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'Board game' for Parkinson's patients
Jane Elliott - BBC News Online health staff
Sept. 6, 2003

Parkinson's Disease experts have come up with a novel way of ensuring everyone gets the message about the condition -
Parkinsonpoly.

Set out like a board game Parkinsonpoly offers information and advice for sufferers and their families and carers.

Astudy of people with the disease showed that they and their families often suffer from an information overload.

Experts say that by using the board game formula with its different squares it helps cut through the mass of
conflicting and often confusing information sources on the disease and provides people with essential and up-to-date
information.

Tools

By using visual mnemonics, such as a pipe blocked with lime scale to explain atherosclerosis (narrowed arteries) the
'board game' it helps explain conditions. They also provide visual prompts to help patients remember their treatments
and doctors appointments.

The education tools include a website, series of patient booklets and other patient materials.

The Parkinsonpoly concept is a novel and interesting approach
Robert Meadowcroft, of the Parkinson Disease Society

Parkinsonpoly has already proved popular with those who have trialled it.

David Jones, Chairman of Next, who has had Parkinson's since 1982, said Parkinsonpoly could prove a good aid both to
patients, carers and the general public.

"I was intrigued. It was quite good. It was very tasteful

"The important thing is that people who have Parkinson's do not like admitting they have it and people who do not have
it don't know what it is.

"Anything that develops the knowledge is a good thing. I bore people to death by talking to them all the time," he
said.

Dr Mark Stacy, director of movement disorders, at Duke University School of Medicine, North Carolina, US, said
Parkinsonpoly would be particularly useful in alerting patients to changes that could be needed in their medication.

"The most effective treatment of Parkinson's Disease symptoms is levodopa.

"It can provide benefit throughout the entire course of the disease and has consistently demonstrated to have a
positive effect on the quality of life and significantly prolongs life expectancy.

"However, people with Parkinson's Disease often experience a decline or wearing-off of its clinical effects, that may
produce changes in mobility, mood and sensation.

Resources

"They need to have regular physician assessments and be educated to medication changes associated with anti-Parkinson
therapy.

"For this reason it is essential to alert patients to the need to review their medicines, and ensure that these re-
emergency symptoms are optimised to maintain their quality of life.

"Parkinsonpoly is a resource that can deliver this essential information."

Robert Meadowcroft, director of policy, research and information at the Parkinson Disease Society agreed: "The
Parkinson's Disease Society believes that all people with Parkinson's and their families, friends and carers should
have access to appropriate and reliable information and support.

"The Parkinsonpoly concept is a novel and interesting approach to communicating such information and should prove to be
a successful venture."

SOURCE: The BBC NEWS Online
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/health/3170739.stm

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