Dementia and COVID-19 in Chile, New Zealand and Germany: A research agenda for cross-country learning for resilience in health care systems
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2021Metadata
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Laporte Uribe, Franziska
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Dementia and COVID-19 in Chile, New Zealand and Germany: A research agenda for cross-country learning for resilience in health care systems
Author
- Laporte Uribe, Franziska;
- Arteaga Herrera, Oscar Germán;
- Bruchhausen, Walter;
- Cheung, Gary;
- Cullum, Sarah;
- Fuentes Garcia, Alejandra Marcela;
- Miranda Castillo, Claudia;
- Kerse, Ngaire;
- Kirk, Ray;
- Muru Lanning, Marama;
- Salinas Ríos, Rodrigo Alejandro;
- Schrott, Lothar;
- Slachevsky Chonchol, Andrea María;
- Roes, Martina;
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has revealed existing gaps in policies, systems and services,
stressing the need for concerted global action on healthy aging. Similar to the COVID-19 pandemic,
dementia is a challenge for health systems on a global scale. Our hypothesis is that translational
potential lies in cross-country learning by involving three high-income countries with distinct geopolitical-
cultural-social systems in Latin America (Chile), the South Pacific (New Zealand) and Europe
(Germany). Our vision is that such cross-country learning will lead to providing adequate, equitable
and sustainable care and support for families living with dementia during a pandemic and beyond.
We are proposing a vision for research that takes a multi-disciplinary, strength-based approach at the
intersection of health care research, disaster research, global health research and dementia research.
We present some insights in support of our hypothesis and proposed research agenda. We anticipate
that this research has the potential to contribute towards strengthening and transforming health care
systems in times of crises and beyond.
Patrocinador
MULTI-PARTNER CONSORTIUM TO EXPAND DEMENTIA RESEARCH IN LATIN AMERICA (ReDLat)
National Institutes of Aging of the National Institutes of Health R01AG057234
Alzheimer's Association SG-20-725707
Rainwater Foundation
Global Brain Health Institute
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Artículo de publícación WoS Artículo de publicación SCOPUS
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Sustainability 2021, 13, 10247
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