Seth Rogen needs you to help fight Alzheimer’s disease

Seth Rogen needs you to help fight Alzheimer’s disease

Alzheimer’s Champion Seth Rogen is raising money for Hilarity for Charity, his fund supporting the Alzheimer’s Association. Your gift to the Crowdrise Holiday Challenge could help him win $100,000 for the cause. Make a donation today!

http://www.optimumseniorcare.com/services/alzheimerscare.php

http://optimumseniorcare.com/blog/


Greater Illinois Chapter introduces Ask the Helpline feature

Greater Illinois Chapter introduces Ask the Helpline feature

In honor of National Alzheimer’s Disease Awareness Month, the Greater Illinois Chapter is unveiling its Ask the Helpline feature online. This quarterly piece highlights commonly asked questions of those who call the Alzheimer’s Association’s 24/7 Helpline. Our staff, which includes licensed clinical social workers, then provides insightful responses to concerns and problems of those impacted by a dementia diagnosis as well as next steps.

The Alzheimer’s Association highly trained and knowledgeable 24/7 Helpline staff provides reliable information and support to all those who need assistance, with translation services available in 170 different languages. We serve people with memory loss, caregivers, health care professionals and the public. In the Ask the Helpline series, our staff answer some of our callers’ more common questions, providing insight and next steps for those faced with the challenges of a dementia diagnosis.
Q — “What do I do next?”
Q— In recent months, I have noticed that my husband is more forgetful and has difficulty doing day-to-day tasks that used to come easily for him, like balancing the checkbook. How do I find out if he has Alzheimer’s disease?
Q—How do I get Mom to accept help caring for Dad?
To reach the Helpline with questions or concerns, call 800.272.3900 or fill out an E-Helpline Request for Assistance.

http://www.optimumseniorcare.com/services/alzheimerscare.php

http://optimumseniorcare.com/blog/

Longtime couple tackles Alzheimer’s with positivity and realism

Longtime couple tackles Alzheimer’s with positivity and realism

Three years ago, Pansy received a diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease. According to Pansy and her husband, Winston, their day-to-day life, which they’ve shared for 57 years, hasn’t changed much. But as they think about what they’ll face next, they each seem to be looking at the future a bit differently.

NPR has been following Pansy and Winston Greene, a California couple struggling with an Alzheimer’s diagnosis. Three years ago, Pansy learned she had Alzheimer’s disease, and over this past summer, the couple told NPR that their day-to-day lives haven’t changed much. That’s still true. But on this second visit, they each seem to be looking at the future a bit differently.

Pansy Greene says her secret to maintaining a normal life is to keep active. She’s almost never without a book of crossword puzzles; she reads her Bible daily, babysits her grandkids and goes for walks. She’s also become passionate about raising awareness of Alzheimer’s disease.

So on a recent morning, she and Winston were at the Los Angeles office of the Alzheimer’s Association. They’re on the planning committee for a forum on the early stages of the illness. The committee includes both staff members and people who, like Pansy, are in the early stages of Alzheimer’s.

African-Americans are roughly twice as likely to get the disease as whites, so Pansy wanted to make sure the organization was reaching out to her community.

“They don’t know where to go. They don’t have the money to get all that testing and stuff,” she says. “That’s in our neighborhood. That’s what the black people do. They can’t afford [testing], so they just say ‘I can’t do it.’ ”

Winston adds that this may not be just an African-American problem. “It’s probably in other ethnic groups also. We’re just so close to it and see so many in our [extended] family.”

There are moments when this meeting feels as much like a support group as a planning committee. Pansy slides seamlessly from discussions of how to persuade Alzheimer’s patients around Los Angeles to come to the forum to how to get her own relatives who have the disease to follow her example and take action.

Read More About The Greenes

 

Health
Despite Alzheimer’s, Couple Holds Tight To Old Memories

“I gotta reach out more,” she says. “They’re not listening.” She says they need to know what she’s done to keep herself active and take charge of her life. “I’m not letting this other thing take control. I’m in control.”

Everyone in the room laughs in appreciation of Pansy’s fierce determination. But across the table from Pansy and Winston is living proof of how little control of this disease there is.

Jonathan Blumberg, another member of the committee who has Alzheimer’s, wants to offer his own suggestions on outreach but the words don’t come. There are long pauses between phrases, lots of ums and ahs. He apologizes. Everyone tells him to just take his time and waits patiently while he completes his thought.

‘There Is Still Fear’

That’s the thing about Alzheimer’s. There’s nothing that really stops its relentless progression. And if you’re with a group of fellow sufferers, someone will be further down that path. Winston sees this at the support groups he attends. It gets to him.

“There is still fear,” he says. “Not so much denial, but fear. … You’re with people that are that much advanced, and you’re thinking, oh my gosh, this could be our journey.”

Winston and Pansy Greene have been on a journey together for 57 years. She was 16 when they married; he was 18. They have three daughters, seven grandchildren and two great-grandchildren, most of whom live nearby.

Pansy may be having trouble with short-term memory, but she and Winston have plenty of long-term memories to share — of family and travel and decades when they both worked in the aerospace industry.

“I think it’s a blessing for me being where I was,” says Pansy. While she was working on the space shuttle, she met astronauts and even Queen Elizabeth. “I got all those wonderful memories. God brings those things to me,” she says. “So that’s why I stay positive. I don’t like being negative.”

And she thinks Winston is — just a little bit. A few months earlier, he said he didn’t look ahead. It would make him crazy. Now, he says he’s gotta be realistic.

“I can’t be unrealistic about where this journey goes [because] there’s no cure!” Winston says. “How could I be unrealistic to think that tomorrow things are going to change and she’s gonna be back like she was before the diagnosis. That would be really unrealistic.”

That’s just the way Winston is, Pansy says. “But … I’m not giving into it. He’s thinking that way, I’m thinking positive, and that’s who I am.”

The Greenes have spent 57 years accepting each other for who they are. They have no plans to stop now.

http://www.optimumseniorcare.com/services/alzheimerscare.php

http://optimumseniorcare.com/blog/

A note of gratitudAlzheimer’s Association.


A note of gratitude – Alzheimer’s Association.

You lead a busy life and yet you still find the time to support the Alzheimer’s Association. We are truly grateful!
It’s because of your thoughtfulness that we are able to spend each day providing help and hope to individuals affected by Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias.
This holiday season, we hope you have the opportunity to spend time with those who matter most.

The Alzheimer’s Association is the world’s leading voluntary health organization in Alzheimer’s care, support and research. Our mission is to eliminate Alzheimer’s disease through the advancement of research; to provide and enhance care and support for all affected; and to reduce the risk of dementia through the promotion of brain health. Our vision is a world without Alzheimer’s disease®.

http://www.optimumseniorcare.com/services/alzheimerscare.php

http://optimumseniorcare.com/blog/

Special year-end opportunity – Alzheimer’s Association

Special year-end opportunity – Alzheimer’s Association

As the end of 2013 approaches, the Alzheimer’s Association has an exciting opportunity.

Two anonymous donors from California will collectively give $225,000 to the Alzheimer’s Association if we raise that same amount by December 31, 2013.

Their generosity will not only enhance local programs and services, but also fuel our New Investigator Research Grant program (NIRG), which aims to accelerate breakthroughs by supporting early-career scientists as they explore innovative concepts that have the power to change the field.

When you make your gift today to this special challenge match, your donation can have twice the impact and support our mission to eliminate Alzheimer’s disease through the advancement of research; to provide and enhance care and support for all affected; and to reduce the risk of dementia through the promotion of brain health.

Your tax-deductible year-end donation of $50 can become $100, or a gift of $100 can become $200. Any amount you give by December 31, 2013 can help us continue to work toward our vision of a world without Alzheimer’s.

http://www.optimumseniorcare.com/services/alzheimerscare.php

http://optimumseniorcare.com/blog/