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Dementia Research Conference 2024

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About this event

This free two-day conference hosted by Dr Dorina Cadar, Senior Lecturer in Cognitive Epidemiology and Dementia, Centre for Dementia Studies, BSMS, will feature a range of national experts in dementia research, as well as local researchers and representation from patients who shape our research. 

This is the fourth online Dementia Research Conference from BSMS and the Sussex Partnership Foundation Trust.

Delegates are welcome to attend on both or either days of the conference, and for full or part days to fit around your schedule.

There are 12 CPD points available (six for each full day of attendance), validated by the Royal College of Physicians.

Please note that the schedule and titles of talks are subject to change.

For any queries about the event, please contact Linda Bennett at L.Bennett@bsms.ac.uk.

join the conference via zoom here >

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Event programme

Please note that all speakers, titles and timings on the below programme are subject to change.

Wednesday 17 April: Day one

9:30am: Welcome and Introductions: Dr Dorina Cadar, Centre for Dementia Studies, Brighton and Sussex Medical School

9:40am: Introductions and overview: Professor Malcolm Reed, Dean BSMS

9:50am: Introductions and overview: Professor Andrew Dilley, Head of Clinical Neuroscience Department, BSMS

10am: Keynote Speaker: Professor Carol Brayne, Public Health, University of Cambridge: Reflections on population-based studies in older people, current societal and research efforts and their inter-relationships

11am: Professor Chakravarthi Rajkumar, Chair of Geriatric and Stroke Medicine, BSMS: Hypertension and cardiovascular risk factors

11:20: Refreshment break

11:30am: Dr Khalid Ali, Reader in Geriatrics, BSMS: Vascular dementia

12pm: Professor Eef Hogervorst, NICE Advisor, Psychology, Loughborough University: Dementia risk and HRT: Biological plausibility believers vs sceptic statisticians

12.40pm: Margaret Dangoor: Patient and Public Engagement: Involving people with dementia and their carers as advisors in research

1pm Lunch

2pm: Keynote Speaker: Dr Vanessa Raymont, R&D Director Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust: Dementias Platform UK - Trials Delivery Framework and blood biomarker challenge

2:50pm: Refreshment break

3pm: Keynote speaker: Professor Marwan Sabbagh, Barrow Neurological Institute, USA: Updates on anti-amyloid therapy in Alzheimer’s Disease

4pm: Dr Jeremy Isaacs, Clinical Director, NHS London Dementia Clinical Network: Young-onset Dementia

4:25pm: Professor Itamar Ronen, CISC Academic Director, BSMS and Dr Gosia Raczek, Honorary Researcher and Honorary Senior Clinical Lecturer, BSMS: Updates and perspectives on Neuroimaging for people living with dementia

4:55: Reflections of the day: Dr Dorina Cadar

Thursday 18 April: Day two

9:30am: Welcome: Dr Dorina Cadar, Centre for Dementia Studies, BSMS

9:35am: Keynote Speaker: Professor Martin Orrell, Director of Mental Health, Nottingham University: Improving technology for dementia

10:35am: Professor Naji Tabet, Director, Centre for Dementia Studies (CDS), BSMS: Overview of clinical research at the Centre for Dementia Studies – a decade on

10:50am: Dr Stephanie Daley, Reader in Mental Health and Dementia & Yvonne Feeney, Time for Dementia Project Manager, CDS, BSMS: The longitudinal development of empathy towards people with dementia in healthcare students

11am: Dr Dorina Cadar, Senior Lecturer in Neuroepidemiology & Dementia, BSMS: Cognitive frailty and resilience

11:10am: Dr Claire Lancaster, Lecturer in Dementia, CDS, BSMS: Apolipoprotein e4 – Memory and More across the lifespan

11:20am: Refreshment break

11:30am: Dr Ben Hicks, Research Fellow, CDS, BSMS: Early vs timely diagnosis of dementia: Unravelling the best approach

11:40am: Dr Lavinia Bertini, Research Fellow, CDS, BSMS: The impact of outbreaks on quality of life of care home residents: VIVALDI ASCOT & Ethnography Study

11:50am: Dr Nicola Schmidt-Renfree, Research Fellow, CDS, BSMS: The importance of communication in infection outbreaks in care homes

12pm: Dr Sarah Polack, Research Fellow, CDS, BSMS: The role of loneliness and social isolation in people living with dementia in coastal areas

12:10pm: Dr Lisa Quadt, Research Fellow, BSMS: Exploring the links between neurodivergence and cognitive ageing

12:20pm: Dr Nick Farina, Associate Professor, Plymouth University: The acceptability and feasibility of a community dementia screening programme in rural Kenya: DEM-SKY

12:30pm: Kath Sykes, Implementation Manager ARC KSS: Helping people to live well with dementia- an accessible information resource

12:40pm: Atsuko Fujisawa & Alice Russell, Dementia Research Unit: Overview of dementia studies taking place at Dementia Research Unit

12:50pm: Julia Fountain, PPI Coordinator: Ten Years of Lived Experience Involvement

1pm: Lunch

2pm: Professor Dennis Chan, Neurologist, University College London: Impaired spatial navigation as a marker of preclinical AD?

2:25pm: Professor Sabina Dizdarevic, Consultant in Nuclear Medicine: University Hospitals Sussex NHS Foundation Trust: Multimodality multi-tracer functional imaging of dementia

2:50pm: Refreshment break

3pm: Keynote speaker: Professor John-Paul Taylor, Translational Dementia Research, Newcastle University: Updates in Dementia with Lewy bodies

4pm: Professor Heather Ferguson, Professor of Psychology,Divisional Director of Research and Innovation, University of Kent: Social cognitive changes in older age and the mediating role of cognitive control

4:25pm: Dr Samara Banno, Daphne Jackson Trust Research Fellow, School of Psychological Sciences, Birkbeck, University of London: Developing an intelligent prediction model for dementia

4:45pm: Final reflections and close: Dr Dorina Cadar & Professor Naji Tabet

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Speaker bios

Wednesday's Keynote Speakers

Carol Brayne 
Professor of Public Health Medicine and Co-Director of Cambridge Public Health Interdisciplinary Centre, University of Cambridge

Carol Brayne is a medically qualified epidemiologist and public health academic. Her main research has been longitudinal studies of older people following changes over time with a public health perspective and focus on the brain. She is lead principal investigator in the MRC CFA Studies and other population based studies and has played a lead role in teaching and training in epidemiology and public health at Cambridge University. She is a Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences and an NIHR Senior Investigator Emeritus.

Dr Vanessa Raymont
Senior Clinical Researcher, R&D Director, Oxford NHS Foundation Trust

Dr Vanessa Raymont is a highly experienced psychiatrist with over 25 years clinical and clinical research experience in the UK and USA. Her clinical and research interests are in traumatic brain injury, and memory disorders and dementia, as well as clinical trials focused on the prevention of cognitive impairment and dementia.

Professor Marwan Sabbagh
Behavioural Neurologist, Barrow Neurological Institute

Professor Marwan Sabbagh, MD, is a behavioral neurologist in the Alzheimer’s and Memory Disorders Program at Barrow Neurological Institute. He is also a professor and the Vice Chair of Research in the Institute’s Department of Neurology. He is board certified in neurology by the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology. Professor Sabbagh’s expertise includes the diagnosis and treatment of Alzheimer’s disease and other memory disorders. He is a fellow of the American Academy of Neurology.

Thursday's Keynote Speakers

Professor Martin Orrell
Director of the Institute of Mental Health

Professor Martin Orrell is Director of the Institute of Mental Health, a partnership between the University of Nottingham and Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust. He is also the Director of the WHO Collaborating Centre for Mental Health, Disabilities and Human Rights at the IMH. He led the research on Cognitive Stimulation Therapy (CST) for dementia which features in NICE dementia guidance and is used in 35+ countries. He has led £20+ million dementia care research grants and has published 400+ academic papers. He is an NIHR Senior Investigator, and is Editor of the international journal Aging & Mental Health.

Professor John-Paul Taylor 
NIHR Newcastle Biomedical Research Centre Lead for Dementia

Professor John-Paul Taylor is the NIHR Newcastle Biomedical Research Centre lead for dementia and he is the Chief Investigator for the NIHR HTA COBALT trial which is investigating the benefits of memantine as an add-on therapy to cholinesterase inhibitors in dementia with Lewy bodies and Parkinson’s disease dementia. Professor John-Paul Taylor MBBS(hons) MRCPsych PhD is an academic old age psychiatrist and Honorary Consultant at Newcastle University and Cumbria, Northumberland, Tyne and Wear NHS Foundation Trust. Professor John-Paul Taylor graduated with honors and distinction from the University of Newcastle upon Tyne having completed an intercalated MD PhD programme in 2001. He subsequently worked in the Institute of Psychiatry at the Maudsley Hospital in London, before completing clinical academic training in Newcastle upon Tyne. In 2010 he was awarded a Wellcome Trust Intermediate Clinical Fellowship and was appointed in 2019 as Professor of Translational Dementia Research at Newcastle University.

Wednesday's Speakers

Dr Dorina Cadar
Senior Lecturer in Cognitive Epidemiology and Dementia, BSMS

Dorina Cadar is the director of the Cognitive Epidemiology, Dementia, and Ageing Research (CEDAR) lab. She is the Principal Investigator of several grants, including 'Cognitive reserve and dementia', funded by Alzheimer's Society, and 'Social determinants of dementia in the UK and Japan, funded by the UKRI. Dr Cadar is a Co-Investigator of international grants funded by the ESRC, the National Institute on Aging, the Canadian Institute of Ageing Research and the Japanese Institute of Health. Dr Cadar completed her MRC Career Development Fellowship at MRC Lifelong Health Ageing Unit and other postdoctoral training projects funded by the Alzheimer Society, ESRC, and NIA at University College London. She undertook her MRC funded PhD on the role of lifestyle behaviours on cognitive ageing at the Institute of Epidemiology and Public Health, University College London, and her MSc in Clinical Neuroscience at the Institute of Psychiatry, Kings College London, where she investigated the applicability of novel neuroimaging techniques in measuring brain atrophy in patients with Mild Cognitive Impairment and dementia. Dr Cadar's research interests and expertise are in the field of cognitive epidemiology and dementia, including immunology, biomarkers, socioeconomic inequalities, psychosocial factors, and other modifiable risk factors, such as lifestyle behaviours, social isolation, cognitive and social resilience. 

Professor Malcolm Reed
Dean, BSMS

Professor Malcolm Reed attended school in Birmingham and subsequently qualified in medicine from the University of Sheffield in 1981. He then underwent surgical training in Birmingham, Derby and Bristol before moving to the University of Louisville in the United States to undertake a research MD. He returned to Sheffield and undertook higher surgical training before becoming appointed a Senior Lecturer and Honorary Consultant Surgeon at the Royal Hallamshire Hospital in 1992. He was then appointed to the Foundation Chair in Surgical Oncology at the University of Sheffield, taking up the post in 2000. Subsequent roles included Head of Academic Surgery and Head of the University Department of Oncology. Professor Reed was appointed Dean of Brighton and Sussex Medical School in 2014.

Professor Andrew Dilley
Head of the Department of Clinical Neuroscience, BSMS

Prof Dilley completed a BSc in Anatomy and Development Biology at University College London (UCL) and went on to undertake a PhD in neurophysiology at Kings College London, focussing on the mechanisms underlying the peripheral neuropathy, Guillain-Barré syndrome. Following completion of his PhD, Andrew returned to UCL as a Postdoctoral Research Fellow within the Department of Physiology. At UCL, he established his interest in peripheral neuropathic pain mechanisms. Following this post, he took a position at Harvard Medical School in Boston, as an Instructor in Anesthesia. During his time at Harvard, he continued his laboratory research into the role of peripheral neuroinflammation in chronic musculoskeletal pain. Andrew joined Brighton and Sussex Medical School in 2007, and he currently leads Phase 1 of the BM BS programme. His external roles include Board member of the International Federation of Associations of Anatomists (IFAA) Federative International Programme on Anatomical Research, where he is the lead for Neuroscience Research. From 2018 to 2020, Andrew was the Interim Head of Anatomy for the new Kent and Medway Medical School.

Professor Chakravarthi Rajkumar 
Chair of Geriatric and Stroke Medicine, BSMS

Professor Chakravarthi Rajkumar is a Chair of Geriatric and Stroke Medicine, Brighton and Sussex Medical School, University of Sussex. To date he has been actively involved in research in the field of Geriatrics and Stroke medicine. He has held various positions in the National Institute of Health Research (NIHR) Research Network for Kent, Surrey and Sussex. He has been Clinical Director, Associate Director for Early Career Development and also Deputy Director for the past 15 years. He has a wide range of research interests which includes clinical trials in the very elderly, hypertension, vascular compliance, frailty, and hospital acquired infections in the elderly. He has published over 400 abstracts, peer reviewed papers and book chapters on clinical problems in journals including NEJM, The Lancet and JAMA (total 200 publications, 13,979 citations, H Index 49).

Dr Khalid Ali
Senior lecturer in Geriatrics and Stroke Medicine, BSMS

Dr Khalid Ali is a Senior Lecturer in Geriatrics and Stroke Medicine at BSMS and a consultant geriatrician at Princess Royal Hospital (PRH) in Haywards Heath. Dr Ali is the Ageing speciality research lead in Kent, Surrey and Sussex, Clinical Research Network (KSS-CRN) and Champion of Personalised Medicine representing the UK Ageing Research group as well as a member of the Intercollegiate Stroke Working Party in the UK. He was a Visiting Professor at Weill Cornell University and the Liz Claiborne Centre for Humanism in Medicine, New York in October 2016. His academic roles include being the academic secretary for the Cardiovascular Section of the British Geriatrics Society), and the scientific abstracts editor in Age and Ageing Journal. Dr Ali has a long-standing interest in ‘Medical Humanities’ and now works as the film and media correspondent for ‘Medical Humanities BMJ’. In November 2018, he published his book ‘The Cinema Clinic: Reflections on Film and medicine’ to great critical reception.

Professor Eef Hogervorst 
Neuropsychologist and Epidemiologist

Professor Eef Hogervorst did her PhD at the University of Maastricht on the modelling of age-related cognitive decline. She subsequently worked at the Universities of Oxford (1998-2005), Arkansas Medical Sciences USA, and Cambridge as a neuropsychologist and epidemiologist, investigating risk factors for Alzheimer's disease and age-related cognitive decline.

Mrs Margaret Dangoor  

Mrs Margaret Dangoor has been Research Involvement Manager in the Care Policy Evaluation Unit at the London School of Economics and Political Science since 2014 and has been co-investigator on a number of research projects focusing on dementia and carer issues (including DETERMIND);   also a member and past chair of the NIHR School for Social Care Research (SSCR), user, carer, practitioner, reference group (UCPRG), since the school first set up the group in 2009.  Margaret was a carer for over 20 years, for both her husband and her mother who both had Alzheimer’s disease. She now chairs an ‘Experts by Experience' carers group for carers of people with dementia, for a local charity. Margaret’s career background was in the NHS as a registered nurse, senior nurse and then general manager. She has an MA in Health Law. After retiring from the NHS she was the executive director of a patient safety organisation ‘ALARM’, based at the Royal Society of Medicine.  She is a senior life fellow and former council member and vice-president of the RSM and was responsible for setting up the first patient safety section of the society.

Dr Jeremy Isaacs

Dr Jeremy Isaacs studied medicine at Cambridge and UCL, where he qualified in 1998. From 2002-2006 he held research posts at KCL Institute of Psychiatry and subsequently at UCL Institute of Neurology. His PhD was on the immunology of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD).

Professor Itamar Ronen 
Academic Director of the Clinical Imaging Science Centre, BSMS

Professor Itamar Ronen obtained his PhD in Physical Chemistry from the School of Chemistry in Tel Aviv University, where he worked with Prof. Gil Navon on developing a method for indirect NMR detection of 17O. Following a post-doctoral fellowship at the Center for Magnetic Resonance Research at the University of Minnesota with Dr. Seong-Gi Kim and Dr. Dae-Shik Kim, he obtained his first academic position at the Boston University School of Medicine, and there, together with Dr. Dae-Shik Kim, he co-founded the Center for Biomedical Imaging and a secured a Master’s degree in Bioimaging. In 2009 Itamar moved to the Netherlands, where he joined the C. J. Gorter Center for MRI at the Leiden University Medical Center as PI and Associate Professor, focusing mostly on developing methods for diffusion of intracellular metabolites in humans at ultrahigh field, and recently on developing spectroscopic techniques suitable for low field MR (0.05T). Since October 2021 he holds the positions of Academic Director of the Clinical Imaging Science Centre and Chair in Medical Physics at the Brighton and Sussex Medical School in Brighton, UK.

Dr Gosia Raczek 
Honorary Senior Lecturer, BSMS 

Dr Gosia Raczek is an Honorary Senior Lecturer at BSMS and a module leader for the MSc in Dementia Studies. She is also a clinical academic consultant in Old Age Psychiatry in Sussex Partnership NHS Foundation Trust, where she works in Memory Assessment Service in North West Sussex and Dementia Research Unit in Crowborough. Gosia is an investigator in a number of clinical trials and other studies within the CDS with collaboration with UCL and KCL.  Her special interest is neuroimaging in dementia where she collaborates with researchers in the Clinical Imaging Sciences Centre at BSMS. 

Thursday's Speakers

Prof Naji Tabet
Director of the Centre for Dementia Studies, BSMS

Naji Tabet, Professor in Dementia and Old Age Psychiatry, is the Director of the Centre for Dementia Studies (CDS) and the Course Leader of the MSc Dementia Studies at Brighton and Sussex Medical School. Prof Tabet also leads the Dementia Theme at the NIHR Applied Research Collaboration (ARC) KSS and the CDS research is closely aligned with ARC KSS Dementia Sub-themes. Prof Tabet is also the Dementia Speciality Co-Lead for NIHR Clinical Research Network (CRN) KSS. A major interest for the Centre for Dementia and its research staff is the investigation of quality of life and non-pharmacological interventions in the field of dementia. Prof Tabet has also been the Principal and UK Chief Investigator on over 35 Phase II-IV therapeutic and diagnostic clinical trials in dementia. The CDS involvement in clinical randomised trials is carried out through the Dementia Research Unit at Sussex Partnership NHS Foundation Trust supported by dedicated clinical research team working with Prof Tabet. 

Dr Stephanie Daley
Reader in Older People’s Mental Health & Education, BSMS

Dr Stephanie Daley set up the Time for Dementia programme at Brighton & Sussex Medical School and has led its evaluation lead and expansion. Her research interests lie in quality of life and quality of care for people with dementia and their carers. Stephanie undertook her PhD at the Institute of Psychiatry, Kings College London, on the applicability of the concept and practice of recovery for older people with mental health problems. Stephanie has over 30 years of experience as an Occupational Therapist, most recently as the Professional Lead for Occupational Therapy for the Mental Health of Older Adults and Dementia at the South London & Maudsley NHS Trust. Stephanie has also worked as an Organisational Consultant and is an experienced teacher and supervisor for both undergraduate and postgraduate students.

Yvonne Feeney
Project Manager, Time for Dementia

Yvonne Feeney works as the Project Manager on the Time For Dementia educational programme and supports the implementation and delivery of the programme across a range of universities. Yvonne is based at BSMS. Having qualified as an Adult Nurse in 2003 at University College Cork in Ireland, Yvonne spent most of her career managing care services for older adults in social care settings in Scotland before joining the Time for Dementia team in 2016. As part of her work on Time for Dementia, Yvonne is undertaking a PhD at BSMS, that focuses on the longitudinal empathy development in healthcare students towards people living with dementia. Yvonne’s research interests centre on improving the quality of life for people with dementia and examining the role of education in shaping empathy and attitudes towards the condition. 

Dr Claire Lancaster 
Lecturer in the Department of Clinical Neuroscience, BSMS

Dr Claire Lancaster is a lecturer in the Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Brighton & Sussex Medical School, with a background in Experimental Psychology and Cognitive Neuroscience. Claire’s research investigates the impact of carrying a genetic risk factor for Alzheimer’s Disease - the APOE e4 gene variant, on cognition, brain function and structure across the lifespan, and whether we can mitigate the detrimental effects of this gene pharmacologically. In addition, Claire is interested in how our genes interact with wider health (e.g., menopause) and lifestyle factors to influence trajectories of brain ageing. She uses methods including digital and in-person cognitive assessments, neuroimaging and drug interventions in her work.

Dr Ben Hicks
Research Fellow and Programme Co-ordinator for DETERMIND, BSMS

Dr Ben Hicks is a Research Fellow and the Programme Co-ordinator of the DETERMIND project, based at the Brighton and Sussex Medical School. His research concerns supporting quality of life and social inclusion in people with dementia through exploring the differing lived experiences of the condition and addressing the inequalities that may arise in the dementia care pathway. His PhD focused on examining and supporting social inclusion in rural-dwelling older men with dementia through a community technological initiative that was tailored towards their multiple masculinities. 

Dr Lavinia Bertini 
Research Fellow, BSMS

Dr Lavinia Bertini Dr Lavinia Bertini is a social and medical anthropologist with extensive experience of interdisciplinary health research, where she brings her expertise in ethnographic research methods, critical medical anthropology, and co-production to address health inequities.  In 2020, she joined Brighton and Sussex Medical School (BSMS) and the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Applied Research Collaboration Kent, Surrey and Sussex (ARC KSS) as a Research Fellow in Public Health, where she has worked on several projects that focus on the interface between public health and adult social care. Dr Bertini has contributed to establishing a portfolio of public health research in homecare and care homes.

Dr Nicola Schmidt-Renfree 
Research Fellow in Neuroscience, BSMS

Dr Nicola Schmidt-Renfree previously worked as a lecturer in communication at the University of Ulster and as a lecturer in English language at the University of Kent. After moving from Kent to the county of Sussex, she studied for her PhD in the School of Psychology at the University of Sussex, and this has led to her interest in developing research and taking up my Postdoctoral Research Fellowships at the Brighton and Sussex Medical School.

Dr Sarah Polack 
Research Fellow, ARC-KSS 

Dr Sarah Polack is a research fellow with the NIHR-Applied Research Collaboration Kent, Surrey, Sussex (ARC-KSS) ‘Living Well with Dementia’ theme. Sarah’s current research is on the well-being of people with dementia who live on their own, with a focus on underserved coastal communities. She is exploring access to support and social interaction for people dementia who live alone in Kent, Surrey and Sussex, through interviews with people with lived experience and service providers as well as systematic reviews on dementia and social isolation. She is also interested in how to strengthen inclusion of underserved populations in dementia research. Sarah completed her PhD in 2008 at the London school of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine where she has since worked on a range of mixed-methods research projects related to disability-inclusion in the global south. 

Dr Lisa Quadt
Department of Neuroscience, BSMS

Dr Lisa Quadt is a cognitive neuroscientist whose interest in the central and autonomic nervous system, and the interactions between mind, brain and body are applied to the understanding of neurodivergent individuals. She is a research fellow within the Department of Neuroscience at the Brighton and Sussex Medical School, University of Sussex. She attained her PhD at the Johannes Gutenberg University of Mainz, Germany, taking an interdisciplinary approach towards a theoretical framework for social cognition that integrated philosophy, cognitive psychology, predictive processing and social neuroscience. Since 2017, at Brighton and Sussex Medical School, she has led the implementation and testing of interoceptive training studies, neuroimaging, behavioural, and self-report studies in clinical and neurodivergent populations.

Dr Nicolas Farina
Associate Professor in Dementia Research, University of Plymouth

Dr Nicolas Farina has over 10 year’s experience working in the field of dementia research. His interests include understanding and improving quality of life of people with dementia.Dr Farina is currently is co-lead for the DEM-SKY project, which is implementing dementia screening in rural Kenya. In addition, he it the co-ordinator for the RadioMe project which seeks to tackle agitation in dementia through the use of music and radio. In recent years he has led work packages on the STRiDE project, which sought to improve dementia care, treatment & support systems in middle-income countries so that people living with dementia are able to live well, whilst also ensuring that family & other carers do not shoulder excessive costs. Dr Farina is an advocate for raising awareness about dementia internationally, and has developed a research theme surrounding better understanding attitudes towards dementia and how we can combat stigma.

Kath Sykes 
Implementation Lead for the Applied Research Collaboration

Kath Sykes is the Living well with Dementia (and healthy aging) Implementation Lead for the Applied Research Collaboration, supporting Theme Lead Dr Naji Tabet. Kath is a nurse by background, and has worked in the NHS in London and Sussex for over 20 years, leading teams and services in Cancer/Haematology and Clinical Research. Across the system Kath has worked in Quality and Patient Safety in Commissioning including Mental Health and Dementia services, and supporting spread and adoption of innovation as Tech Navigator at the AHSN. Kath also holds a Masters in Clinical Research, focusing on mixed method research. Kath is passionate about the Health and Social care system, quality improvement, supporting the development and spread of effective, proven, innovation that responds to recognised need by service users, improves the health and care outcomes of our populations, and supports our workforce. Kath is delighted to be part of the implementation team of the ARC, working with all stakeholders across Kent, Surrey and Sussex as well as nationally, and ensuring that user needs and their voice are integral to the research we do as an ARC and the solutions we seek to implement.

Alice Russel
Dementia Research Unit

Alice Russell graduated from the University of Portsmouth in 2016 with a BSc (Hons) in Psychology. Since then, she has undertaken a Graduate Psychology Internship with the Adur, Arun and Worthing (AAW) Assessment and Treatment Service (ATS) at Sussex Partnership Foundation Trust (SPFT). Alice’s interest in dementia was established during her university dissertation, where she interviewed dementia carers about how friendships affected their lives. She’s worked as a Research Assistant on the DETERMIND project for the past four years and is currently working at the Dementia Research Unit as a Clinical Research Coordinator.

AtsukoFujisawa
Dementia Research Unit

Atsuko Fujisawa is a Clinical Research Coordinator working at the Dementia Research Unit for Sussex Partnership NHS Foundation Trust. She is currently coordinating the NoDem study (University of Sussex) and Evoke a commercial RCT drug study. Atsuko has extensive experience working with people living with dementia and people living with brain injury in various settings. These experiences have led to her interest in research. She has studied for a Gerontology MSc at the University of Southampton and a PG certificate in Dementia Studies at the Brighton and Sussex Medical School.

Julia Fountain
Sussex Partnership NHS Foundation Trust

Julia Fountain co-ordinates Sussex Partnership NHS Foundation Trust's Dementia Consultation Group - a group of people with experience of living with dementia. Some of the group members have a diagnosis of dementia and some have experience through caring for a partner or family member who has dementia. The group's role is to talk to researchers about their research and to advise them from a lived experience perspective.

Dennis Chan 
University Associate Professor and Honorary Consultant in Clinical Neurosciences, University of Cambridge

Dennis Chan is a University Associate Professor and Honorary Consultant in Clinical Neurosciences at the University of Cambridge. He is the clinical academic lead for research into early Alzheimer's disease (AD). Dr Chan undertook a PhD in basic neuroscience under Nobel Laureate Professor John O’Keefe at UCL and subsequently a second research doctorate under Professor Martin Rossor, Institute of Neurology, London. His primary research interest is in identifying alterations in the functions of the entorhinal cortex (EC) and hippocampus, the first brain regions to be affected in AD, with the ultimate aim of diagnosing AD prior to symptom onset.

Professor Sabina Dizdarevic 
CISC PET Clinical Lead, BSMS

Professor Sabina Dizdarevic, MD, MSc, PhD, FRCP is the Consultant in Nuclear Medicine and PET-CT Clinical Lead at the University Hospitals Sussex NHS Foundation Trust, Honorary Clinical Professor at Brighton and Sussex Medical School (BSMS) and British Nuclear Medicine Society Research Chair. With colleagues, Prof Dizdarevic has developed a state-of-the-art diagnostic imaging and therapeutic nuclear medicine services in Sussex. In her role of the Chair of the Intercollegiate Standing Committee NM, RCP/RCR (2020-2024) she authored the National guidelines – ‘Evidence-based indications for PET-CT in the UK 2022’.

Professor Heather Ferguson
Divisional Director for Research and Innovation and Honorary Secretary, the Experimental Psychology Society

Professor Heather Ferguson completed her PhD in Cognitive Neuroscience and Psycholinguistics at the University of Glasgow in 2007, followed by a two-year postdoctoral research position at University College London. She was appointed as a Lecturer in Cognitive Psychology at the University of Kent in October 2009, and was subsequently promoted to Senior Lecturer in 2012, Reader in 2015, and Professor in 2018. She is the Divisional Director for Research and Innovation (2020-2024), and Honorary Secretary for the Experimental Psychology Society (2019-2024).

Dr Samara Banno
Daphne Jackson Fellow, Birbeck, University of London

Dr Samara Banno is a Daphne Jackson Fellow at Birkbeck, University of London in the Department of Psychological Science.With a BSc and MSc from Al Nahrain University in Iraq, Samara’s background is in general information systems and her interest lies in developing intelligent cognitive computational and AI models. Having worked both as a lecturer and in industry, she completed her PhD at the University of Portsmouth/ School of  Engineering.Now returning to research after a four year break Samara’s Fellowship is sponsored by Birkbeck, University of London and the Medical Research Council (MRC).Due to finish in 2024, her project is entitled: Developing an Intelligent Diagnosis Model for Early Awareness of Brain Deterioration in Dementia.