Sir Jackie Stewart: Bringing the Formula One mentality to dementia research – ‘the establi

GMB: Jackie Stewart says his wife's dementia gets 'very serious'

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However, it has also galvanised Sir Jackie Stewart to find a cure for a condition that is slowly taking the life of the one he and his family hold so dear.

Race Against Dementia is the charity he set up to fight a disease that one in three people born today will be diagnosed with, and for which there is no cure.

“The establishment has failed,” said Stewart in our interview.

So, with that, Stewart is taking a new approach, he is bringing the Formula One mentality to dementia research.

Just as Formula One teams work with money, talent, and a sense of urgency, so too is Race Against Dementia working with money, talent, and a sense of urgency.

And it is this sense of urgency that Stewart states is lacking when it comes to dementia; his charity is fighting dementia “in a fashion and a speed that doesn’t exist in the medical world”.

This is down in part to Race Against Dementia, and Stewart’s strategy.

To attack dementia not just with money, but with youth.

Race Against Dementia is investing the money raised into the best young scientists and PHD students in the same way that Formula One teams invest in the best drivers.

Stewart is keen to impress this point: “Youth has a lot to do with it.

“We’re bringing them in because they’re hungrier, they want to succeed and therefore their energy is higher”.

This new and fast-paced approach is driven by a sense of urgency, the same sense of urgency that Formula One teams employ when developing a new car.

Why more focus hasn’t been brought onto dementia is another topic Express.co.uk discussed with the three-time world champion.

It could be because dementia, unlike COVID-19, is not an immediate threat to the planet.

The data says one in three people born today will develop dementia, but everyone can get COVID-19 with Stewart saying of Covid is a “global issue”. Stewart elaborated: “Suddenly there’s been considerably more put into that financially, within the industry of health.”

This is the reason why so many resources have been pumped into vaccines and treatments.

In contrast dementia has been, says Stewart, “a sleeper”, in that the population have accepted it as part of getting old rather than realising it is a disease, and therefore one that can be cured.

This is part of Stewart’s mission, to raise awareness of dementia so that more money can be raised so that lives can be saved because in forty years plus of trying, he adds “the medical world have failed to find a cure for dementia”.

At the end of the day, as well as being part of global cause, this is part of a personal battle, as Stewart observed: “I see my wife depreciating in so many different ways.”

With this mentality and this drive fuelling the talented scientists working with Race Against Dementia, the time when dementia is treatable may be just around the corner.

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