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Ageing society
Hong KongHealth & Environment

The 1,400 unseen guardian angels helping to protect Hong Kong’s dementia sufferers

  • Ordinary citizens performing small acts of kindness make big difference to lives of vulnerable and elderly
  • Project is part of Christian Family Service Centre initiative which is backed by government community fund

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Lau Chiu-kwong, owner of Tung Shing Medicine, is one of hundreds of people who have been trained by the Christian Family Service Centre. Photo: Dickson Lee
Naomi Ng

Lau Chiu-kwong’s day job for almost the past three decades has been running a local shop at a public housing estate in Ngau Tau Kok, but he also juggles another role – being a “guardian angel” for elderly people with dementia.

Lau recalled a 70-year-old woman who bought a pack of 10 toilet rolls at his store, only to come back several hours later to buy the same thing.

“I didn’t think she would have used up all the toilet roll so quickly, so I just told her she already bought them and sent her on her way,” he said.

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Helping an elderly woman save some cash may seem trivial, but other times a small act of kindness can go a long way.

The 50-year-old spotted an elderly woman wandering aimlessly in front of his store not being able to find her way home. Had he not intervened, he could not imagine what would have happened to her.

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Lau Chiu-kwong’s has been running his store in Ngau Tau Kok for almost three decades. Photo: Dickson Lee
Lau Chiu-kwong’s has been running his store in Ngau Tau Kok for almost three decades. Photo: Dickson Lee
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