“…Dementia coordinators in the present study mainly reported working with ME service users originating from the Middle East, East Europe, and South Asia, who were generally in the moderate to severe stage of their dementia disorder at the point they met them. As discussed in the previous reports, this may be an indication that people from these ME communities are less able to access dementia care and support services, and when they do so, they access these services at a later stage of the disease (Cooper et al, 2010;Hailstone, Mukadam, Owen, Cooper, & Livingston, 2017;Mukadam, Cooper, Basit, & Livingston, 2011a;Naess & Moen, 2015;Pham et al, 2018;Segers et al, 2013;van Wezel et al, 2016). Whereas some barriers to accessing post-diagnostic dementia care and support seem to be associated with specific cultural norms and values in predominantly family-oriented Middle Eastern, East European, and South Asian ME communities, others seem to represent more general barriers faced by minority groups in a society where only mainstream services tailored to the majority culture and language are available.…”