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EXCLUSIVE: TV presenter Carrie Brown opens up on Raheem Sterling gesture for dementia-suffering mum

The Lionesses will take on Australia in an Alzheimer's Society International on Tuesday, and journalist Carrie Brown has spoken about the importance of shedding a light on the disease

The Lionesses will take on Australia in an Alzheimer's Society International on Tuesday

When England step out at Brentford’s Gtech Community Stadium on Tuesday night, they'll get the chance to test themselves against one of their fiercest World Cup rivals and further consolidate their impeccable record under Sarina Wiegman.

And their meeting with Australia will be about more than just football. The Lionesses - who have already left an indelible mark on the landscape of women's sport - will hope to shed a light on a subject that continues to devastate lives both inside and outside the realms of football.

England's clash with the Matildas is an Alzheimer's Society International, raising vital funds and awareness for more research into a disease that currently affects an estimated 900,000 people in the UK. Its a disease that sports journalist and presenter Carrie Brown is all too familiar with, having seen both of her parents diagnosed with dementia in the last few years.

"It’s heartbreaking," Brown told Mirror Football. "I think any parent has great pride and is so independent, and then there’s that subtle shift from your parents being your leaders and role models to you becoming their carers. That takes a lot of pride and identity away.

"Those early days are probably the hardest because of that realisation and the fear of what’s coming next and this why raising awareness like the Lionesses are doing is so important.

"At the moment, I think the Lionesses are this country’s greatest role models. They’ve come up against adversity and they’ve triumphed against all the greatest odds.

"When you look at the stark new research that shows one in three people born in the UK today will develop dementia in their lifetime, you can see that this maybe the greatest adversity this country faces and something which needs to be addressed very quickly, so having the Lionesses support us really means the world."

Presenter and journalist Carrie Brown has spoken out about her parents' battle with dementia

It's not the first time Brown - who has worked in sports media for more than two decades - has been touched by the actions of an England squad. Last November, while covering the World Cup for beIn SPORTS in Qatar, she had an encounter that she admits will live longer in the memory than any event that transpired on the pitch.