Register today to participate in The Longest Day on June 20

Register today to participate in The Longest Day on June 20

An estimated 47 million people worldwide, including more than 5 million Americans, are living with Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias. You can honor them by signing up for The Longest Day®, a sunrise-to-sunset fundraising event taking place June 20. Your efforts will enhance care and support and advance research toward methods of treatment, prevention and, ultimately, a cure.

Check out our live webinars in May


Check out our live webinars in May

We know you are busy and may not always be able to attend education programs in a classroom setting, so we are now offering webinars – live interactive programs conducted through the internet. These convenient programs are designed to meet the needs of the busy caregiver.

Cost: None.

The Alzheimer’s Association is pleased to announce its schedule of live webinars. Offered at various times throughout the day, the topics range from general awareness to specific caregiving strategies. Webinars are recorded and available to those who are unable to attend. Join us for one, or all!

Registration

Program

Day

Time
Register

Gadgets, Gizmos and Technology to Make Alzheimer’s Care Safer and Less Stressful
Thursday, May 12, 2016
10:00 – 11:00 a.m.
[ click here ]

How Anyone Can Use Art to Help a Person with Alzheimer’s
Thursday, May 26, 2016

2:00 – 3:00 p.m.

[ click here ]

How Anyone Can Use Art to Help a Person with Alzheimer’s
Thursday, May 26, 2016
7:00 – 8:00 p.m.
[ click here ]

Caregiver Burnout: What to Do When You Have Nothing Left to Give
Thursday, June 23, 2016

10:00 – 11:00 a.m.

[ click here ]

Caregiver Burnout: What to Do When You Have Nothing Left to Give
Thursday, June 23, 2016
2:00 – 3:00 p.m.
[ click here ]

Webinar Descriptions:

Gadgets, Gizmos and Technology to Make Alzheimer’s Care Safer and Less Stressful
You don’t have to spend a lot of money or be an expert in technology to take advantage of the many gadgets and gizmos available today. From high-tech monitors to automatic pill dispenser to sensors in the home, learn how to utilize technology to make caregiving safer and less stressful.

How Anyone Can Use Art to Help a Person with Alzheimer’s
Regardless of skill level, many people with dementia find great emotional and cognitive benefit in making or even viewing art. Join us as we learn the basics from a registered art therapist and licensed clinical counselor. Learn some simple tools you can use at home to aid with communication, mood, and behavior management. No art background required!

Caregiver Burnout: What to Do When You Have Nothing Left to Give
Alzheimer’s caregivers report higher levels of depression, illness and burnout than caregivers of those with any other condition. Find out why, and what you can do to overcome burnout and care for yourself.

Alzheimer’s Association awards $4.3 million for new phase of landmark prevention trial

Alzheimer’s Association awards $4.3 million for new phase of landmark prevention trial

The Alzheimer’s Association has announced a $4.3 million research grant for a new phase of the Dominantly Inherited Alzheimer’s Network Trials Unit (DIAN-TU) known as DIAN-TU Next Generation (NexGen). This award will accelerate the testing of potential Alzheimer’s therapies and a new diagnostic approach in people with genetically based, younger-onset Alzheimer’s disease using an innovative trial design that is being applied to the disease for the first time.

ALZHEIMER’S ASSOCIATION AWARDS $4.3 MILLION TO ACCELERATE THE LAUNCH OF NEW DRUG TREATMENT ARMS IN LANDMARK PREVENTION TRIAL Funding Supports Testing New, Innovative Methods of Early Detection in Individuals Destined to Develop Alzheimer’s CHICAGO, April 23, 2016 – The Alzheimer’s Association announces a new $4.3 million research grant for a new phase of the Dominantly Inherited Alzheimer’s Network Trials Unit (DIAN-TU) known as DIAN-TU Next Generation (NexGen). This award will accelerate the testing of new potential Alzheimer’s therapies and a new diagnostic approach in people with genetically based, younger-onset Alzheimer’s disease using an innovative trial design that is being applied to Alzheimer’s for the first time. DIAN-TU is a landmark, global Alzheimer’s prevention study led by researchers at Washington University in St. Louis. DIAN-TU NexGen will add the infrastructure for new testing methods and additional drug arms designed to test experimental treatments targeting the accumulation of amyloid brain plaques, a hallmark of Alzheimer’s. Amyloid plaques are deposits of the protein fragment amyloid-beta that build up in the spaces between nerve cells and are a hallmark brain change in Alzheimer’s. “This funding will quicken efforts to launch and expand the DIAN-TU NexGen trial, creating the foundation for a new generation of clinical trials. DIAN-TU NexGen will accelerate both the testing of potential therapies and allow for the consideration and execution of combination therapy, which has the potential to make a real impact on those with the disease,” said Maria Carrillo, Ph.D., Alzheimer’s Association Chief Science Officer. “Having a treatment that can delay the onset of Alzheimer’s is projected to reduce the number of individuals affected by the disease by 2.5 million within the first five years it is available.” Making this Award Possible The Alzheimer’s Association funding for DIAN-TU NexGen is made possible by donations to the Alzheimer’s Association from St. Louis-based financial services firm Edward Jones and Alzheimer’s Association Zenith Society members John and Crystal Beuerlein, of St. Louis, and Mary Barton Smith, of Portola Valley, California. John Beuerlein is General Partner at Edward Jones. The Zenith Society is a group of individuals and organizations that have each committed $1 million or more to the Alzheimer’s Association to support research. “The single greatest threat to financial security late into life is contracting a long-lasting disease that destroys a person’s savings and leaves them dependent upon their children or Medicaid. The most expensive of those chronic diseases, in both financial and emotional costs, is Alzheimer’s,” said Jim Weddle, Managing Partner of Edward Jones. “That is why Edward Jones is partnering with the Alzheimer’s Association to drive financial support for increasing the pace of research and is pleased that this funding will go to this highly esteemed team of scientists at Washington University.” New Testing Methods The funding supports the inclusion of new approaches to diagnosing Alzheimer’s that would enable earlier and more accurate detection of the disease if proven to be effective: • Tau PET Imaging – This brain imaging technique uses positron emission tomography (PET) to visualize another hallmark of Alzheimer’s, tau tangles. Past research suggests that tau PET imaging may help determine where the process of damage and death of brain cells begins and how it progresses to cause the symptoms of Alzheimer’s. Including this technique in the DIAN-TU NexGen trial will enable researchers to evaluate its ability to serve as a marker for the presence and progression of the disease, and for evaluating effectiveness of potential treatments. • Home-based and Increased Frequency of Cognitive Testing – This component will assess whether more frequent cognitive testing and the use of self-administered at-home cognitive assessments can better detect subtle cognitive changes over the currently used methods. If proven, this approach may eventually be used in the early detection of Alzheimer’s so that a disease-modifying treatment, once available, can be given earlier in the disease process. “Being able to move forward now with DIAN-TU NexGen as a result of this funding is critical to our mission to find a way to stop or slow the progression of Alzheimer’s,” said Randall Bateman, M.D., Director of DIAN-TU and DIAN-TU NexGen. “Our aim is to find ways to prevent damage and loss of brain cells by intervening early in the disease process – even before outward symptoms are evident. The new components we are adding with the DIAN-TU NexGen are designed to test ways to do exactly that.” Dr. Bateman is also the Charles F. and Joanne Knight Distinguished Professor of Neurology at Washington University in St. Louis. He is an Alzheimer’s Association Zenith Fellows Awardee. More About DIAN-TU NexGen Drug Arms In each trial arm, people who carry a deterministic gene mutation for Alzheimer’s and who show mild or no symptoms of the disease will receive either an experimental drug or a placebo over a four-year time span. Researchers will compare the results of cognitive tests taken by participants at the beginning, during and at the end of the trial, and assess markers associated with Alzheimer’s in body fluids and brain imaging scans to evaluate the drugs’ effectiveness. Multiple study sites around the world will be added to the 26 existing DIAN-TU sites in seven countries. Countries expected to have trial sites are Germany, Netherlands, Argentina, South Korea, Japan, Belgium, Taiwan and Bulgaria. Individuals who carry a deterministic gene mutation for Alzheimer’s are destined to develop the disease. This form of the disease is known as dominantly inherited Alzheimer’s disease (DIAD). For individuals with DIAD, family history can help to predict the age of onset of Alzheimer’s symptoms, which is typically during a person’s 30s, 40s or 50s. While DIAD makes up less than 1% of all Alzheimer’s cases, the predictable age of onset makes it possible to test drugs years before symptoms begin. This is when anti-amyloid therapies are hypothesized to be most effective. Past research shows the biological changes observed in the brain of those with DIAD are highly similar to brain changes involving people with the more-common sporadic form of the disease, which is more likely to occur after age of 65. As a result, many scientists believe that a treatment that will work for those with DIAD will likely work for those with sporadic Alzheimer’s. The funding for DIAN-TU NexGen also supports holding an Annual DIAD Family Conference. This meeting provides DIAN-TU researchers with an opportunity to collect input on trial design features from families affected by DIAD and to communicate the scientific and medical rationale of research studies through direct engagement with these individuals. In July 2015, the DIAN-TU and the Alzheimer’s Association organized a DIAD Family Conference at the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference (AAIC) in Washington, D.C. The conference offered an opportunity for families involved in the original DIAN study and DIAN-TU to meet one another in person for the first time. It also provided a forum for dialogue on critical issues, regulatory approval for Alzheimer’s disease treatments and advocacy for increased research funding to find new and more effective treatments for Alzheimer’s. The next DIAD Family Conference will be held at AAIC 2016 in July in Toronto, Canada. More About DIAN-TU DIAN-TU is the first large-scale clinical trial aimed at identifying drugs to stop or slow Alzheimer’s disease in people with DIAD. Led by researchers at Washington University in St. Louis, the trial is currently testing the amyloid-targeting drugs solanezumab and gantenerumab, from Eli Lilly and Company and Hoffmann-La Roche, respectively. The trial is an outgrowth of DIAN, an international network of 17 research centers established in 2008 to conduct a long-term observational study to understand how DIAD develops. DIAN has been instrumental in validating markers to detect the presence or increased risk for Alzheimer’s in body fluids and brain imaging, and has been critical for the launching of DIAN-TU. At the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference 2011, the DIAN team reported interim data from 150 participants showing that, in this population, measurable brain changes appear as much as 20 years before the first detectable memory and thinking impairments. About the Alzheimer’s Association The Alzheimer’s Association is the leading voluntary health organization in Alzheimer’s care, support and research. It is the largest nonprofit funder of Alzheimer’s research. The Association’s 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. Its vision is a world without Alzheimer’s. Visit alz.org or call 800-272-3900.

 

Action Alert: Act now to help add $400 million to Alzheimer’s research

Action Alert: Act now to help add $400 million to Alzheimer’s research

More than 5 million Americans are living with Alzheimer’s, and every 66 seconds, someone in the United States develops the disease. Yet many of us, including some members of Congress, still don’t know that Alzheimer’s takes a devastating financial toll — not just on those with the disease but on families and the national economy.
This is why we need you to add your voice: Ask Congress to continue to make Alzheimer’s research a priority by providing at least an additional $400 million in federal funding in fiscal year 2017.
The Alzheimer’s Association has a successful history of bringing people together to tackle the challenge of Alzheimer’s disease. Our advocate network, together with the Association and support from friends like you, has helped us win many critical public policy victories.
Last year, we invited advocates to participate in a historic effort to urge lawmakers to increase Alzheimer’s research funding at the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Our hard work paid off: We won the largest-ever annual increase — a nearly 60 percent jump.
But we still have a long way to go. Even with that increase, the commitment continues to fall far short of the need. In 2012, an expert panel of scientists concluded that $2 billion in annual Alzheimer’s research funding is necessary to achieve breakthroughs in developing preventions and effective treatments for the disease by 2025.
In order to achieve annual research milestones to both prevent future cases of Alzheimer’s disease and to better meet the needs of the millions of American families currently facing this disease, the NIH must have the necessary research funding. Please join us today and urge Congress to continue its commitment to the fight against Alzheimer’s disease by providing at least an additional $400 million in NIH funding in fiscal year 2017.

Anything you love, from angel hair pasta to Zumba

Anything you love, from angel hair pasta to Zumba

Although you know about The Longest Day® 2016, you might be wondering what you can do to participate this year. The answer is anything from A to Z!
Register now for The Longest Day.
Need a little inspiration? Here’s what others who share your commitment have done to advance the care, support and research efforts of the Alzheimer’s Association:

  • In tribute to his grandmother’s fight against Alzheimer’s disease, Bobby spent The Longest Day cooking her favorite Italian recipes, which included anything from angel hair pasta to meatballs to ziti.
  • To honor her father’s love of music, Sonia spent The Longest Day doing something she loves: a Zumba dance workout.
  • In honor of his wife, a caregiver for her father who had Alzheimer’s, Henryrode his bicycle 50 miles — and invited local Boy Scout troops and others in his community to join him on the journey to end Alzheimer’s.
  • Todd organized a day of live performances in support of his mother who is fighting Alzheimer’s.
  • Rose spent The Longest Day doing what she loves most: knitting with her friends and family.

Join us on The Longest Day and be part of a community of people around the world who are coming together in their own special way, on one special day, to fight Alzheimer’s.
Sincerely,

Wendy Moran

Wendy Moran
The Longest Day Team
P.S. Wear your passion to fight Alzheimer’s on your sleeve and everywhere you go! Sign up for The Longest Day before 6/3, and receive our exclusive T-shirt with your registration.