Today's Top Alzheimer's News
USA2 SPOTLIGHT
An April 2015 Scientific American Alzheimer’s Outlook edition highlighted pieces by USA2 co-founder George Vradenburg and USA2 patient advocate Greg O’Brien. According to Vradenburg, “Most importantly, USAgainstAlzheimer’s is hoping to start a conversation about Alzheimer’s and other dementias, to raise consciousness about a health crisis that is creating a soon-to-hit tsunami in this country and around the world. Without a cure or the ability to delay the onset of this debilitating disease, we will all suffer the loss of an extraordinary standard of healthcare in our country—the Medicare/Medicaid system will go bankrupt, our economy will be impacted, and the loss of millions of bright and inspiring Baby Boomers will leave us bereft on so many levels.”
MUST READS
An April 20, 2015 St. Louis Public Radio article reported that Senator Roy Blunt (R-MO) “says that he wants to use his key position on the Senate Appropriations Committee to boost funding for research.” According to the article, “The Republican senator recently became the chairman an Appropriations subcommittee that controls federal funding for the National Institutes of Health. He said during a visit to Washington University’s Alzheimer’s Research Center that he wants to make funding for the agency a priority…With the Republicans in control of both chambers of Congress for the first time during President Barack Obama’s presidency, Blunt’s party will have more power to shape federal spending. He said funding for NIH “doubled” the last time Republican controlled both congressional chambers…Randall Bateman, a professor of neurology at Washington University, said the fact that there’s more interest in fighting Alzheimer’s disease within the federal government “is a huge positive sign for all of us, not just those of us who are in research.””
BRAIN HEALTH
An April 20, 2015 Wall Street Journal article and video segment reported that Rush University Medical Center researchers successfully tested the MIND Diet, a diet designed to reduce the risk for developing Alzheimer’s disease. According to the article, “The study, conducted by researchers at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago, found strict adherence to any of the three diets lessened the chances of getting Alzheimer’s. But only the MIND diet seemed to help counter the disease even when people followed only some of the diet’s recommendations. The research was observational, not randomized or controlled, and therefore isn’t evidence the MIND diet caused a reduced risk for Alzheimer’s. Instead, the research shows there is an association between the two…The MIND diet, which took two years to develop, stands for Mediterranean-DASH Intervention for Neurodegenerative Delay. Researchers modified the Mediterranean and DASH diets based on evidence from animal and human studies looking at nutrition and the brain. DASH stands for Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension.”