Showing posts with label alzheimer's. Show all posts
Showing posts with label alzheimer's. Show all posts

September 3, 2009

Don't forget - World Alzheimer’s Day is September 21

 

This September 21st is World Alzheimer’s Day when organizations around the world unite to raise awareness of the plight of Alzheimer’s Disease victims and to show that this is a global crisis.

Here are some facts about Alzheimer’s from the Alzheimer’s Association:

Did you know ...

    * As many as 5.3 million people in the United States are living with Alzheimer's.
     
    * Alzheimer's and dementia triple healthcare costs for Americans 65 and older.
     
    * Every 70 seconds, someone develops Alzheimer's.
     
    * Alzheimer’s costs more than $148 billion each year to Medicare, Medicaid and businesses.

    * The Alzheimer's Association is the leading voluntary health organization providing support to families facing Alzheimer's and funding research that will get us closer to a cure.

Take this September 21st as a opportunity to raise your awareness, as well as those of others you know to help support the elderly in any way by becoming an advocate of the Alzheimer’s Association or visiting someone elderly or merely acknowledging someone older you see by merely giving them the gift of a smile, a “Hello” or a small helping hand. Your personal wealth will increase immeasurably!


Don't forget - World Alzheimer’s Day is September 21

Posted using ShareThis

April 22, 2009

Watch HBO's The Alzheimer's Project documentary - May 10-14, 2009

Tune in May 10 - 14, 4 part, 4 nights, to watch HBO's "The Alzheimer's Project" Documentary. You will be forever touched and become more aware of the epidemic of Alzheimer's Disease that is the six leading cause of death in the U.S.

Many of you who read this blog are aware that my mother, Hannah, has been suffering from Alzheimer's Disease since 2007. Our family has gone through so many stages of trying to deal with this terrible disease, but of course none of us know the terror of actually feeling it's devastation like our mother. She is the one who has been living through the minutes, hours, days and months of losing her thoughts and memories. I can only try to understand what that must feel like.

Data has been showing that many of us Baby Boomers may succumb to this disease in our lifetimes as well. Alzheimer's has become an epidemic throughout the world.

The one major fact from the affected family's aspect is having no idea what to do, where to turn or how to help. The first trip is always to the family doctor, who knows what drugs are the approved ones available and that is really all they can do. There currently is no cure for Alzheimer's. It becomes the family's job to find out what more can be done or to find help when they become overwhelmed in dealing with the care of their loved one, who in many cases may be a total different person, full of fear and mood swings.

Alzheimer's associations and caregiver help are becoming much more prevalent and there is a lot of help out there...more and more every day.

HBO Documentary Films is presenting, in their usual award winning standards, a touching and hard hitting film called "The Alzheimer's Project" in 4 part presentation, May 10 - 14, 2009.

Watch this trailer!




Trailer from HBO

Please contribute to the cause of raising funds for the support and research of finding a cure for Alzheimer's Disease by going to my article,

Alzheimer's Disease Year in Review Video

OR

Follow This Link to visit my personal donation web page and help me in my efforts to support Alzheimer's Association or copy and paste the following into your browser:
http://memorywalk08.kintera.org/virtual/dlindberg

You can further help by telling your congressional representatives to support providing funding to Alzheimer's research by going to the Alzheimer's Association Advocacy page.

For more info: See my articles as the Pittsburgh Elder Care Examiner for Examiner.com


April 11, 2009

Raising awareness of Alzheimer's Disease

The Alliance for Aging Research, with a grant from the Metlife Foundation is raising awareness of the epidemic of Alzheimer's Disease to the public for help in increasing the government funding to research and support this terrible disease. As the Baby Boomer generation ages, it will push the numbers of people who will be afflicted with Alzheimer's to epidemic proportions. The need for public awareness to tell their congressional representatives is now!

These videos will make you aware of what the disease is and the current strides being made to fight it. Alzheimer's is not merely something we just have heard about from our parents and grandparents any longer. It is going to slam into the Baby Boomer generation without mercy and our country will not only feel it's effects first hand, but our economy will feel the burden unless we get serious...NOW!

Talk to your family about it, tell your friends about it and make your congressional representatives know that the time to act is NOW!
For more details, click the link below or go to www.aboutalz.org.

A Quick Look At Alzheimer's







March 26, 2009

Alzheimer's Disease is getting some much needed media attention!


(Alzheimer's Association)

Alzheimer’s Disease is getting some much needed media attention!

Alzheimer’s is getting HUGE visibility on the national news in the last couple of days as Maria
Shriver and other celebrities are speaking out about this disease that claims so many lives and will increasingly do so as the nearly 80 million Baby Boomers are aging!

In my life, I have seen my grandmother slip into this, although I was too young to pay a lot of attention, but I did see my parents deal with caring for her to the point of having to, in the end, take to a nursing home. Then in the past year, I have now been dealing with my mother's struggle with this same disease. My mother is now in a nursing home and I watch her slip away mentally although she has had nearly perfect physical health most all of her life. If I follow their steps in life, the good news is that they had long, healthy lives. The bad news is that this made them susceptible to this mind melting disease, whereas my father, lived a physically healthy life, but a shorter one as he had a fatal heart attach at the age of 72. We do not know if he would have gotten Alzheimer’s disease, as his death was related to smoking, lack of physical activity and being overweight.

The news is raising the awareness, not only of the disease, but of the test that people can take to see if they have any of the two identified genes that cause Alzheimer’s. Currently, there is no cure. This is only a test to see if one is more likely to get the disease. Nearly all the funds that are used for this disease are for the caring of those who are stricken with it. Nursing facilities are bursting at the seams right now with people with Alzheimer’s. We really can’t fathom how hard this will hit our economy and culture of our country over the next few decades as the largest segment of our population, the Baby Boomers, move into their elder years. Research shows that currently, the best
preventative measures we can take are to exercise and follow a healthy diet.

For more information on what Alzheimer’s Disease is and the latest news about it, check out this link to the National institute on Aging.
http://www.nia.nih.gov/Alzheimers/Publications/adfact.htm

February 11, 2009

Alzheimer's Disease affects the younger generation as well!



Through my association and membership to ASCAP (American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers), I came upon a musician who is also a member of the ASCAP social network. At first listen, the music of the band FORCEAIKEN has a hard rock sound, but upon a closer look, there are some basic core family values that come out of the band's founder, Mike's lyrics. One such song is titled, Alzheimer's. As my mother is afflicted with this disease and I have posted several articles on this blog about this it, this song title drew my attention quickly. Mike was effected by Alzheimer's as his grandmother had the disease. Clearly, the lyrics of this song show that even younger family members are strongly affected as well as the aging parent's children. In this case, the powerful, driving guitar sounds in this song bring the pain and anger of this disease to light.

This band is sure to grow in it's fan base and success, but they also show that even when a particular type of music may not be your regular cup of tea, it sometimes deserves another listen and closer look to see the message and passion.

Here is a link to the band's MySpace page as well as their ASCAP page. Give them a listen and pay particular attention to the lyrics in the song titled "Alzheimer's". The lyrics are on the page when you click the song title on the ASCAP site.

FORCEAIKEN ASCAP SITE

FORCEAIKEN MySpace Page

November 20, 2008

Five ways to keep Alzheimer's away - CNN.com





A new article about Alzheimer's from CNN with information about 5 ways to prevent or help hold off the disease.

Five ways to keep Alzheimer's away - CNN.com

This is information that Boomers want to know as many struggle with their aging parents, not only for help with them but to find out ways to possibly prevent the same health issues happening to themselves!

As I have written about in many articles in this blog, under the folders, Hannah's Journey and Alzheimer's, my mother has had Alzheimer's for the last year and our whole family has dealt with the phases of this disease, from "what is she talking about" to it's so hard to go visit her at the nursing home because "that is not mom, or grama".

I have a lot of good information within the articles in Hannah's Journey and Alzheimer's folders, for those who may be going through any part of this terrible disease within their family. If anyone ever has any questions or would like to vent, please feel free to contact me at DLindberg49@gmail.com

November 6, 2008

November - National Alzheimer’s Disease Awareness Month





My mother suffers from this terrible disease and I had no idea that November was designated to raise awareness of this disease. This just shows you how much the mainstream media needs to put more effort into publishing this! Thank goodness for the Internet and the social media. I have heard some recent claims about new drugs being discovered and researched to cure Alzheimer's disease, but obviously, much more awareness needs to happen.

October 13, 2008

Some much needed celebrity attention on Alzheimer's disease.




Here is some much needed celebrity backing to bring attention to Alzheimer's disease that help to bring more resources toward research and care. John Glover has been an actor for many years but most recently as Lionel Luthor, father of Lex Luthor in the current hit TV series, Smallville, one of my favorite shows.

Here is an article about John Glover's connection to Alzheimer's and his dedication to raising awareness of the need for more funds to find cures and treatments.

‘Smallville’ actor talks Alzheimer’s, growing up in Salisbury



August 30, 2008

Touching video about living through Alzheimer's Disease.

This amazingly well done video story about a couple who have been in love for 87 years go through the terrible last few years of losing that life long love, slowly..... This will undoubtedly bring on some tears, but it is amazing to see two people live such a long, full life time of love. We all can only hope to have that.



This video was on Alzheimer's Notes web site.

August 22, 2008

Alzheimer's Association Sponsors Memory Walk! Together we can move a nation!





The Alzheimer’s Association (www.alz.org) is pulling out all the stops to raise awareness of this disease that has effected as many as 5 million people currently in our country. With the 70 million Baby Boomers approaching retirement years, this figure will undoubtedly increase substantially over the next decade. As Boomers, this will affect so many of us, if it hasn't already. If you have read some of my articles about my mother (in My Folders - Hannah's Journey) you will know that my family is and has been going through this life changing event over the past year. Hannah is doing well and is currently living in a nursing home and physically sound but her mind comes and goes. She still mostly remembers everyone but will go off into mixed up stories of both imagination and scattered past memories. During such a spell, it is hard to get her off the subject without angering her. This takes an extreme amount of patience as it is natural for us to want to clarify her on what she is talking about, but we have to remember to just nod our heads and listen.

I also have a great post with a video about living with aging parents going through memory loss that will tear anyone up. Don't say I didn't warn you... get your tissues ready! (Absolutely beautiful slideshow for boomers!!!)

Drug research is only beginning to see some light at the end of the tunnel for treatments for Alzheimer’s Disease. There just isn’t nearly enough media press on the subject to raise the public’s awareness which would then give it a higher priority in the political circuit. This is a great time to raise this public and political awareness as we get closer to the Presidential election.

The Alzheimer’s Association is sponsoring the Alzheimer’s Memory Walk which is the nation’s largest event to raise awareness and funding for support and research. The event is typically a 2 - 3 mile walk on one morning in the fall.

Together we can move a nation! Sign up to be a team captain today.

Alzheimer's Memory Walk



Sponsored by Alzheimer's Walk

August 2, 2008

A New Hope.... and Easy to Remember (Rember - New Drug for Alzheimer's Disease)




This AP News article has been widely published over the current week, but I wanted to bring it to the attention of the readers of my blog, Davy's Locker, for any who may have not seen it and as it relates to our Baby Boomer issues of aging parents. This will not be something that will be able to help my mother, Hannah, who you all may have read about in my articles of Hannah's Journey, but hopefully it will help millions in the future, and perhaps allow the Baby Boomer children to not have to go through one of the most painful and sorrowful issues our our generation. By the way.... what a great name for the drug.... Rember! (easy to remember :-)

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Experimental Alzheimer's drug shows early promise Jul 29, 2008 3:49 PM EST CHICAGO - For the first time, an experimental drug shows promise for halting the progression of Alzheimer's disease by taking a new approach: breaking up the protein tangles that clog victims' brains.

The encouraging results from the drug called Rember, reported Tuesday at a medical conference in Chicago, electrified a field battered by recent setbacks. The drug was developed by Singapore-based TauRx Therapeutics.

Even if bigger, more rigorous studies show it works, Rember is still several years away from being available, and experts warned against overexuberance. But they were excited.

"These are the first very positive results I've seen" for stopping mental decline, said Marcelle Morrison-Bogorad, director of Alzheimer's research at the National Institute on Aging. "It's just fantastic."

The federal agency funded early research into the tangles, which are made of a protein called tau and develop inside nerve cells.

For decades, scientists have focused on a different protein - beta-amyloid, which forms sticky clumps outside of the cells - but have yet to get a workable treatment.

The drug is in the second of three stages of development, and scientists are paying special attention to potential treatments because of the enormity of the illness, which afflicts more than 26 million people worldwide and is mushrooming as the population ages.

The four Alzheimer's drugs currently available just ease symptoms of the mind-robbing disease.

TauRx's chief is Claude Wischik, a biologist at the University of Aberdeen in Scotland who long has done key research on tau tangles and studies suggesting that Rember can dissolve them.

He is an "esteemed biologist," and the research "comes with his credibility attached to it," said Dr. Sam Gandy of Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York. He heads the scientific advisory panel of the Alzheimer's Association.

In the study, 321 patients were given one of three doses of Rember or dummy capsules three times a day. The capsules containing the highest dose had a flaw in formulation that kept them from working, and the lowest dose was too weak to keep the disease from worsening, Wischik said.

However, the middle dose helped, as measured by a widely used score of mental performance.

"The people on placebo lost an average of 7 percent of their brain function over six months whereas those on treatment didn't decline at all," he said.

After about a year, the placebo group had continued to decline but those on the mid-level dose of Rember had not. At 19 months, the treated group still had not declined as Alzheimer's patients have been known to do.

Two types of brain scans were available on about a third of participants, and they show the drug was active in brain areas most affected by tau tangles, Wischik said.

"This is suggestive data," not proof, Wischik warned. The company is raising money now for another test of the drug to start next year.

The main chemical in Rember is available now in a different formulation in a prescription drug sometimes used since the 1930s for chronic bladder infections - methylene blue. However, it predates the federal Food and Drug Administration and was never fully studied for safety and effectiveness, and not in the form used in the Alzheimer's study, Wischik and other doctors cautioned.

On Monday at the International Conference on Alzheimer's Disease, other researchers reported encouraging results from a test of a different experimental drug that also targets tau tangles. That drug, by British Columbia-based Allon Therapeutics Inc., was tested in people with an Alzheimer's precursor, mild cognitive impairment.

The tau-drug results are in stark contrast to the flop of Flurizan, which was aimed at blocking enzymes that form the beta-amyloid clumps. Myriad Genetics announced in June that it would abandon development of Flurizan after the failure, the biggest clinical trial of any Alzheimer's drug to date. Full results were presented at the conference Tuesday.

Also due out are full results of a closely watched test of bapineuzumab, an experimental drug that aims to enlist the immune system to clear out the sticky brain clumps.

Its developers - New Jersey-based Wyeth and the Irish company Elan Corp. PLC - previously announced that the 240-patient study missed its main goal of improving patients' mental performance at 18 months.

But the company found a silver lining - the drug appeared to help the roughly 60 percent of people in the study who did not have a gene that scientists think makes Alzheimer's disease more severe.

Scientists were eager for information on side effects and possible magnitude of benefit for the drug, which the companies have already said will move on to late-stage testing in more than 4,000 patients. ---

By MARILYNN MARCHIONE AP Medical Writer

June 29, 2008

Drawing for “Finding the Joy in Alzheimer’s̶ Book

A new book especially to help support those who are caring for their parent with Alzheimer's. I found this on a website called Alzheimers Notes.

read more | digg story

February 4, 2008

Senior mother back at her retirement apartment...

It has been since Nov. 2007 since my mother has stayed overnight in her apartment at the retirement residence... by herself! It is really an amazing feat which is really hard to put into words in this post. If you read my post about aging parent issues... you have some of the background that makes this night amazing! I just called my mother and she seemed to be fine and has our phone numbers to call and has emergency alert devices in the apartment. The retirement place is really new and nice and secure.. so she is safe there and has many friends living there also. She will be fine...
This whole ordeal has been really tuff on our mother, most of all as she is fully aware that she just can't remember so many things. You and I do have moments where we forget what day it is... but we then remember soof afterwards.... she may not until she looks at the calendar or asks someone. It has to be a scary place to be.

January 30, 2008

Aging Parent Issues

As baby boomers, not only are we getting close to retirement years, we all face many issues with aging parents. I know! My mother is still living and soon to be 90 years old in June of 2008. Amazingly, she has had great health just about all of her life. One issue she has had in the last 10 years is some hearing loss. We have gone through our share of hearing aids and that is a story I'll post another time, as it is long by itself! We were used to her being healthy and still living on her own in a retirement residence. Then she fell, for no apparent reason on a level service and broke her hip. When a senior falls and breaks their hip, it is almost always the beginning of going downhill from there. She was in the hospital recovering from surgery and physical therapy for 2 weeks amazingly well!... but she seemed to be going through the beginning stages of Alzheimer's. It just got worse for those two weeks.

We all knew she had showed signs of some minor confusion for the last year, but nothing like this. In fact, we even mentioned it to her doctor and he started her on Aricept which is the primary drug for Alzheimer's but it only slows it down. It is not a cure. She was also under pain medications, so we thought she would get better after getting off that, but she did not. After the two weeks, since no one in the family could watch her 24 hours a day, she had to go to an assisted living home, which we knew would be temporary as it was soon to be the holidays and we would be off work for two weeks. She got worse and even though the assisted living home had people who were very caring and did their best, they were understaffed and it was a depressing place.

As I say, I know there are worse conditions, but you could smell urine in some furniture that was being used and it just needed better cleaning and it was gloomy and my mother seemed to be totally out of her mind. We thought there would be no return from this. However, we took her home for the holidays while we were off and she could walk very well by then, she just needed some physical therapy at our house which we arranged, but was doing well, physically. The first week at our house, I thought I would lose my mind because she was babbling out of her mind, getting up all hours of the night, making strange noises, talking back and forth to herself like there was two people right there. She went to my sister's house the second week of Christmas and still was pretty bad but started getting better. She quieted down and slept better. Well, as time went on and I read more and more about this disease, I found out that are many people who were having bad side effects from the Aricept, so we talked to the doctor and we stopped it. The very next day she improved tremendously!! She has been about where she was before this all happened ever since. She is going to move back to her apartment in the retirement home she lived in. Good thing I kept it!!! It seems like a miracle!!! I mean, I know that this may not last long, but we have learned a LOT about what all of us baby boomers need to do to prepare for this and I will be adding more information as I can.

What we doing next is that we found a fantastic program in our local area called Community Life (there is link below). This is really a day care program for seniors but their main purpose is to care for seniors health and well being so that they can continue to live in their homes or with family, but can go to the center every day if they wish (Mon - Fri) to be active, address health concerns like hearing, teeth, eye care, medications, appearance, meals, activities, day trips, the list goes on....

These adult day care places are all over the country under different names but are government funded through Medicaid. The government has realized that it is much more cost effective to pay for these centers and prevent seniors from having to go to nursing homes where 24 hour care needs paid for. It's just cheaper this way. So it's a win... win for everybody. The only thing that everyone may not like is that you must turn over your primary doctor care to the doctor at the center, as they take care of all medications. If one is very partial to their current doctor, this can be a difficult decision. But the benefits well out balance this and if hospital care is needed they are affiliated with the local hospital anyway.

I will post a list of web sites in this posting, one of which is a Online Community Forum where I found others going through this same thing and about taking her off of the Aricept. Other things I will put in future postings will be what you need to do financially. Things such as living wills, wills, putting all assets in some other family members name, power of attorney, etc. Here is the list of sites about aging:

National Institute on Aging - www.nia.nih.gov/ which is leading the federal effort on aging research

American Society on Aging - http://www.asaging.org/index.cfm is an association of diverse individuals bound by a common goal: to support the commitment and enhance the knowledge and skills of those who seek to improve the quality of life of older adults and their families.

Govbenefits.gov - http://www.govbenefits.gov/govbenefits_en.portal is a partnership of Federal agencies with a shared vision - to provide improved, personalized access to government assistance programs.

Alzheimer's Association Online Community - http://alzheimers.infopop.cc/eve/ubb.x is an online forum where people share issues they are undergoing to help each other deal with all aspects of aging parents.

National Council on Aging - http://ncoa.org/ is a nonprofit organization with a national network of more than 14,000 organizations and leaders. Our members include senior centers, area agencies on aging, adult day service centers, faith-based service organizations, senior housing facilities, employment services, consumer groups, and leaders from academia, business, and labor.

National Institute of Health Senior Health - http://nihseniorhealth.gov/ makes aging-related health information easily accessible for family members and friends seeking reliable, easy to understand online health information. This site was developed by the National Institute on Aging (NIA) and the National Library of Medicine (NLM) both part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

Pension Rights Center - http://www.pensionrights.org/ is the nation's only consumer organization dedicated solely to protecting and promoting the retirement security of American workers, retirees and their families.

Senior Citizens Resources USA - http://www.usa.gov/Topics/Seniors.shtml is a Senior Citizens' Resources of the US government.

I know this is a lot of information.... but take your time and check out the sites and start learning what you need to do. Don't let yourselves get caught off guard and have to scramble to find out what to do. This time will come to many of us.
Live and Love well....we can make it when you have others to help you and there is a lot of help out there!

Take care.... and keep coming back to my blog for more info....