CDC report: Workers in construction, mining, food service smoke the most.
Continue reading here: CDC: Miners, Construction, Food Workers Smoke Most -AARP
//-->
CDC report: Workers in construction, mining, food service smoke the most.
Continue reading here: CDC: Miners, Construction, Food Workers Smoke Most -AARP
Editorial Commentary
Our website is geared towards providing the latest news to caregivers as well as others who are concerned with the plight of our sick and frail elderly. With so much focus on providing the news, we found an event that became OUR news, the Maria Shriver’s Alzheimer’s Walk and Candlelight Vigil, which took place on October 24, 2010 in Long Beach, California.
Our readers may have noticed us promoting the event not only on this website but on Twitter, Facebook and everywhere we could get the word out. We drove two hours from San Diego to Long Beach just so we could share how important this issue really is not only to us, but to so many people living in our country and abroad.
A saddening statistic, about one in 10 people over the age of 65 has Alzheimer’s Disease and this number continues to grow despite promising advances in medicine. We, as well as other advocates know there will be a cure someday, but without exposure, influencing public policy to help find a cure will be a lost battle and millions more will continue to suffer behind closed curtains.

Mom waiting for dinner (photo credit: Rose Broyles)
Mom was diagnosed in 2005. With her strong will, spiritual faith and the effectiveness of Namenda and Aricept (both slowing the progression), Mom has retained her memory of us and is still fighting to stay strong for us, our family and our dad, who himself is afflicted with COPD and Congestive Heart Failure.
It was Mom’s condition that brought the launch of this website. It was through our struggles in the early stages of the disease that we began to understand the need for advocacy for this and other elderly causes.

Betty looking at her medicine (photo credit: Rose Broyles)
Just last year, our dearest relative and my sister’s mother-in-law was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s Disease. Betty is still very alert but the disease has begun to rear its ugly head at times and the confusion sets in. We remain hopeful for Betty and we keep her surrounded by love and understanding by her caregivers and our family who loves her as our own. We hope that besides Aricept, Namenda and other inhibitor drugs, there will be a cure someday and it is what we and others like us fight for.
The Alzheimer’s Walk was just one of many events to be held at the three day Women’s Conference in Long Beach, California. California First Lady, former NBC correspondent and advocate Maria Shriver has herself, been affected personally with the disease with her father Sargent Shriver who was diagnosed with the disease in 2003. She has since written a book, hosted an HBO documentary series “The Alzheimer’s Project: Do you Know Who I am?” and partnered a study with the Alzheimer’s Association entitled, “The Shriver Report”.
Seeing so many volunteer their time and make the walks was a touching experience. It was comforting for us to know that even though we were there as photojournalists, there were others who could relate to us and who we could relate to. Only those who have experienced loss or been affected by the disease personally can truly understand and appreciate the importance of finding a cure; finding help for caregivers who are responsible for the care of their partners, spouses, relatives and patients.
Everyone from senior residence centers to individuals and whole families were there to walk for a loved one who succumbed to the disease or who were suffering from it. Caregivers enthusiastically marched showing their resilience and strength.
Opening ceremonies included an introduction by former TV host Leeza Gibbons, co-celebrity chairs such as: celebrity chef Paula Dean, actor Peter Gallagher, Soleil Moon Frye, an appearance by current California Governor Arnold Schwarznegger and actress Sally Field. Jane Fonda led the crowd in warm up exercises and hundreds of marchers prepared for two walking events: 2 and 5K which took them to the streets of Long Beach, led by Maria Shriver.
Closing ceremonies ended with a performance by country singer Brett Eldredge and “Glee” star, Amber Riley.
It was this woman that caught my attention. The look of emotion on her face is what summed up the entire event. And it was the story of two young girls, both 18 and caregivers, that brought to light the effects this dreadful disease has on everyone from young to old.

A woman reacts to a big screen showing images of caregivers and their Alzheimers patients (photo credit: Rose Broyles)
While this story will have come and gone to the general public, more and more people will be diagnosed and many more caregivers will begin to suffer the devastating emotional and financial impact from diseases such as this and others. For more information on how you can help the cause by participating in a march yourself or donating, please visit Alzheimer’s Association for local events.
LOS ANGELES – Maria Shriver and the Alzheimer’s Association – the leader in Alzheimer’s care, support and research – today released The Shriver Report: A Women’s Nation Takes on Alzheimer’s. This groundbreaking report reveals the epidemic’s effect on women as caregivers, advocates and people living with this disease.
The Shriver Report: A Women’s Nation Takes on Alzheimer’s demonstrates that women are at the epicenter of the Alzheimer’s epidemic. According to the Alzheimer’s Association Women and Alzheimer’s Poll unveiled in the Report, women are almost two-thirds of all Americans with Alzheimer’s and compose 60 percent of the unpaid caregivers for family members and friends with Alzheimer’s. That means there are 10 million women who either have Alzheimer’s or are caring for someone with the disease. The toll Alzheimer’s has on individuals and caregivers is further compounded by the financial burden felt by families and the U.S. government.
The economic impact of Alzheimer’s disease – on government, families and business – totals about $300 billion per year. The cost of caring for a single person with Alzheimer’s is a whopping $56,800 a year, the bulk of it borne by each family. With the baby boomers entering their mid-60s, an Alzheimer’s tsunami is about to hit, with the number of people with Alzheimer’s disease expected to triple, reaching as many as 16 million by 2050.
“The statistics in this report are shocking,” said Shriver. “We have to ask ourselves as a nation if we’re ready for what will happen as this epidemic unfolds. When my father, Sargent Shriver, was diagnosed back in 2003, my mother, four brothers and I all felt we were entering a world that was confusing, dark and depressing. People just didn’t talk about Alzheimer’s when it hit their families. It was a diagnosis shrouded in shame and there was little information and even less hope. It’s time to start talking about Alzheimer’s. It’s time to fight this disease.”
An instant eBook edition of The Shriver Report created by Free Press will be available on October 19th wherever Simon & Schuster eBooks are sold. This eBook will be the only copy of the report available to the public. Portions of the report are available now through the Alzheimer’s Association at alz.org orShriverReport.com.
The Shriver Report: A Woman’s Nation Takes on Alzheimer’s is a comprehensive, multi-disciplinary anthology of every facet of Alzheimer’s disease –medical, sociological, political and economic. The academic core of the report is composed of expert reviews of issues and trends with analysis backed by a nationwide poll of 3,118 adults, including more than 500 Alzheimer’s caregivers.
But there’s more to Alzheimer’s than numbers. The Shriver Report: A Women’s Nation Takes on Alzheimer’sincludes original photography by award-winning photojournalist Barbara Kinney and personal essays. Contributors include Barbra Streisand, Terrell Owens, Soleil Moon Frye, ABC News “Nightline” anchor Terry Moran, CBS News Correspondent Barry Petersen, former First Lady Laura Bush, President Ronald Reagan’s daughter Patti Davis, Alzheimer’s Study Group Chairs Newt Gingrich and former Sen. Bob Kerrey, Secretary of Health Kathleen Sebelius and Vice President Joseph Biden. In addition, extraordinarily honest and moving essays by a diverse group of Americans – including teenage caregivers and women in their 60s living with Alzheimer’s – further illustrate the toll Alzheimer’s is taking on America.
“This report gives us a glimpse of Alzheimer’s in a different light. With 10 million women affected, Alzheimer’s is a women’s issue,” said Angela Geiger, Chief Strategy Officer of the Alzheimer’s Association. “One-third of the 6.7 million female caregivers are a part of the ‘sandwich generation’ caring for children and an adult with Alzheimer’s disease simultaneously. The Alzheimer’s Association Women and Alzheimer’spoll also found that 64 percent of women reported the fact that they had to arrive late, leave early or ask for time off due to caregiving for a loved one with Alzheimer’s, and the majority of respondents found it more difficult to get employer support for elder care than child care.”
Unpaid family caregivers are on the frontlines of the battle against Alzheimer’s. More than 11.2 million Americans provide billions of hours of unpaid care to people with Alzheimer’s or other dementias. More often than not, women report stepping up to become the caregiver because no one else in their family will do it and 40 percent of them say they had no choice in the matter. Caregivers’ own heath care costs an additional $4 billion a year due to the emotional and physical stress and strain of caregiving.
This report will not only shine a bright light on the implications of a disease that directly impacts 10 million American women, but it will ignite a dialogue for the millions of women currently suffering from depression, cardiovascular disease, and obesity – diseases that disproportionately affect women and link to Alzheimer’s.
The Shriver Report: A Woman’s Nation Takes on Alzheimer’s is designed to spark a national dialogue around kitchen tables and in communities across the country. This is led on the national stage by today’s issue ofTIME, whose story on women and Alzheimer’s features original reporting based on findings from The Shriver Report. On Sunday, October 17th Maria Shriver will be on ABC’s This Week with Christiane Amanpour discussing the report for the first timeand kicking off a week of coverage across ABC properties.
The Shriver Report supporters include Deloitte LLP and Visa Inc. Grassroots outreach supporter AARP will help amplify the conversation and research partner Berkeley Center on Health, Economic & Family Security at UC Berkeley School of Law once again provided an academic anchor to the report and made critical substantive links from the first Shriver Report to this one. The Families and Work Institute shared revealing, never-before-seen data on the plight of Alzheimer’s caregivers today.
This is the second in a series of Shriver Reports examining transformational moments in American culture and society. Last year, Maria Shriver and the Center for American Progress published The Shriver Report: A Woman’s Nation Changes Everything, a landmark study examining how American families live and work today, now that women are half of all the country’s primary and co-breadwinners. The Report launched a national conversation about the far-reaching consequences of women’s shifting roles in society that continues today.
The launch of The Shriver Report: A Women’s Nation Takes on Alzheimer’s leads into Maria Shriver’s March on Alzheimer’s benefiting the Alzheimer’s Association on October 24, and the annual Women’s Conference in Long Beach, California the following day. Shriver will be joined at the March by emcee and Alzheimer’s advocate Leeza Gibbons and co-chairs actor Peter Gallagher, Dixie Chicks lead singer Natalie Maines, actress and activist Soleil Moon Frye, Body by Jake CEO Jake Steinfeld and members of the cast of “Glee.” Jane Fonda will lead participants in warm-up exercises before they begin the 5K March, which will be followed by refreshments, entertainment, and a candlelight vigil honoring those lost to Alzheimer’s disease and their friends and families. All proceeds from the March will benefit the Alzheimer’s Association. For more information, visit http://www.womensconference.org/march-on-alzheimer-s/.
About the Alzheimer’s Association:
The Alzheimer’s Association is the leading voluntary health organization in Alzheimer 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; to advocate for policy change; and to reduce the risk of dementia through the promotion of brain health.
About Maria Shriver:
Shriver is the author of six books and an Emmy and Peabody Award-winning broadcast journalist currently serving as California’s First Lady. A mother of four, she has expanded the California Women’s Conference into a star-studded multi-day event for 30,000 participants, featuring newsmakers, cultural leaders, and opinionmakers, all with the goal of inspiring and empowering women to be Architects of Change in their own lives, their communities, and the world. Shriver was co-Executive Producer of last year’s Emmy Award-winning four-part HBO documentary series, “The Alzheimer’s Project.” It took an inside look at cutting-edge research in the country’s leading Alzheimer’s laboratories and examined the effects of this disease on patients and families. One of the Emmy Award-winning films in the series, “Grandpa, Do you Know Who I Am?” was based on Shriver’s best-selling children’s book dealing with Alzheimer’s. “The Alzheimer’s Project,” one of HBO’s most-watched events ever, can be seen at http://www.hbo.com/alzheimers/the-films.html.
Caring For Mom and Dad is a news portal for caregivers. We provide the latest news about caregiving, eldercare, legislation, tips, and other important information. [Read More …]
© 2012 Caring For Mom and Dad- BCK Media Inc.