Recently, I heard from Dr. Christopher Tokin, an ABC health
writer, requesting an interview for an article about new therapies for
Alzheimer’s disease. After reading my blog and one of my books, he wanted to
include information about Jim in an article introducing the Alzheimer’s
Association International Conference in Vancouver.
Being the skeptical person I am, the first order of business
was to check out Dr. Tokin to make sure he was the person he said he was. After
a Google search, I was confident that Dr. Tokin was a health writer for ABC
news. I had no problem answering his questions as long as he did not ask for my
social security number, birth date or bank account number.
I was getting ready to leave on an Alaskan cruise so I used
my time in Seattle to answer Dr. Tokin’s interview questions. I’ve been
interviewed before by national news media including a telephone interview while
I was at a conference in Boston. I know that national media will interview
several people and then choose one or two of the stories to include in the
article. When I read the previous article, my interview was not included. This
time, I just didn’t mention the interview and thought I’d wait to see if Jim’s
story was included in the article.
My first day at work after my cruise, I heard from my son.
“Did you know there’s an article online about dad?” He went
on to tell me he was browsing the news on his cell phone when he saw an
Alzheimer’s article. He started reading it and realized the Jim Fisher in the
article was his dad.
“Dr. Tokin interviewed me before I left on the cruise,” I
said. “He was going to send me a link to the article when it was published.” I looked at the news feed on my phone and the
article was indeed in the health section.
A few hours later, I received an email from Dr. Tokin with
the link to the article. By then, the article had been shared on Facebook.
This morning, I went in to read some of the news from the conference
and one of the articles is “New Drugs Aimed at Ending Alzheimer’s Decline.” This in Dr. Tokin’s article. He used Jim’s story to
personalize an article on new drug treatments. Two of the drugs targeting
beta-amyloid, Eli Lily’s
solenezumab and Pfizer’s bapineuzamab, are in Phase III clinical trials.
The Alzheimer’s Association’s International Conference gives
the world a chance to learn about research targeting 2025 as the date to find a
cure for Alzheimer’s. Scientists try many approaches to diagnosing Alzheimer’s
early and developing therapies to target the hallmarks of Alzheimer’s—beta amyloid
plaques and tau tangles.
As the week unfolds, we will learn more about new studies
like the one that shows a change in walking can indicate Alzheimer’s disease
before cognitive symptoms appear. People with undiagnosed Alzheimer’s disease
may begin to walk slower and take shorter steps. The interesting thing about
gait is that some people performed well on the clinical tests, but at home, family
members observed that their loved one walked much slower. Walking speed, like
other symptoms of dementia, rely on family observations as a key component of
making a diagnosis.
When you know someone well, you notice things about them
that doctors don’t. A ten-minute exam might miss many of the symptoms of
serious brain disorders. When Jim developed dementia, it was my observations of
changes in his behavior and skills that convinced the doctor that it was more
than depression.
We lost Jim more than seven years ago, but he is not
forgotten by the family that loved him. Jim would have been pleased to know
that his story provides an illustration of hope for the 5.4 million Americans
with Alzheimer’s.
“New Drugs Aimed at Ending Alzheimer’s Decline.”
copyright © July 2012 Linda Fisher
4 comments:
This is great, Linda! I am also posting on Facebook.
On another matter, I had a cruise also, paid for by family as respite time. My husband in stage one Alzheimer's missed me terribly, but did stay with his son.
Hugs,
Carol
My mom was getting respite from watching over my brother. He did fine while we were gone but was in the ER Friday. It turned out to be okay, but was scary for a while.
Hope your cruise was a time to refresh yourself for your caregiving role. Many blessings, Carol.
Every 69 seconds someone develops Alzheimer’s disease. Please share this video and one thing that you never want to forget to help end Alzheimer’s. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xeHTTonG6co&feature=player_embedded
My friend also suffers form Alzheimer's and last month he died.. Most patient suffering from this kind of illness has a very poor prognosis. Thanks for the share..
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