng (Taiwan) negotiation process Li-Jung Elizabeth Ku 872 A survey about dementia awareness on banking staff in Taiwan (Taiwan) Geriatric integrated network for dementia (GerIND): a collaboration Ma. Eloisa Luz Cabarlo 886 between an Asian restructured hospital and community partners in Marasigan (Singapore) dementia care Development of a dementia awareness online survey through local Marta Fadda 890 stakeholders’ involvement (Switzerland) Attitudes and assumptions about people living with dementia and Carmela Leone 940 their carers, and their influence on rights to participation, inclusion and (Australia) access to public spaces. 953 Dementia – breaking barriers and building bridges Hanadi Al Hamad (Qatar) “One country 77 events reaching to 9000 plus population in 18 months – 956 is it time to close down dementia awareness campaigns?" Reflections Marwa El Orrabi (Qatar) from our memory clinic nurse

Twitter @AlzDisInt @alz_sg #ADI2020 34th Virtual International Conference of VIRTUAL Alzheimer’s Disease International 2020 10-12 December 2020 ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE INTERNATIONAL VIRTUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE 10-12 DECEMBER 2020 Dementia risk reduction Role of oxygen free radicals in Alzheimer's disease following noise 136 Fereshteh Bagheri (Iran) exposure: a literature review Cognitive stimulation therapy on older women with dementia in Virginia Geraldine Hanny 208 Indonesia; the impact on executive function Prasetya (Indonesia) 245 The effect of personality traits on risk of motoric cognitive risk syndrome Emmeline Ayers (USA) The impact of cognitive enhancers (CE) on survival in persons with Constance Neo 265 dementia (PWDs) (Singapore) Community-based computerised cognitive training is feasible and 425 Pei Shi Yeo (Singapore) benefits older adults cognitively Jae-Hyeok Heo (South 442 Vascular burden in patients with Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease Korea) POSTER PRESENTATIONS Risk prediction models to predict dementia in type II diabetes: a Wardah Khalid (United 484 scoping review Kingdom) Social network size, cognition, and incident dementia in the Sydney 537 Henry Brodaty (Australia) 68 memory and ageing study Impact of sarcopenia and sarcopenic obesity on cognitive functioning in Suzanne Yew 557 healthy community dwelling older adults (GeriLabs2 study) (Singapore) Associations of social frailty with cognition and mood in healthy 727 Kalene Pek (Singapore) community-dwelling older adults Study partners’ experiences of participating in a multidomain Charlotta Thunborg 742 intervention for individuals with prodromal Alzheimer's disease (Sweden) Youth movement initiative in raising awareness of dementia in 822 Sri Mulyani (Indonesia) community: a project based learning

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At Otsuka, our purpose is to defy limitation, so that others can too.

We have an unwavering belief in going above and 69 beyond—under any circumstances—for patients, families, providers, and each other. This deep-rooted dedication drives us to uncover answers to complex, underserved medical needs, so that patients can push past the limitations of their disease and achieve more than they thought was possible.

Let’s connect @OtsukaUS www.otsuka-us.com

Twitter @AlzDisInt @alz_sg #ADI2020 Otsuka America Pharmaceutical, Inc. Otsuka Pharmaceutical Development & Commercialization, Inc. December 2020 01US20EUC0252 34th Virtual International Conference of VIRTUAL Alzheimer’s Disease International 2020 10-12 December 2020 ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE INTERNATIONAL VIRTUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE 10-12 DECEMBER 2020 Dementia, diagnosis, treatment, care and support Implementing a palliative care screening tool to improve management 132 Damaris Mose (USA) and referral in a skilled nursing facility Role of systematic cueing in 2-minute walk test, 6-minute walk test and Wayne Ls Chan (Hong 143 10-meter walk test for older adults with dementia Kong) Theoretical model of intergenerational family connections in dementia May Yeok Koo 149 care (Singapore)

152 Improvisation drama for people with dementia May Wong (Singapore)

Improvisation drama: a case study of the social engagement of a 153 May Wong (Singapore) resident with dementia 164 The role of dementia ward in an acute hospital Si Ching Lim (Singapore) POSTER PRESENTATIONS Domain-specific improvements of combined physical activity and cognitive 165 intervention on cognitive and instrumental activities of daily living function Wan-Wen Liao (Taiwan) in older adults with mild vs. moderate-to-severe cognitive impairments 70 Holotranscobalamin as a potential marker in the development of Ayudhea Tannika 172 Alzheimer's disease: a systematic review (Indonesia) Development of culturally appropriate cognitive assessment in a 176 Tolulola Taiwo (Canada) Canadian First Nations community Analysis of cognitive function and neuroimaging related to driver's 181 Yuzo Araki (Japan) license return for elderly 187 My heart time: benefits of group music therapy for elderly with dementia Dean Neo (Singapore) The impact of an inter-generational program on the well-being of 192 May Wong (Singapore) persons with dementia Characteristics of the built environment for people with dementia in Joanna Shuzhen Sun 200 East and Southeast Asian nursing homes: a scoping review (Australia) Knowledge translation: a progress report on the culturally sensitive Joanna Shuzhen Sun 201 application of a dementia environment audit tool in Asia (Australia) My morning venture: benefits of innovative integrated physical, social and 206 Jing Yi Lim (Singapore) cognitive stimulation in-community programme for elderly with dementia Story 2 remember: a collaborative, cross-European storytelling and Ben Hicks (United 209 creative drama programme for people with dementia Kingdom) Couplehood in dementia – a review on relationship issues faced by Intan Sabrina Mohamad 211 people with dementia and their intimate partners (Malaysia) Intan Sabrina Mohamad 212 Delusional jealousy in dementia – a review paper (Malaysia) Intan Sabrina Mohamad 213 Sexual behaviours in dementia – a review paper (Malaysia) Enhancing value for people with dementia through an integrated inter- Chin Yee Cheong 240 disciplinary dementia team in partnership with the community (Singapore) Rehabilitation and care strategies for people with younger onset 266 Ying-Hui Wu (Taiwan) dementia in rural area of Taiwan A target-distractor inhibition effect is preserved in healthy ageing, Megan Polden (United 267 Alzheimer’s disease and across ethnicity Kingdom)

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Dementia, diagnosis, treatment, care and support Modified Chinese mini-mental status examination (mCMMSE): cohort 273 effect in cut-off scores and diagnostic performance as a cognitive Yu Rui Lim (Singapore) screening tool POSTER PRESENTATIONS 275 The Montessori method in dementia management Luca Croci (Italy) 279 Living with Alzheimer's or a related disease Joël Jaouen (France) Codesigning dementia diagnosis and post-diagnostic care 294 Henry Brodaty (Australia) (COGNISANCE) Bench-testing the iCST touch-screen app with people with dementia Harleen Rai (United 303 and carers: a qualitative study Kingdom) Cognitive stimulation therapy (CST) for dementia: protocol Aimee Spector (United 304 for international implementation in Brazil, India and Tanzania Kingdom) (CST-International) Living with dementia in Aotearoa (the LiDiA study): a feasibility study for Sarah Cullum (New 312 the first dementia prevalence study in New Zealand Zealand) Cognition and activities of daily living in people with dementia in Tran Thanh Truc Nguyen 71 320 Vietnam: a correlational study (Vietnam) 323 Comparison of diagnostic value of four dementia tests Gholamreza Hajati (Iran) The impact of advance care planning information intervention for 324 persons with mild dementia and their family caregivers on decision- Wei-Ru Lu (Taiwan) making conflicts of end-of-life care Measuring the prevalence of sleep disturbances in people with Lucy Anne Webster 329 dementia living in care homes: a systematic review and meta-analysis (United Kingdom) An integrative, cognitive-behavioural treatment for persons living with Simon Forstmeier 340 mild Alzheimer’s dementia: Results of an RCT (Germany) Kathleen Doherty 356 A new role in aged care: the Dementia care support worker (Australia) Meaningful engagement in nutritional understanding (MENU) project: Kathleen Doherty 364 developing effective nutrition and hydration action plans for people with (Australia) dementia in residential aged care Ability centred care model: a case illustration for implementing rich Shi Fang Gay 365 tasks for persons with dementia (Singapore) Psychosocial support for people with dementia with challenging Marleen Prins (The 368 behaviour and their carers living in the community: two interventions in Netherlands) the Netherlands Dyadic intervention for people with dementia and their family carers in Marleen Prins (The 369 an early stage after the diagnosis Netherlands) Enhancing communication between nursing staff and people with Claudia Van Der Velden 371 dementia and their formal and informal carers: development of tools (The Netherlands) Dr. Birgit Maria Dietz 380 “Come to your senses – dementia-sensitive design saves money!” (Germany) Examining the needs of people with dementia and family carers directly Claudia Van Der Velden 381 after the diagnosis dementia (The Netherlands) The effect of motor-cognition rehabilitation programs at support center 384 Yu-Fen Lai (Taiwan) for people with dementia and their families (SPDF) Quality of life measurement in care homes: reliability and validity of the Laura Jane Hughes 386 DEMQOL-CH instrument (United Kingdom)

Twitter @AlzDisInt @alz_sg #ADI2020 34th Virtual International Conference of VIRTUAL Alzheimer’s Disease International 2020 10-12 December 2020 ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE INTERNATIONAL VIRTUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE 10-12 DECEMBER 2020 Dementia, diagnosis, treatment, care and support Exploring how the use of validated measures may affect the way people Diana Schack Thoft 395 with dementia respond and how their dignity can best be supported (Denmark) Feasibility of app-based dementia screening by rural primary health Robyn Barber (United 411 workers in Tanzania. A potential task-shifting approach to dementia Kingdom) diagnosis Preserving the dignity of people living with dementia at the world’s first Natasha Chadwick 414 residential aged care microtown (Australia) The effectiveness of using secondary prevention to promote demented 416 Yi-Lin Su (Taiwan) care services Used case management model to improve the care outcome of 422 Min Tseng (Taiwan) dementia cases and caregiver

POSTER PRESENTATIONS Quality of care and quality of life for people with dementia in residential Katrina Anderson 426 care: what do staff have to do with it? (Australia) Early diagnosis of mild cognitive impairment based on eye movement 430 Jing Nie (China) 72 parameters Using lean management to shorten the number of days of dementia 431 Kai-Shan Kao (Taiwan) diagnosis Pioneering a multidisciplinary post diagnostic support team for 439 Bridget Goh (Singapore) dementia in Singapore Effect of an educational method that uses role playing for care 443 Hisami Aoyagi (Japan) communication techniques with dementia patients Towards person-centred care in nursing homes: an insight from nursing Yew Chen Lim 444 home staff (Singapore) Valuing dementia quality of life: a comparative analysis of people with Kim-Huong Nguyen 457 dementia, carers and older Australians. (Australia) Post-diagnostic services for people with dementia and caregivers in Sookyoung Han (South 465 South Korea Korea) Fiona Carragher (United 468 Dementia Connect Kingdom) My choice – tools for people with memory-related diseases to make Outi Karoliina 473 choices, lead a fuller life and get their voice heard Ronkainen (Finland) Multidisciplinary treatment of people with dementia at the University Polona Rus Prelog 479 Psychiatric Clinic Ljubljana (Slovenia) The impact of the outdoor environment on the wellbeing of people living Ruth Louise Mantle 487 with dementia in the community and how virtual access can help keep (United Kingdom) people connected with the outdoors: a scoping review “It's our pleasure, we count cars here”: an exploration of the Elzana Odzakovic 491 ‘neighbourhood-based connections’ for people living alone with dementia (Sweden) Discovering staffing issues and experimenting with staffing levels in Marleen Prins (The 492 Dutch nursing homes Netherlands) 495 Pathway for the diagnosis and management of dementias Tolulola Taiwo (Canada) Effectiveness of interventions for dementia in low- and middle-income Maximilian Salcher- 499 countries: a systematic review Konrad (United Kingdom) Kasper Bormans 502 Dementia is future-loss (Belgium)

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Dementia, diagnosis, treatment, care and support Kasper Bormans 505 Memory palaces to improve quality of life in Alzheimer's disease (Belgium)

How do sleep disturbances impact upon care home residents living Lucy Anne Webster POSTER PRESENTATIONS 512 with dementia: a qualitative study (United Kingdom) We can do the work “because” we have dementia, not “in spite of” 515 Tomofumi Tanno (Japan) dementia Development of social support assessment system for people with 517 Aya Yasutake (Japan) dementia and family caregivers at home in Japan Debbie May Arriola 528 PCC nursing: a game changer in dementia care Amata (Singapore) A cognitive communication screener for early identification of patients Cora Yi Neng Tan 532 at risk of dementia (Singapore): Khoo Teck Puat Hospital-Cognitive (Singapore) Communication Screener (KTPH-CCS) Text to pictures – a better way to measure how people feel about their 539 Tracy Comans (Australia) quality of life 73 Cognitive stimulation therapy (CST) for people with dementia in Ssenku Safic(United 549 Tanzania: results of an implementation research programme Kingdom) Reframing dementia: creating positive attitudes to assist dementia Gaynor Macdonald 560 carers (Australia) George Dallas Dixon 572 The dementia declaration of independence (USA) Developing a person centred care plan for improved outcomes of Namrata Sadarangani 576 persons with dementia in the community (Singapore) The recage project (respectful caring for agitated elderly): a new model 579 Mario Possenti (Italy) for management and care of BPSD The Cogs Club in Italy: a multi-modal intervention for people with 580 Katia Pinto (Italy) dementia The effect of a lifelong learning intervention on people with dementia: a Ann Lykkegaard 584 pilot control study Soerensen (Denmark) Crossing cultural barriers: introducing a new cognitive stimulation Harleen Rai (United 586 touch-screen application from the United Kingdom to people with Kingdom) dementia and carers in Jakarta, Indonesia 593 Navigating dementia: a pilot project for post diagnostic support Stephani Shivers (USA) Integrated care model for family caregivers of persons with dementia in 602 Hui Pin Lin (Taiwan) the community care centers De-Kopitiam: in-community art-based open studio for persons living 603 Jue Ann Ng (Singapore) with dementia Cognitive stimulation therapy: research and capacity building in a Tara Puspitarini Sani 604 religious community in Indonesia (Indonesia) Performance of Montreal cognitive assessment (MoCA) as a screening 614 Sreelakshmi Pr (India) tool for cognitive impairment in community setting – Kerala, South India What are the financial implications of providing residential aged care in Suzanne Marie Dyer 617 a clustered domestic, home-like model of care? (Australia) Feasibility of localised cognitive stimulation therapy programme in the 625 Joy Lim (Singapore) Singapore context

Twitter @AlzDisInt @alz_sg #ADI2020 34th Virtual International Conference of VIRTUAL Alzheimer’s Disease International 2020 10-12 December 2020 ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE INTERNATIONAL VIRTUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE 10-12 DECEMBER 2020 Dementia, diagnosis, treatment, care and support Relationships between cognition, emotion and language in Dementia Francesca Maria 626 syndrome, from interdisciplinary to transdisciplinary research: a case Dovetto (Italy) study Predicting dementia diagnosis with a comprehensive web app Frances Duffy (United 646 assessment Kingdom) Relationship centred dementia care: an academic – industry partnership Kevin Muirhead (United 648 and innovation Kingdom) Bernadette Rock 667 Understanding and addressing dementia and loneliness in Ireland (Ireland) 670 Integrated hospital model for geriatric care – Alexandra Hospital Li Feng Tan (Singapore) Journey in improving quality of life for elders with dementia in 678 May Low (Singapore) POSTER PRESENTATIONS community care at SLEC senior care centres (SCC) A cost-effective way to measure the complexity and outcomes of Fengyuan Yao 683 patients with dementia managed by a psychogeriatric community team (Singapore) 74 in Singapore Individualised simulated presence therapy (SPT) in managing 695 challenging behaviours and role modelling for caregiver: a qualitative Si Huan Lim (Singapore) case report EQ5D as a measure of health-related quality of life in mild-moderate 698 Cai Ning Tan (Singapore) dementia: comparison between self and caregiver ratings A realist review of sustainable community interventions for people Dawn Brooker (United 706 affected by dementia (SCI-Dem) Kingdom) An exploration of dance/movement therapy on the improvement of Shin-Fang Chang 720 quality of life in the elderly with mild cognitive impairment (Taiwan) Caregiver burden in mild cognitive impairment: burden profile and Yang Lin Ting 722 associated factors (Singapore) Perspectives of family caregivers in EOL care for people with dementia 726 Lay Ling Tan (Singapore) (PWD) Longitudinal changes in self versus proxy-rated quality of life in mild- 728 moderate dementia: Factors associated with positive and negative Jun Pei Lim (Singapore) transitions Geraldine T.Y Goh 734 Attending to spiritual needs in dementia care: a Singapore experience (Singapore) Effectiveness of cognitive stimulation for dementia: a systematic review Ben Hicks (United 744 and meta-analysis Kingdom) Effectiveness of a structured occupational therapy group therapy Yoke Chuan Lee 750 programme for nursing home residents with dementia: a retrospective (Singapore) cross sectional study Meeting centres support programme: evidence of transferability to Dawn Brooker (United 752 different countries for providing effective community post-diagnostic Kingdom) support 754 Autoethnography and narrative therapy: interventions for dementia Kate Swaffer (Australia) Alister Robertson (New 755 Benefits of gym exercises Zealand) Recommendations for optimising and planning homes for people with 769 Tomislav Hui (Croatia) dementia in Croatia ć

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Dementia, diagnosis, treatment, care and support The utility of brief cognitive tests for patients with type 2 diabetes Yanhong Dong 778 mellitus: a systematic review (Singapore)

A thematic analysis of the barriers to and facilitators of the POSTER PRESENTATIONS 779 Mina Chandra (India) implementation of cognitive stimulation therapy (CST) in Delhi Ying Ying Chong 816 Engaging persons with dementia in a café setting – a case study (Singapore) An evaluation of the impact of cognitive stimulating mobile application Li Leng Eunice Tan 820 games on the cognitive function and well-being of persons living with (Singapore) dementia Hsuan Wen Wang 827 Occupational therapy in a geriatric psychiatric inpatient unit (Taiwan) Caregiver burden among caregivers for patients with dementia in Made Ayu Wedariani 829 National Brain Center Hospital Jakarta, Indonesia in 2019 (Indonesia) Constance Dimity Pond 848 Management of responsive behaviours in primary care (Australia) 75 Improving management of agitation in persons with dementia (PWD) 861 Fuyin Li (Singapore) with simulated presence therapy (SPT) in an acute geriatric ward Neuropsychological features in a patient with suspected progressive 863 Kuan-Yu Chen (Taiwan) supranuclear palsy (PSP) Eef Hogervorst (United 864 The compression of needs model Kingdom) Translation and adaptation process of cognitive testing instruments into Tara Puspitarini Sani 879 Indonesian context (Indonesia) Priya Treesa Thomas 884 Enhancing dignity in dementia: a single case analysis (India) 888 Greek norms for the Rey-Osterrieth complex figure in elderly population Elena Poptsi (Greece) Zvezdan Pirtosek 902 Clinician reflecting on patients with dementia: can philosophy help? (Slovenia) Zvezdan Pirtosek 904 Paradoxical lucidity in dementia: new questions, new interpretations (Slovenia) Evaluation of guideline implementation for prevention and management Tipanetr Ngamkala 912 acute confusional state in hospitalised older patients (Thailand) Stream Café: the use of gospel activities for both people with dementia 915 Wen-Chuin Hsu (Taiwan) and their caregivers Babs Harris (United 937 Day care – but not as we know it Kingdom) Exploring staff perspectives of the impact of physical environment in Sook-Young Lee (South 941 dementia units Korea) 952 Bringing dementia care at doorsteps – together we aspire Dr Shafi Khan(Qatar) Person living with dementia in existing housing system and Osman Ku uk (Bosnia 965 č requirements of modern time and Herzegovina) Goals, principles, approaches and responses: designing in a way that 987 Kirsty Bennett (Australia) enables people living with dementia to live well 988 Designing for the homes of community dwelling people with dementia Lyn Phillipson (Australia) LANGaware: extensive evaluation of a robust ML based language 989 Vassiliki Rentoumi (USA) agnostic approach for the early detection of neurodegenerative diseases

Twitter @AlzDisInt @alz_sg #ADI2020 34th Virtual International Conference of VIRTUAL Alzheimer’s Disease International 2020 10-12 December 2020 ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE INTERNATIONAL VIRTUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE 10-12 DECEMBER 2020 Support for dementia carers Under one roof; intergenerational care for people with dementia in May Yeok Koo 148 Singapore-Chinese families – a case study design (Singapore) Translating the vision for a smart, elderly- and dementia-inclusive May Yeok Koo 150 environment in Singapore through education (Singapore) Development of a 3-tier care model for patients with dementia in an 158 Si Ching Lim (Singapore) acute hospital The feasibility of using a virtual avatar to improve communication skills Claire Morrisby 168 among formal carers (Australia) Evaluating effectiveness of a new comprehensive, unified, person- centred, dementia education tool in improving dementia knowledge and Amos En Sheng Lee 169 reducing caregiver stress among family caregivers of dementia patients (Singapore)

POSTER PRESENTATIONS in a community hospital in Singapore Caregiver burden across different age-groups: differential profile and Wee Shiong Lim 171 associated factors (Singapore) AID-COM: an innovative communication-focused program for family Sophie Chesneau 76 204 carers of people with early-stage Alzheimer's disease (Canada) Hsu-Chen Andrea Tan 217 Dementia knowledge in healthcare staff working in community hospitals (Singapore) Audrey Duceppe 238 Disruptive behaviours in the family setting: a descriptive study (Canada) Contrasting the various dimensions of loss and grief in dementia 246 Ivana Chan (Singapore) caregivers: multivariate analysis Jeonglan Kim (South 283 The experience and effect of GPS tracker for the people with dementia Korea) Establishing a training programme for family caregivers of people Thi Thanh Tam Pham 295 with dementia in a memory clinic in Ho Chi Minh City – a Vietnamese- (Vietnam) German collaboration project Developing leaders in aged care – education alone is not enough to Amanda Kay Warman 299 transform practice. (Australia) An international comparative study of dementia workforce education 350 Okjin Rhee (South Korea) and training Karen Shepherd 354 Carer support clinics – plugging the gaps in the care we give our carers! (Australia) ‘Til dementia do us part’: caring and grieving for an intimate partner with Jane Forbes Thompson 355 dementia (Australia) 357 Multidisciplinary fall risk interventions in dementia ward Si Ching Lim (Singapore) Evaluation of an e-learning aiming to improve person-centred attitude in Claudia Van Der Velden 382 healthcare professionals working with people with dementia (The Netherlands) 406 Academic programs in dementia care and policy Michael Splaine (USA) Knowledge and attitudes towards dementia in adolescent students: a 418 Yi-Lin Su (Taiwan) questionnaire study Communicating antipsychotic deprescribing advice on discharge in Elissa Campbell and 424 patients with dementia and delirium: a clinical audit in a tertiary hospital Brendan Foo (Australia) Use and effectiveness of blended simulation and team-based learning Huei-Ling Huang 428 in dementia care courses (Taiwan)

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Support for dementia carers Assessment of a simulation-based education program designed to 429 Amaki Nobuku (Japan) improve practical dementia care skills of nurses in acute care hospitals

Is a massive open online course accessible and effective for everyone? POSTER PRESENTATIONS 434 Sarang Kim (Australia) Native vs non-native English speakers The effect of Zentangle training programme on stress, anxiety and Yuet Ying Wong (Hong 450 depression in caregivers of older adults with dementia Kong) Be a healthy caregiver – the effect of support group for families caring 452 Po-Sheng Chih (Taiwan) for demented elderly Experiences of carers of people with dementia with Lewy bodies at 453 Mari Yoneyama (Japan) home: after diagnosis Kasper Bormans 501 Dementia and the game of imagination (Belgium) The effect of family counselling meeting on dementia families: a pilot Ching Jung Tseng 516 study (Taiwan) The perceived needs of family caregivers in learning nursing knowledge 77 523 Qun Ding (China) with dementia in China: a qualitative research iSupport, an online training and support program for caregivers of Shingo Yamashita 568 people with dementia: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial (Japan) in Japan A successful experience by the spouse of a patient with frontotemporal 592 Maki Kato (Japan) dementia of persuading the patient to see a doctor The simplification of medications prescribed to long-term care residents 606 J Simon Bell (Australia) (SIMPLER) cluster randomised controlled trial Confidence, attitude and knowledge of care staff caring for persons Cindy Ying Ying Yeo 609 with dementia (PWD) in nursing homes: an evaluation of GerIND (Singapore) (Geriatric Integration Network for Dementia) Building cognitive bridges on dementia for undergraduate nurse Leah Macaden (United 642 education: empowering future agents of change for dementia care Kingdom) excellence Use of potentially inappropriate psychotropic medications and Nirupama Natarajan 645 polypharmacy in persons with dementia in Chennai, India (India) CLEAR Dementia Care © helps carers to understand behaviour and Frances Duffy (United 649 reduce distress Kingdom) From informal to formal care: supporting the emerging generation of Melissa Chan 661 caregivers (Singapore) Introduction of mindfulness practice during dementia nurse counselling Philomena Anthony 680 session in a memory clinic in Singapore – impact and challenges (Singapore) Dementia education and training in Singapore nursing homes: effects 696 Si Huan Lim (Singapore) on literacy and staff burnout Journey of dementia care skills training: Brunei Hospital experience Lih Vei Onn (Brunei 718 from trainer's perspective Darussalam) Lyntara Quirke and Do hospitals harm or heal? A lived experience review of hospital 760 Kim-Huong Nguyen environments and how they may impact a person living with dementia (Australia) Empowering informal caregivers of people with dementia through the 770 Merle Varik (Estonia) support groups: a participatory action research

Twitter @AlzDisInt @alz_sg #ADI2020 34th Virtual International Conference of VIRTUAL Alzheimer’s Disease International 2020 10-12 December 2020 ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE INTERNATIONAL VIRTUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE 10-12 DECEMBER 2020 Support for dementia carers Intensive practical course in dementia and delirium care – an Asian 803 Siyun Leong (Singapore) hospital’s experience Mindfulness-based intervention in alleviating burden and negative 815 Hui-Hsuan Ku (Taiwan) emotions for dementia family caregivers Summer school of neurogeriatrics & dementia: a multidisciplinary short Tara Puspitarini Sani 876 course to empower healthcare practitioners and community members (Indonesia) to address dementia in Indonesia Promoting care for the elderly with dementia and delirium in an acute 877 Fuyin Li (Singapore) hospital Discharge planning for persons with cognitive impairment and their 883 Yi-Chen Chiu (Taiwan) family caregivers: from hospital to home: a pilot study

POSTER PRESENTATIONS Family dynamics of informal carers among persons with dementia – 916 Sam Sangeeth (India) rural Tiruvananthapurum, Kerala, India Moving forward during COVID-19 pandemic: online educational Azam David Saifullah 974 78 intervention for carers of people living with dementia (United Kingdom)

Information systems for dementia Jong Bin Bae (South 335 The Korean dementia registry and management system (K-DREAMS) Korea) Making research more accessible in Ireland: developing a registry 503 of people with dementia and caregivers who want to participate in Laura O'Philbin (Ireland) research with limited resources

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Dementia research and innovation Acupuncture improved cognitive function and decreases hippocampal 137 IL-1β in a mouse model of Alzheimer’s disease via increasing TREM2 Jing Jiang (China) and DAP12 POSTER PRESENTATIONS 139 Iontophoretic drug transport for treatment of Alzheimer Ashish Jain (India) 156 Caregiver burden in mild cognitive impairment in Japan Satoshi Hayashi (Japan) Person centred care for patients with dementia in a teaching hospital 159 Si Ching Lim (Singapore) with novel innovation Involvement of amyloid and insulin signalling in the pathogenesis of 180 β Te-Jen Lai (Taiwan) dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) 186 Person-centred care: how is it practiced today? Henry Brodaty (Australia) Sharifah Munirah 188 A case of neuronal intranuclear inclusion disease Alhamid (Singapore) Supporting elderly people with cognitive impairment during and after Jochen René Thyrian 190 hospital stays with intersectoral care management [intersec-CM]: a (Germany) randomised controlled trial 79 The effect of integrative physical and cognitive activity on older adults Ching Jung Tseng 191 with mild cognitive impairment (Taiwan) Can markers of dementia progression be derived from primary care Louise Robinson (United 193 electronic health records? Kingdom) A simple risk prediction model for predicting dementia in low- and Eduwin Pakpahan 203 middle-income countries: evidence from a population representative (United Kingdom) cohort study in China (result from DEPEC programme) C5aR agonist enhances phagocytosis of fibrillar and non-fibrillar A Elena Panagiotou Worth 224 β amyloid and preserves memory in a mouse model of Alzheimer’s disease (Cyprus) They remind me that I am still me: clubs for people with young onset 232 Riley Malvern (Canada) dementia GPS safer walking technology for people with early-stage dementia, Esme Wood (United 234 how is it used? Kingdom) Chronic Pannexin 1 blockade improves cognitive performance of APP/ 281 Paula Fernanda (Chile) PS1 mice model Aging actively care of cognition and emotions in a group of religious Jacqueline Arabia 282 people of the Sacred Corazon de Jesus community (RSCJ) Cali Colombia (Colombia) Christian Gossan 314 Improving dementia awareness using interactive video simulation (Australia) An innovative approach to the acute hospital journey and experience for Meagan Cara Hartley 319 people living with dementia (Australia) Gillian Anderson (United 331 The digital future of dementia health and care Kingdom) Effect of therapeutic cooking for the elderly with mild dementia and 370 mild cognitive impairment (MCI) – from a practical research at a Natsuko Yukawa (Japan) "confectionery cooking club" in a nursing home in Japan 375 Recage project – respectful caring for agitated elderly – horizon 2020 Mario Possenti (Italy) Estimating prevalence of subjective cognitive decline across Susanne Roehr 393 international cohort studies of ageing: a COSMIC study (Germany)

Twitter @AlzDisInt @alz_sg #ADI2020 34th Virtual International Conference of VIRTUAL Alzheimer’s Disease International 2020 10-12 December 2020 ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE INTERNATIONAL VIRTUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE 10-12 DECEMBER 2020 Dementia research and innovation Population normative data for the IDEA six-item cognitive screen, William Keith Gray 407 CERAD 10 word list and animal naming test in Tanzania and Nigeria (United Kingdom) The prevalence of dementia in rural Tanzania. Community-based Stella-Maria Paddick 408 prevalence estimates in 2009–2010 and 2018–2019 (United Kingdom) The prevalence and associations of subjective memory complaints in Aoife Colgan (United 409 older adults in Hai, Tanzania Kingdom) Dementia subtypes in rural Tanzania: proportions and community- Rosie Lyus (United 410 based screening Kingdom) A pilot study on the effectiveness of multi-cognitive training courses for 420 Chia-Min Lai (Taiwan) patients with dementia The effect of structural hand-made art therapy on improving the 421 Ya-Ting Young (Taiwan) POSTER PRESENTATIONS physical and mental function of older people with dementia Dave Jenkins (New 433 Reversal of cognitive decline: 100 patients Zealand) 80 Caregivers of younger onset dementia: exploring needs, obstacles and Chyi En Teoh and Sok 436 service gaps Hwee Lim (Singapore) The wisdom of the crowd – involving the public and people affected by Fiona Carragher (United 460 dementia in innovation Kingdom) Generating quantitative evidence on the prevalence, impact and costs Nicolas Farina (United 461 of dementia: the STRiDE model Kingdom) Implementing a longitudinal dementia educational programme into Yvonne Anne Feeney 467 higher educational institutes: what are the barriers and facilitators? (United Kingdom) Katarzyna Hess-Wiktor 472 Minnity – a digital tool to personalise dementia care (Sweden) Kasper Bormans 506 Advertising techniques and dementia (Belgium) “Happy brain exercise program” at the day care centre in the middle of 513 Hui-Wen Chien (Taiwan) Taiwan UTI’s, antimicrobial resistance and the ageing population. A study of the Megan Mcstea 524 last two years of life for patients diagnosed with dementia in Queensland (Australia) A mobile application (app) for family caregivers of persons with dementia 530 Ya-Li Sung (Taiwan) in receiving a smart technology assisted home nursing program Developing a questionnaire of visual perception related daily function 546 Bin-Huei Shih (Taiwan) for mild cognitive impairments: preliminary study Entrepreneurship and intergenerational engagement to tackle ageing in Kishan Kariippanon 555 place: a case study of an undergraduate coursework (Australia) Observing well-being among individuals with mild cognitive impairment: 556 Rong Lin (China) a process evaluation of creative expression art program Art-based creative expression therapy for the elderly at high dementia 559 Hong Li (China) risk: a randomised controlled trial Desert Rose House: an integrated approach to designing a dementia Kishan Kariippanon 561 friendly sustainable house for ageing in place (Australia) The prevalence of frailty in a cohort of older HIV-positive patients and Clare Elizabeth Bristow 564 its relationship with HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders in northern (United Kingdom) Tanzania

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Dementia research and innovation Contributions of a multicomponent exercise program for people with Flávia Borges-Machado 588 dementia: cognitive preliminary data (Portugal)

Measuring dementia incidence within a cohort of 267,153 older POSTER PRESENTATIONS 589 Heidi Welberry (Australia) Australians using routinely collected linked administrative data Antipsychotic use and risk of ischemic stroke in atrial fibrillation patients 596 Su-Yong Ow (Taiwan) with dementia Non-pharmacological interventions in the management of behavioural Shubashini Gnanasan 597 and psychological symptoms of dementia in Malaysia (Malaysia) Alleviation of behavioural and psychological disorders by ylang-ylang Mahmathi Karuppannan 612 essential oil to benefit patients with dementia: a systematic review (Malaysia) 622 Four square step test is a valid test to detect cognitive impairment Yu-Hsiu Chu (Taiwan) Quantitative analysis of psychotropic prescribing in dementia – prevalence 623 Samuel X Tan (Australia) and functional outcomes in a neurocognitive unit in Queensland, Australia Vascular risk factors for HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders Emma Rainey (United 653 (HAND) in older adults in northern Tanzania Kingdom) 81 Retinal screening as a potential low-resource screening method for Grace George (United 654 HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders (HAND) in older adults in sub- Kingdom) Saharan Africa (SSA): a pilot study Prevalence of HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders (HAND) in older Grace Hillsmith (United 655 adults in Northern Tanzania Kingdom) Subgroups of mild cognitive impairment based on a neuropsychological 658 Yi Zhou (China) approach in China for targeted cognitive training Theresa L Scott 660 Living with young onset dementia and staying engaged without driving (Australia) 662 Why innovation and entrepreneurship is key to sustaining dementia care Gillian Tee (Singapore) Guojun Gabriel Chew 679 A single cell brain atlas in human Alzheimer’s disease (Singapore) Reliability, validity, and responsiveness of the health belief model 681 based knowledge scale for mild cognitive impairment: a behavioural Junyu Zhao (China) exploration in cognitive complained subjects Functional genomic analysis of gene expression data and study of 721 regulatory network centred on BACE1 associated with Alzheimer’s Yi-Shian Peng (Taiwan) disease 723 Putative brain mechanisms of cognitive stimulation therapy (CST) Gloria Wong (China) Survival of people with clinical diagnosis of dementia in Hong Kong: a 729 Hao Luo (Hong Kong) population-based study Mild behavioural impairment (MBI) in subjective cognitive decline (SCD) 730 and mild cognitive impairment (MCI): prevalence and association with Justin Chew (Singapore) longitudinal cognitive decline in a memory clinic cohort Mild behavioural impairment in mild cognitive impairment and healthy 733 Kok Pin Ng (Singapore) controls Claudia I Astudillo- 737 A roadmap of dementia research in Mexico García (Mexico) Strategies to achieve mild nutritional ketosis for Alzheimer’s, dementia, 745 Mary Newport (USA) and healthy brain aging

Twitter @AlzDisInt @alz_sg #ADI2020 34th Virtual International Conference of VIRTUAL Alzheimer’s Disease International 2020 10-12 December 2020 ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE INTERNATIONAL VIRTUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE 10-12 DECEMBER 2020 Dementia research and innovation Long-term consumption of cocoa prevents dementia induced by Mihiri Munasinghe 756 amyloid-β1-42 in Caenorhabditis elegans (C. elegans) (Australia) To build up the communication skills of caregivers of persons with Sanni June-Chyn Leong 758 dementia using “play to care” application (Singapore) Massage and technology: a potential synergy for behavioural and Savannah Siew 763 psychological symptoms of cognitive impairment (Singapore) The use of mHealth for people with dementia and caregivers: an Duangrat Monthaisong 772 integrative literature review (Thailand) Can computerised cognitive training improve cognition in patients with Zhong Jie Kua 777 heart failure? (Singapore) The role of digital technology in enhancing the lives of people with Joyce Gray and Gillian 783 POSTER PRESENTATIONS dementia Fyfe (United Kingdom) A case of progressive supranuclear palsy with an initial acute 797 Tolulola Taiwo (Canada) psychiatric presentation 82 Examination of methodologies for introducing volunteer-led 808 “therapeutic cooking” program to Japanese Canadian older adults with Chiho Myojin (Japan) dementia in Canada Impact of risk minimisation tools on drug utilisation of rivastigmine 850 Sunil Modali (India) transdermal patch in patients with dementia in a real-world setting Family caregiving experiences for persons with young-onset dementia 856 Li-Hua Chen (Taiwan) in Taiwan Service needs of people with young onset dementia and their family 859 Ciao-Yei Chen (Taiwan) caregivers: the perspective from professional worker The 10/66 short dementia diagnostic schedule in nursing homes: a Aliaa Ibnidris 894 validation study (Switzerland) Impact of infections on dementia progression: a retrospective cohort Angelique Mavrodaris 906 analysis (United Kingdom) Effectiveness of the wellness Nordic relax chair on behavioural and Fan Jun Samantha Tan 962 psychological symptoms of dementia (Singapore) Challenging the biomedical model in dementia: is there a role for arts 971 Maria Gialama (Ireland) and mindfulness-based interventions? 972 A novel device to deliver drugs across the blood brain barrier U R Anoop (India)

Facebook-square Alzheimer’s Disease International New trial results show positive benefits of nutritional intervention over 3 years*

• Just published in Alzheimer’s & Dementia*, the results of 3 years of intervention with Souvenaid showed slowing of decline on cognition, memory, function and brain atrophy in patients with MCI due to AD.

• The intervention benefits increased with initiation early in the disease and long-term use.

* Soininen H, et al. Alzheimers Dement. 2020. https://doi.org/10.1002/alz.12172 Souvenaid is a Food for Special Medical Purpose for the dietary management of early AD and must be used under medical supervision 34th Virtual International Conference of VIRTUAL Alzheimer’s Disease International 2020 10-12 December 2020 ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE INTERNATIONAL VIRTUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE 10-12 DECEMBER 2020

FILM ROOM

Film title and description Language A Christmas message from Ashford's Dementia Peer Support Group English An animation of a poem written by one of the Alzheimer’s Society’s support groups. A Place Called Pluto English Greg O’Brien, long-time Cape Cod reporter and newspaperman, has been diagnosed with Early Onset Alzheimer’s. Acting on instinct and journalistic grit, Greg has decided to face down the disease and his imminent decline by writing frankly about the journey. ABU Urdu with English subtitles

FILM ROOM A story of a young man’s unwavering loyalty to his father. What others may see as a sacrifice, was merely a privilege to him. Surrounded by distractions, and tested by his ambition to reach his potential at a pivotal time in his career. The choices he makes will ultimately demonstrate his belief systems. The film highlights an incurable disease, Alzheimer’s. Based on a real-life story, this film brings awareness to people living with dementia and their carers. Primarily a drama, with a hint of comedy, and “Bollywood songs” are incorporated in the film, to give it a commercial aspect. Include Faraz Alam’s 84 email address! Alzheimer en Afrique / Alzheimer in Africa French This short film is about a man over the age of 60 who developed Alzheimer’s disease symptoms over a long period of time without being diagnosed and his family and friends did not understand his actions. It addresses the issues of stigma and witchcraft in Africa, and shows how the ACMA association in Cameroon helped the family understand the disease. Alzheimer na Periferia / Alzheimer on the Outskirts Portuguese with English This documentary shows the daily lives of families who live on the outskirts of the city of subtitles São Paulo and need to deal with Alzheimer’s disease. The film’s original vision is to relate the drama of families who need to care for an Alzheimer’s patient without the financial resources to buy expensive drugs or pay a caregiver or physical therapist. Most of the time, when we hear about this disease in the news or on television, the examples shown are from families able to seek good doctors, pay caregivers and give the most appropriate treatment to the patient. In “Alzheimer on the Outskirts” we intend to give a realistic view of the situation of most families that face this disease. The film presents the point of view of relatives who end up becoming caregivers for the patient, and for that they need to give up their own lives, making enormous sacrifices, such as abandoning the profession, studies or their home itself. (Malabar Filmes, Brazil, 2018) Fleeting Memories Spanish with English Asociación Grupo Ermita Alzheimer de ’s video is about the testimony of a subtitles person who lives with her husband living with Alzheimer’s Disease, how he got to Ermita and the services they provide. There are also brief interviews with health professionals who speak about what Alzheimer’s is and how they treat it, from their different perspectives. It reflects the comprehensive care of a patient and the support that Ermita as an association can give to families. Conversando con los cuidadores Spanish A series of short films with carers providing their advice on a number of different topics • Capitulo 1 Historias de Vidas • Capitulo 2 Sintomas psicologicos conductuales • Capitulo 3 Comunicación • Capitulo 4 Actividades de la vida diaria • Capitulo 5 Cuidado personal • Capitulo 6 Aceptación y Compromiso • Capitulo 7 Apoyo al cuidador • Capitulo 8 Historia de Familia

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Film title and description Language Dancing for a cure No dialogue The film depicts how dance and music can be a dementia therapy, a way to revitalize culture and revive the memory of a grandfather with dementia. This movie is part of a

group project assignment for an undergraduate course from the English Department at FILM ROOM Laurentian University. This assignment merged two vastly different Indigenous cultures’ (Canada and ) humility and sacred values. DAYS BLG! Japanese with English The director is Mr. Tomohiro Hirata, who used to work for the Japan Broadcasting subtitles Corporation and switched to a NGO supporting people living with dementia. He is focusing on work for people living with dementia. Dementia Advisory Group Mandarin with English TADA, Chinese Taipei has established the SECOND dementia advisory group (DAG) in subtitles Asia! People with mild dementia were invited as consultants for dementia policies. Since April 2019, the consultants with dementia have discussed dementia-friendly facilities, transportation, problems associated with getting lost, financial security, etc. By listening 85 to the voices of consultants with dementia, TADA’s dream is not only to advocate FOR people with dementia, but also to advocate WITH them! The advisors invited more people with dementia to join the DAG in the video. Desandando la Vida / Retracing Life Spanish This is a Puertorican film in 8 parts. It is the story of a man who after the death of his wife begins to show signs of Alzheimer’s disease. The film illustrates how each family member reacts to this event and how this man feels that his life is going back to a road already travelled. El Cielo en el Lago / Heaven on the Lake Spanish with English This short film was made by Ruy Portillo, a Mexican director, in 2013 and won the subtitles Jordi Solé Turá award for the best fiction short film in 2014. Mario is a 60-year-old gentleman caring for Lupita, his 80-year old mother who is living with Alzheimer’s disease. This night, just like many other nights, she cannot sleep, she meets with her young children in the past, confuses photographs, she hides so she will not have to take her medications. Mario is tired, very tired, and decides to take her for a ride, he carries her to her wheelchair and rides off with her to many different places until they comes upon a beautiful lake, together they walk into the lake, where she will magically find her past, her future, a lake, Heaven on the lake. Ruy Portillo wrote this story, not only to remember his grandmother’s beauty and to honour her memory, but also so that many others could realize the nature of Alzheimer’s and those who are affected, that are not only the patients but also the relatives. Forget Us Not Network – The Journey to Taipei English and Mandarin with Are people living with dementia capable of travelling abroad? Determined to change the subtitles in both languages minds of families who have loved ones with dementia, the Alzheimer’s Disease Association and Lien Foundation set out to prove that those living with dementia can do anything they set their minds to, especially travel. Watch as the group travel to Taipei to meet with the TADA, Chinese Taipei, to continue in their quest to enable Singapore to be more dementia- friendly and inclusive. The trip is a first for any dementia group in Asia. The group’s trip to Taipei was done in collaboration with ADA (Singapore) under the Forget Us Not campaign, and supported by Lien Foundation and Singapore Airlines. France Alzheimer Campaign 2018 French As citizens, we bear the responsibility of treating and seeing those affected by Alzheimer’s with caring eyes. Together, let us choose to not anticipate their hardship and put their emotional wellbeing at risk; to see their abilities rather than their shortcomings. Let us help them to always enjoy life!

Twitter @AlzDisInt @alz_sg #ADI2020 34th Virtual International Conference of VIRTUAL Alzheimer’s Disease International 2020 10-12 December 2020 ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE INTERNATIONAL VIRTUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE 10-12 DECEMBER 2020

Film title and description Language Gendhuk Indonesian with English Gendhuk won first place out of 50 short films of the Remember Me Film Festival in subtitles or Indonesian collaboration between Alzheimer’s Indonesia, Eagle Documentary, Atma Jaya Catolic subtitles University of Indonesia and Kick Andy TV Show which was held at the World Alzheimer’s Month event in 2017. The film was made by Farizal Famuji. I Remember Hindi with English subtitles A Hindi drama film on stolen memories and broken hearts

FILM ROOM IMAJI Indonesian with English Alzheimer’s Indonesia collaborated with a young community co-produced “IMAJI” Short subtitles Film, from the word “Imagination”, tries to ask young people in Indonesia to “Imagine” if they start to forget many things in the future and finally break their family life. We hope this short film can break the Dementia stigma from a younger age. Kids interview people with dementia English Dementia Action Week 2019 – Alzheimer’s Society (UK) 86 La traversée French This year, for World Alzheimer’s Day, France Alzheimer and related diseases wanted to send a message of hope and solidarity. As this year has been and still is particularly hard and demanding for people living with dementia and their caregivers, we wanted to stand by their side more than ever with a message of proximity, support and inclusivity. (Association France Alzheimer) Living well with dementia English Alzheimer’s New Zealand released a series of three short films for World Alzheimer’s Month, in which Alister, Rita and Helen discuss some of the things they do to help them live well with dementia. Mammamà Italian with English subtitles Mammamà is an old Neapolitan word which means “mamma mia”, mummy dearest. But nowadays, it really doesn’t mean anything – it’s a kind of emphatic exclamation that can be used depending on the situation and on the tone it is uttered. It can express just about anything: joy, incredulity, displeasure/exasperation. It’s not at all just a word, it’s a magic formula... Memory is not forever English with Arabic subtitles The Oman Alzheimer’s Society launched this video two years ago. It is about a daughter who cared for her mother living with dementia for 15 years. It shows the emotions experienced by caregivers when their loved one with dementia is no longer able to recognise them or express their love and gratitude. My Little Girl Thai with English subtitles This short film seems to be about a little girl and her mother, but the little girl actually turns out to be the woman’s mother with dementia who behaves like a child. Peter's story: Living with dementia English Peter is living with dementia and shares how he was coping with his diagnosis and leading a café to support others with early onset dementia

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Film title and description Language ¿Quien eres tu? Spanish This is an independent production, on Alzheimer's Disease and how it affects the family. ¿Quien eres tu? is about a married couple’s life seen through the eyes of a son, who

tells the story of his parents’ wondrous childhood in the countryside along a boisterous FILM ROOM Macaná River, their adventures as students in the city and their marriage. From thereon, professional careers and the birth of six children follow in tandem. The narrator through the sixth son revisits the family history and sets the stage for the eventful, adventurous, and often times typical life of the family. And then, a mysterious and subtle cloud begins to settle over the mother as she slowly travels into oblivion at the hands of Alzheimer’s disease. It is a no-holds barred account of the hardships of the disease on a family, but it also offers a breath of hope for the eventual closure to be found at the foot of the hill, in the valley that will once again cradle its wounded child. Somebody I used to know English A book shelf analogy by story teller Wendy Mitchell The Dementia Island Journey (trailer) English 87 Rianna Patterson founded the Dominica Dementia Foundation following the passing of her grandfather Terry Vidal in Dominica, and received the Queens Young Leader award in 2017. She has started crowdfunding to raise £35k to produce a documentary film on Dementia. This film will focus on dementia, culture and Rianna's personal journey in creating an impact in the lives of the elderly in Dominica. The Dementia Island Journey aims to highlight ageing and living well in a cultural context such as the Windrush generation. She wants to celebrate the elderly and share their stories with the world. Rianna will explore holistic treatments for Dementia and engage in traditional dances by the one of the very few indigenous people of the world, the Kalinagos. The Rest I Make Up English This is filmmaker Michelle Memran’s documentary portrait of the playwright María Irene Fornés who is living with Alzheimer's disease. The unforgettable ride for Lolita and Marujita Spanish with English These are 2 testimonial videos of family members of people living with dementia in subtitles Ecuador. These videos were made for the XII Iberoamerican Alzheimer Congress which took place in Quito, Ecuador, in 2019, organised by Fundacion TASE. Vivre avec la maladie – Programme ETP (Education Thérapeutique du Patient) French with English subtitles In early Spring 2018, France Alzheimer launched a programme dedicated only to people with dementia. With this programme, the French organization wishes to provide new answers to those recently diagnosed. Volunteering with dementia Finnish with English subtitles The aim of this series made by the Alzheimer Society of Finland is to make visible that people with dementia are also involved in volunteering. Ones possibilities for participation and the will to influence important matters do not end when they are diagnosed with a memory related disease. With open dialogue and right kind of support everyone can find their own way to volunteer. In these 4 videos, four volunteers from member associations of the Alzheimer Society of Finland are seen to share their own experience on volunteering with dementia.

Twitter @AlzDisInt @alz_sg #ADI2020 34th Virtual International Conference of VIRTUAL Alzheimer’s Disease International 2020 10-12 December 2020 ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE INTERNATIONAL VIRTUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE 10-12 DECEMBER 2020

CONFERENCE COMMITTEES

ADI Scientific Programme Committee (SPC) International Advisory Board (IAB) Chair: Prof. Serge Gauthier (Canada) Prof. Olusegun Baiyewu (Nigeria) Dr Hamed Al Sinawi (Oman) Dr Linda Barclay (Australia) Dr Hanadi Al-Hamed (Qatar) Mr Matthew Baumgart (USA) Prof. Suvarna Alladi (India) Prof. Carol Brayne (United Kingdom) Dr Ricardo Allegri (Argentina) Prof. Dawn Brooker (United Kingdom) Dr Mohammad Arbabi (Iran) Dr William Brooks (Australia) Dr Alireza Atri (USA) A/Prof. Angelique Chan (Singapore) Prof. Henry Brodaty (Australia) Prof. Lynn Chenoweth (Australia) Dr Andrea Fabbo (Italy) Dr Habib Chowdhury ()

CONFERENCE COMMITTEES Dr Richard Faull (New Zealand) Mr Diego de Leo (Italy) Dr Ishtar Govia (Jamaica) Dr Amit Dias (India) Ms Iva Holmoverá (Czech Republic) Dr Temitope Farombi (Nigeria) 88 Dr Georges Karam (Lebanon) Mr Sam Fazio (USA) Mr Shamil Mohamed () Dr Nori Graham (United Kingdom) Dr Jose Luis Molinuevo (Spain) Dr Karen Harrison-Dening (United Kingdom) Dra. Ninoska Ocampo () Ms Hilda Hayo (United Kingdom) Prof. Adesola Ogunniyi (Nigeria) Ms Lynda Hutton (United Kingdom) Prof. Craig Ritchie (United Kingdom) Ms Stefania Ilinca (Romania) Prof. Vorapun Senangarong (Thailand) Dr Motoharu Kawai (Japan) Dr Alina Solomon (Finland) Prof. Mark S. Kindy (USA) Ms Li Yu Tang (Taiwan) Prof. Piers Kotting (United Kingdom) Dr Yuda Turana (Indonesia) Ms Sue Kurrle (Australia) Dr Huali Wang (China) Prof. Brian Lawlor (United Kingdom) Mrs Wendy Weidner (United Kingdom) Dr Tau Ming, Liew (Singapore) Prof. Anders Wimo (Sweden) Prof. Juan J. Llibre-Rodriguez (Cuba) Dr Ki-Woong, Kim (South Korea) Prof. Lee-Fay Low, (Australia) Dr Gayle Madden (United Kingdom) Local Scientific Programme Committee (SPC) Prof. Kalyani Mehta (Singapore) Chair: Dr Wee Shiong, Lim (Singapore) Mr Dustin Nowaskie (USA) Co-chair: Dr Li Ling, Ng (Singapore) A/Prof. Tze Pin, Ng (Singapore) Ms Philomena Anthony (Singapore) Dr Wai Chong, Ng (Singapore) Dr Mei Sian, Chong (Singapore) Prof. Celestine Obua (Uganda) A/Prof. Nagaendran Kandiah (Singapore) Mr Martin Orrell (United Kingdom) Dr Feng Yuan, Yao (Singapore) Mr Jim Pearson (Scotland) Prof. Philip Poi (Malaysia) International Advisory Board (IAB) Dr Farshad Sharifi(Iran) Dr Daisy Acosta (Dominican Republic) Mr Randy Steffan (Canada) Dr Noorhazlina Ali (Singapore) Prof. Bengt Winblad (Sweden) Dr Sharon Andrews (Australia) A/Prof. Philip Yap (Singapore) Ms Jessica Young (Australia)

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