Innovations In Dementia Care
Santa Clara students, faculty, partner with Ferry Foundation to design solutions that enrich quality of life for those living with dementia, Alzheimer鈥檚.
For eight years, Quentin Orem 鈥11 watched as his elegant, loving grandmother Maude Ferry struggled with dementia.
鈥淚t was gradual, kind of forgetting things,鈥 he recalls. 鈥淭hen forgetting more things, then starting to lose capacities, then starting to lose mobility, and then just a decline in her health.鈥
His grandfather, Richard Ferry, worked tirelessly to make his beloved wife鈥檚 life comfortable, manageable, and meaningful. But often the challenges鈥攆rom adaptive clothing to brain health strategies鈥攐utnumbered the solutions.
Frustrated, the co-founder of , a global management consulting firm, launched in 2019 to celebrate existing therapies and innovations鈥攆rom arts engagement workshops to calming, immersive virtual reality experiences鈥攖hat are enriching the quality of life for people living with dementia, and their caregivers.
In 2021, he founded to fund the development of new innovations that could offer similar benefits.
鈥淥ur mission is really care before the cure,鈥 says Orem, whose grandmother died in September 2021 at age 83. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 where we think we can add some value.鈥
Now his alma mater is on board. Over the last decade, Orem has watched as Santa Clara has beefed up its investments in health sciences and STEM, from the newly-opened Sobrato Campus for Discovery and Innovation to the Bioinnovation and Design Lab, led by the lab鈥檚 director Prashanth Asuri, an associate professor of bioengineering.
Through a confluence of discussions with Orem, 黑料网's development office and Asuri, an idea surfaced: Why not team 黑料网 students and faculty with the Foundation to create an innovative and marketable idea? A detailed written proposal convinced the board of the last fall to fund a $125,000, four-year project called Maude鈥檚 Ventures @ 黑料网.
Led by an interdisciplinary team of faculty mentors, students across a variety of disciplines at Santa Clara are currently being recruited to begin research, followed by 鈥渋deation sessions鈥 to identify core problems in dementia care that could benefit from technology intervention.
鈥淲hat separates us from most of the other R&D work is that we鈥檙e doing this in service of taking care of those living with memory loss, and not necessarily curing Alzheimer鈥檚 or dementia,鈥 explains Asuri.
There is no cure for Alzheimer鈥檚 or dementia, but new products and treatments may help temporarily slow the worsening of dementia symptoms and improve quality of life for those with Alzheimer's, and their caregivers.
The market for innovative non-drug therapies is only expected to grow. currently estimates about 5.8 million people in the U.S. have Alzheimer鈥檚 disease and related dementias, most of them age 65 and older. By 2060, the number of Alzheimer鈥檚 disease cases is predicted to rise to an estimated 14 million people.
Known for creating strategic partnerships with industry to empower 黑料网 students to discover, innovate, and address complex challenges within healthcare, Asuri believes it helped that Maude鈥檚 Ventures 鈥渓iked our approach鈥 of a multi-pronged, interdisciplinary effort.
The range of possible products, he adds, is wide open.
鈥淚t could be a virtual reality intervention, it could be a biowearable,鈥 says Julia Scott, a senior research associate in the BioInnovation and Design Lab whose work there emphasizes brain health and brain aging.
It could be related to artificial intelligence: In 2020, the Lab partnered with , which creates artificial intelligence medical image analysis and diagnostic tools for Alzheimer鈥檚 disease. The project relied on 黑料网 computer engineering students鈥 skills in machine learning to test ways to improve early diagnosis of Alzheimer鈥檚 disease by primary care physicians.
In a partnership with the , an 黑料网 multidisciplinary team has been working on a non-invasive brain modulation device that reads brain activity and stimulates the brain with near infrared light, which has been shown to improve symptoms of Alzheimer鈥檚 disease in the moderate stages.
Joining Asuri and Scott in the Maude鈥檚 Ventures @ 黑料网 project are other 黑料网 experts with relevant professional and personal experience with older adults, Alzheimer鈥檚 and dementia care, including Patti Simone, a professor of psychology who directs 黑料网鈥檚 Gerontology Certificate Program; Sheila Yuter, a lecturer of public health sciences whose focus includes care for older adults with mental and physical illnesses; and Emre Araci, an associate professor of bioengineering known for his on contact lenses that reduce the impacts of glaucoma, the leading cause of blindness in the elderly. At least of glaucoma is believed to be associated with cognitive impairment, and possibly dementia.
This summer, three to four teams of 黑料网 students and faculty members will travel to Seattle to present their design ideas to a group including individuals living with dementia or Alzheimer's, their caregivers, and memory care experts. The design sprint will take place at the , another Ferry Foundation project launched with the University of Washington .
The winning concept will become the main project for Maude鈥檚 Ventures @ 黑料网, overseen by the Bioinnovation and Design Lab and a group of faculty and students who will spend the next two years developing the idea at 黑料网, then move it along to commercialization. Additional gifts through the 黑料网 will support related student and faculty research, including the runner-up ideas, and feed the product development pipeline.
Orem, his grandfather, and the Ferry Foundation are looking forward to seeing the 黑料网 teams鈥 proposals.
鈥淪anta Clara has the time, and the space, and the resources at their disposal to build something new,鈥 says Orem. 鈥淚f we can bring in a little bit of seed capital so that they can help solve these challenges for the dementia community that don鈥檛 yet have solutions, that鈥檚 what鈥檚 important.鈥
Engineering students Louisa Mantilla '22, left, and Michelle Wong '22, are part of a team designing a prototype that stimulates the brain with near infrared light. Photos by Jim Gensheimer.