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Sydney Dementia Network

A co-operative effort to accelerate dementia research and care

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A network of over 600 dementia researchers, clinicians, people living with dementia, and carers collaboratively working towards improving treatments, care, and support for people with dementia within NSW.

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Join the Sydney Dementia Network

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Get the latest news and network updates

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SDN Research Impact Awards details

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SDN Research Impact Awards details
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Eligibility, application and award details (pdf, 120KB)

About our research

The University of Sydney’s Sydney Dementia Network (SDN) seeks to unite dementia researchers, clinicians, carers and people with dementia to accelerate dementia research within NSW. The SDN executive comprises of Profs Muireann Irish (Chair), Olivier Piguet, Lee-Fay Low, with early and mid-career researchers Drs Johannes Michaelian, Carol Dobson-Stone, Rossana Rosa Porto, Penelope Monroe, Sally Day, and Pradeep Manuneedhi Cholan.

The SDN aims to ensure improved outcomes for people living with dementia and carers through advocacy and knowledge translation, while providing opportunities for researchers across NSW.

Who is part of the SDN?

The SDN brings together the largest multidisciplinary group of Australia’s leading dementia academics and clinician-researchers in Sydney LHD (Concord Hospital, Prof Louise Waite; Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Prof Rebekah Ahmed), Northern Sydney LHD (Royal North Shore Hospital, Dr Helen Wu, Prof Sarah Hilmer; Hornsby Hospital, Prof Sue Kurrle), Western Sydney LHD (Blacktown Hospital Prof Richard Lindley), and Southern NSW LHD (Moruya Hospital, Prof Sue Kurrle). The network keeps researchers up to date with the needs of our local communities and supports clinicians to be involved with the latest research. We bring a strong and cohesive track record of working collaboratively to lead national efforts in innovating to impact practice and policy. Our partnership is successful not only because of our excellent collaboration but also because of our scale. 

What do the SDN do?

Annual Symposium

The SDN has hosted a half-day symposium every year since 2018. 

Sydney Dementia Network Symposium 2024

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Workshops and webinars for researchers

We host international guest speakers, run networking events and workshops and webinars for researchers and clinicians. Sign up for our newsletter to be notified of these opportunities.     

Early-Mid Career Researcher support

In 2024, we began offering travel grants and impact prizes for early-mid career researchers in the field of dementia research across Sydney and Australia more broadly.

These schemes are the Future Research Leader Award and Research Impact Award. 

Sydney Dementia Network Lived Experience Expert Advisory Panel (SDN LEEAP)

This group was established in 2020 as part of a core activity of the Sydney Dementia Network by members Prof Muireann IrishDr Claire O’Callaghan,  and Prof Lee-Fay Low. LEEAP involves people with lived experience of dementia, including caregivers or family members, and people with dementia. The panel meets 3-4 times a year to provide dementia researchers with advice on research priorities, design, interpretation, and other issues.  

The goal of LEEAP is to promote engagement between dementia researchers and people with lived experience of dementia, so that research can be informed by the needs of those directly affected by dementia.  

We invite dementia researchers to contact us if they are interested in engaging with the panel. Likewise, we invite people with lived experience of dementia to contact us if they are interested in being involved by emailing the LEEAP coordinator, Dr Rossana Rosa Porto. 

More about the SDN

  • StepUp for Dementia Research (Led by Prof Yun-Hee Jeon) facilitates the public engagement and participation in dementia research. This national infrastructure is fast-tracking dementia research by connecting the public, people with dementia and carers with researchers delivering studies into dementia prevention, diagnosis, treatment and care.
  • The Australian Dementia Network (ADNeT) Memory Clinic (MC) InitiativeProf Naismith leads the Memory Clinic Initiative of ADNeT, which aims to unite and improve standards of Memory and Cognition Clinics across Australia. We published Guidelines for Australian Memory and Cognition Clinics, working closely with clinicians, people with lived experience and carers, Dementia Australia and other stakeholders such as the Department of Health. We are currently piloting a virtual Memory and Cognition Clinic, working with Echuca Regional Health. We also developed a national Memory and Cognition Clinic Online Finder Tool (developed by Dr Michaelian) that currently lists over 160 clinics across Australia. 
  • The Interdisciplinary Home-based Reablement Program (I-HARP) (Led by Prof Yun-Hee Jeon). I-HARP was developed to address these issues with a dementia-specific, person-centred, time limited, home-based, interdisciplinary rehabilitation package. Data shows that I-HARP enhances the functioning of older people with dementia, mobility, independence, and both wellbeing and confidence that enables their ability to live at home for longer. Funded by the NHMRC (2017-21) this world-first implementation trial, with international collaborators from UK and the US, is being  conducted in 4 hospitals and 2 aged care services in Sydney to test the cost-effectiveness of the program.
  • MotDem: (Led by Prof Muireann Irish) The Motivation in Dementia initiative (MotDem) is a multidisciplinary research program funded by an MRFF Dementia, Aging, and Aged Care Grant to improve the early and accurate diagnosis of frontotemporal dementia. The project team includes neurologists, neuropsychologists, neuropsychiatrists, and occupational therapists, with lived experience from SDN-LEEAP [MI1] members embedded throughout. Currently in Stage 2, MotDem has developed and validated a new clinical screening tool that is now being used across four study sites in Australia and translated for use in several international sites. In parallel, we have developed resources for at-home carers and aged care workers to better understand and manage motivational changes in dementia.
  • Facing Dementia Together: (Led by Prof Lee-Fay Low) is a program to increase timely dementia diagnosis, including with culturally and linguistically diverse communities. We are running a public campaign to encourage help-seeking for dementia symptoms, as well as a program to support the identification, diagnosis, and management of dementia by general practitioners and practice nurses. The project extension works with Chinese, Arab, and Vietnamese communities.
  • Aged Care Providers: Sue Kurrle works closely with not-for-profit aged care provider HammondCare and their Dementia Centre as a Research Lead, assisting with developing evidence-based practice in both community and residential aged care for people with dementia.
  • NeuroMusic Collaborative: A collaboration between the Brain and Mind Centre and Sydney Conservatorium of Music and enabled by a generous philanthropic gift, this program will test whether music training workshops are a feasible cognitive training intervention for people experiencing mild cognitive decline - the stage before dementia develops. 

Pictured from left to right - top to bottom: Chair: Professor Muireann Irish, Professor Lee-Fay Low, Professor Olivier Piguet, Dr Carol Dobson-Stone, Dr Johannes Michaelian, Dr Penelope Monroe, Dr Sally Day, Dr Pradeep Manuneedhi Cholan, Dr Rossana Rosa Porto

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Contact us

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Brain and Mind Centre

Phone: +61 2 9351 0774
Emailbrainandmind.info@sydney.edu.au

94 Mallett Street, Camperdown NSW 2050

Opening hours: Monday to Friday, 9am to 5pm