LOCAL MP Debbie Abrahams has backed a call for a new £2.4 billion dementia fund by tabling a cross-party parliamentary early day motion (EDM).

The Oldham East and Saddleworth MP is co-chair of the all-party parliamentary group (APPG)on dementia.

This follows an Alzheimer’s Society report calling for urgent investment and arguing that people with dementia face an average 15 per cent higher social care costs than others

The EDM calls on the government to include a dementia fund in the forthcoming spending review to break the deadlock on reforming the social care system and end the unfairness facing people with dementia.

Ms Abrahams said: “Alzheimer’s Society and Public Health England data shows that over 2,000 people are living with dementia across the borough of Oldham and that we have a higher proportion of older people with dementia than the national average, and rates of hospital admissions and hospital emergencies are disproportionately high.

“Typically, people with dementia spend £100,000 on their care, an astronomical sum, which would take 125 years to save for, well over a lifetime.

“Social care is in a desperate state and in urgent need of a complete overhaul. People with dementia are left struggling with a system that is unfair and unsustainable.

“The injustice of people battling to get care, on top of battling the devastating effects of dementia can’t go on and the Government must act quickly.”

Ms Abrahams has also signed a cross-party letter, co0ordinated by MP Rachael Maskell, chair of the APPG for ageing and older people, which highlights the crisis in our social care system and the need for urgent investment into services and support for people with dementia in absence of the long-awaited social care green paper.

She argues that, due to the current failings of the social care system, people with dementia often needlessly end up in A&E with dehydration, an infection, or due to a fall. For some, when they are unable to return home they can wait up to a year in hospital for a care home place.

A quarter of hospital beds are taken up by people with dementia, with the Alzheimer’s Society report highlighting 72,496 emergency admissions of over-65s with dementia (2016-2017), an increase of 70 per cent in just five years, costing the NHS an estimated £400 million.

The charity argues that the dementia fund would benefit the NHS in the long term, meaning fewer people living with dementia are forced to go to A&E at crisis point, and would ensure better support is in place to enable people living with dementia to leave hospital as soon as they are well enough.

Jeremy Hughes, chief executive at Alzheimer’s Society, said: “If you develop cancer or heart disease, your care is covered by the NHS. People with Alzheimer’s disease and other forms of dementia have the right and expectation that the NHS will also support them. We are calling for urgent investment in high quality care through a dedicated Dementia Fund. It’s time to end the dementia penalty that‘s preventing people from getting the care they need and deserve.

“The overwhelming cross party support shown through the open letter to the Health Secretary illustrates how indisputable this crisis is. A Dementia Fund will provide help now to remedy the situation for people with dementia, while we wait for the green paper and a long-term sustainable funding solution for social care.”