ACTION ALERT: Call Congress today
Great news! Last night, thanks to the tireless work of advocates like you, the United States Senate passed the National Alzheimer’s Project Act (NAPA). The bill now moves to the U.S. House of Representatives. But...
Alzheimer's champions / Bill, Area Leader / News and notes
by wmfisher · Published December 9, 2010 · Last modified April 14, 2014
Great news! Last night, thanks to the tireless work of advocates like you, the United States Senate passed the National Alzheimer’s Project Act (NAPA). The bill now moves to the U.S. House of Representatives. But...
Alzheimer's champions / Bill, Area Leader / News and notes
by wmfisher · Published November 23, 2010 · Last modified April 14, 2014
Hopefully you’ve seen expanded coverage of our issues in the media lately. The Shriver Report: A Woman’s Nation Takes on Alzheimer’s was created by the Alzheimer’s Association in collaboration with California’s First Lady. It...
Alzheimer's champions / Bill, Area Leader / News and notes
by wmfisher · Published October 5, 2010 · Last modified March 27, 2014
I joined our team in Sacramento Saturday for the Association’s Memory Walk. A record crowd turned out to create a world without Alzheimer’s and make a difference in the quality of life for those...
Alzheimer's champions / Bill, Area Leader / News and notes
by wmfisher · Published September 23, 2010 · Last modified March 27, 2014
5,000 people gathered at Mission Creek Park in San Francisco two weeks ago for Memory Walk – the last Memory Walk, but more about that in a minute. This was the beginning of the...
Alzheimer's champions / Bill, Area Leader / News and notes
by wmfisher · Published September 9, 2010 · Last modified March 31, 2014
When I was a young boy in Iowa my dad used to take us fishing in nearby farm ponds. We never caught anything large, just bluegills and bullheads, but I remember finding it all...
Alzheimer's research news / Bill, Area Leader / News and notes
by wmfisher · Published August 24, 2010 · Last modified April 14, 2014
Cancer, heart disease and AIDS receive 10 to 15 times the Federal funding of Alzheimer’s disease. It’s no coincidence that deaths from all of these conditions declined over the last five years while deaths from Alzheimer’s rose. Research investments have paid off in these areas and it can in Alzheimer’s disease.