Japan restaurant lets dementia patients serve customers to raise awareness ahead of World Alzheimer's Day

 Japan is a global frontrunner in confronting dementia, the cost of which has been estimated at one percent of the world’s gross domestic product.

Japan restaurant lets dementia patients serve customers to raise awareness ahead of World Alzheimer's Day
Image courtesy: The Restaurant of Order Mistakes/Facebook

New Delhi: In a bid to raise awareness for Alzheimer's Disease (AD), a pop-up restaurant in central Tokyo is making dementia patients serve its customers.

The staff of 17 waiters and waitresses in the restaurant called “The Restaurant of Order Mistakes” suffer from dementia.

A brain-child of NHK television director Shiro Oguni, the restaurant has been based on a play on the title of a classic Japanese children’s book, “The Restaurant of Many Orders”.

September 21 is World Alzheimer's Day and this project – scheduled to run September 16-18 – is being held to raise awareness about the same, while also allowing customers to interact with those who have the condition in a safe environment.

“It was truly great that everyone believed that they would be able to do this job, as long as they had proper support in place,” Ogino said.

Makoto Ichikawa, a customer, said he enjoyed talking to a waitress who briefly forgot her role and sat down across from him to chat.

Professional cooks prepared the dishes for diners who were required to register in advance, at a venue in Roppongi’s Ark Hills complex. The organizers included a dementia nursing care home.

Following the success of a similar pop-up restaurant in June, Ogino turned to crowd-funding to back the event, which he hopes to hold annually.

Japan is a global frontrunner in confronting dementia, the cost of which has been estimated at one percent of the world’s gross domestic product.

Both public and private initiatives have sought to erase the stigma of the disorder that affects nearly 5 million Japanese citizens. One in five Japanese aged 65 or over, or some 7 million people, are forecast to have some degree of dementia by 2025.

(With inputs from Reuters)

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