Going green, red and blue to help dementia patients
HDB blocks in Nee Soon, Chong Pang to be brightly coloured to make it easier to find flats
To help dementia patients find their way home, 22 Housing Board blocks in Nee Soon South and Chong Pang will be painted red, green and blue from next February.
Similar to zoned carparks, the blocks will also feature icons - pineapple for red blocks, fish for blue blocks and rubber trees for green blocks. Block numbers will be painted prominently on the sides of the blocks and their pillars.
Plans for such features and other infrastructural upgrades such as clearer signage and more resting places were unveiled yesterday.
The features are based on recommendations by experts on dementia such as Dr Philip Yap, a senior consultant in the department of geriatric medicine at Khoo Teck Puat Hospital (KTPH).
They are intended to compensate for the physical and cognitive deficits that people with dementia may have, Dr Yap said.
"If a person with dementia were to ask for help, or if somebody were to find him looking lost, even if he cannot remember exactly which block he lives in, he might be able to recall the colour or icon. This will help people to lead him back to where he lives."
The project is a collaboration among Nee Soon South Grassroots Organisations, the Agency for Integrated Care, Nee Soon Town Council, KTPH and the GoodLife! @Yishun centre, which is run by social service agency Montfort Care.
Announcing the plans yesterday, Ms Lee Bee Wah, grassroots adviser and an MP for Nee Soon GRC, noted that one in 10 persons aged 60 years and above has dementia.
"We urgently need to make our community dementia-friendly, make it a place where a person with dementia can still go downstairs for coffee, talk with friends, join community activities. All this will slow the progress of their dementia," she said, adding that Nee Soon is the first community to adopt dementia-friendly infrastructure.
Nee Soon South residents like Madam Yong Fui Yin, 66, and her husband, Mr Ho Shien Joo, 70, are looking forward to the upgrades.
Mr Ho was diagnosed with mild dementia in January.
Madam Yong, who is Mr Ho's caregiver, said her husband once got lost and had to ask for help from a passer-by.
"He gave the wrong block number because he had forgotten it. That made me worry," she said in Mandarin.
Mr Ho said the new features will let seniors like him go out independently with more peace of mind.
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