Elin Høgmo (67) and her cohabitant pack their things in boxes and crates.
The apartment in Orkland municipality is being abandoned these days, in favor of a new – and smaller – apartment in Trondheim. It is good that they get spacious stalls, which can accommodate everything they can not fit.
The reason they move is not about space. But about health.
The veil of oblivion
Elin worked as a senior adviser in the Norwegian Labor Inspection Authority. But something happened, gradually. She began to forget.
– People could say to me that “this is what we talked about the other day”. Not to be rude, but it happened more and more often. I forgot, Elin explains.
– I simply could not remember that we had talked about yours and hers.
She was often responsible for writing minutes of meetings. Cohabitant Jens Rian Hansen (68) describes tiring evenings and nights.
– She sat far beyond working hours to put together these minutes in the right way, and struggled to remember.
They went to the GP. But Elin was not even in her mid – 60s. Only when she returned to her doctor the same year, and she did not remember that she had been there not long ago, did it dawn on everyone. Something was wrong.
– There was a visit to the hospital where a spinal fluid sample was taken, Jens recalls. It revealed that she had contracted the brain disease Alzheimer’s.
The relative burden amounts to 28 billion
The societal costs associated with what constitutes the burden of relatives is, according to a new report from Menon Economics, NOK 28 billion in 2020. The term relative burden is used in the report as an expression of the negative consequences the disease has for those closest to it.
Half of the costs are related to the relatives’ burden of illness.