Author name: Alison Watson-Shields

Alison Watson-Shields is a dementia care specialist, trainer, and community leader with over two decades of experience supporting people living with dementia and those who care for them. She is the founder of Young At Heart ULO CIC and Hand in Hand Activities CIC, where she develops and delivers inclusive, meaningful activities, peer support, and wellbeing programmes within the community. Alison is an Independent Positive Approach to Care (PAC) Trainer and Consultant, using Teepa Snow’s evidence-based approach to deliver training for families, carers, and professionals. She holds a BSc in Health and Social Care and an MSc in Dementia Studies, bringing together academic knowledge and extensive real-world experience. She is passionate about creating opportunities for connection, purpose, and joy, ensuring that people living with dementia can continue to live well, stay active, and feel valued within their communities. Her work is shaped by lived experience, co-production, and a deep belief in seeing the person beyond the diagnosis.

Articles

Dementia Lanyards: Helpful Signal or Unfair Expectation?

People occasionally suggest that individuals living with dementia should wear a badge or lanyard identifying their condition to prevent misunderstandings in public. While the idea appears helpful at first glance, it raises important questions about dignity, stigma, safeguarding, and where responsibility for understanding should sit.

Articles

Why Language Matters in Dementia: More Than Just “Words”

The words we use to talk about dementia shape how people are viewed, treated, and understood. Terms like “dementia patient” and “dementia sufferer” create powerful mental images rooted in loss, frailty, and dependency. This article explores why language matters, how it can reinforce stigma, and why person-centred terms such as “person living with dementia” better reflect dignity, identity, and lived experience.

GTKD Q&A

The Limp Mode Analogy

An accessible way of understanding what happens in the brain in the later stages of dementia, using the “limp mode” analogy to explain why some abilities reduce over time while emotional responses can remain strong. This piece explores neurological change, emotional safety, and what this means for everyday care and support.

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