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    US wants effective Alzheimer's treatment by 2025

    WASHINGTON (AP) — Effective treatments for Alzheimer's by 2025? That's the target the government is eyeing as it develops a national strategy to tackle what could become the defining disease of a rapidly aging population.

    It's an ambitious goal — and on Tuesday, advisers to the government stressed that millions of families need better help now to care for their loved ones.

    "What's really important here is a comprehensive plan that deals with the needs of people who already have the disease," said Alzheimer's Association president Harry Johns, one of the advisers.

    Already families approach the advisory committee "reminding us of the enormity of our task," said Dr. Ron Petersen, an Alzheimer's specialist at the Mayo Clinic who chairs the panel.

    The Obama administration is developing the first National Alzheimer's Plan to address the medical and social problems of dementia — not just better treatments but better day-to-day care for dementia patients and their overwhelmed caregivers, too.

    The plan still is being written, with the advisory panel's input. But a draft of its overall goals sets 2025 as a target date to have effective treatments and ways to delay if not completely prevent the illness.

    Some advisory members said that's not aggressive enough, and 2020 would be a better target date.

    "We want to be bold," said Dr. Jennifer Manly of Columbia University. "We think the difference of five years is incredibly meaningful."

    Regardless, an estimated 5.4 million Americans already have Alzheimer's or similar dementias — and how to help their families cope with day-to-day care is a priority, the advisory committee made clear Tuesday.

    The disease is growing steadily as the population ages: By 2050, 13 million to 16 million Americans are projected to have Alzheimer's, costing $1 trillion in medical and nursing home expenditures. That doesn't count the billions of dollars in unpaid care provided by relatives and friends.

    Today's treatments only temporarily ease some dementia symptoms, and work to find better ones has been frustratingly slow. Scientists now know that Alzheimer's is brewing for years before symptoms appear, and they're hunting ways to stall the disease, maybe long enough that potential sufferers will die of something else first. But it's still early-stage work.

    Meanwhile, as many as half of today's Alzheimer's sufferers haven't been formally diagnosed, a recent report found. That's in part because of stigma and the belief that nothing can be done. Symptomatic treatment aside, a diagnosis lets families plan, and catching Alzheimer's earlier would be crucial if scientists ever find a way to stall it, the advisory panel noted.

    Among the goals being debated for the national plan:

    —Begin a national public awareness campaign of dementia's early warning signs, to improve timely diagnosis.

    —Give primary care doctors the tools to assess signs of dementia as part of Medicare's annual check-up.

    —Have caregivers' health, physical and mental, regularly checked.

    —Improve care-planning and training for families so they know what resources are available for their loved one and themselves.

    A training program in New York, for instance, has proved that caregivers who are taught how to handle common dementia problems, and given support, are able to keep their loved ones at home for longer.

    Such programs "are dirt cheap compared to paying for nursing home care," said David Hoffman, who oversees Alzheimer's programs for the New York State Department of Health.

    But hanging over the meeting was the reality of a budget crunch. The government hasn't said how much money it will be able to devote to the Alzheimer's plan, and states have seen their own Alzheimer's budgets cut.

    "We're not going to fix this without substantial resources," Hoffman said. "In New York, we're hanging on by our nails," he added.

     
    • chrystalclear  •  3 mths ago
      you need to 'see' the potential cause in order to 'attempt' to find / work on a cure. its simple, stop spraying us and our water and food, and that dreadful disease will decline and the cost is free. ! aluminum is the main cause, so we must eliminate as much aluminum as we can..helloooooo, thats the probable' cure'..but they wont do that, cause they just want to cut the population down to nothing...my mom had it in her 50s, and that was 30 years ago. people are now coming down with it in their midlife, ( yes, 40s and 50s ) not so much after 70 and 80 ! people better start wakeing up while there is still time...2025 ?? get serious...more lies and deception, thats all.
    • Bernard  •  Nanning, China  •  4 mths ago
      In the Nineties I worked for a big US drug manufacturer. They had developed a product that could help with secondary problems of the AIDS infection. A young colleague asked a question that was not checked first (as ususal): Why do we not work on a product against AIDS ? The boss looked at him a long time, you could hear a needle drop, thenhe said: "Because we are in the business of medication." (For several reasons I can not go into details, but the story is true). I discussed it later with the head of the Marketing. He said: It may not be said very well, but he is correct, we must make money as long as we can, and it takes a certain amount of potential customers to make it worthwile to start research for some illnesses so the developement costs are covered quickly, fast break even.
      So one may come to the conclusion that it is of somebodies benefet when we read headlines as this one here.
      • christopher 4 mths ago
        It will take more than a headline, and more than an epidemic, to solve this problem.
      • homo stupidius 4 mths ago
        that's why u're in China now?... :)
      • D. 4 mths ago
        Uh, the US Government has been documented to be far more sinister than that.

        They literally allowed a group of black Americans to suffer STD infections for years while pretending that the group was being medicated when the study was actually to study damage. No cure was given, intentionally.

        And, today, a group just lost in Federal Court against the Feds in an attempt to get the dirty feds to pay damages for a similar tactic elsewhere. The Feds could have at least paid off... but refused... and defended by the excuse that they were government and shielded from such liability.
    • me  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  4 mths ago
      if you folks saw this disease at work, you wouldn't joke about it. 2025 is the joke here.
      • Moth 4 mths ago
        I have seen it at work...if I remember correctly.
      • Term_Limits_For_Congress 4 mths ago
        Yes, 2025 target is far in the future but probably picked because ( unfortunately ) paths to cures/solutions aren't simple or obvious. One way regular folks can help is signup for Rosetta at Home ( via BOINC ) and other projects like them that run computer analysis to help us understand more about Alzheimer's and other diseases
      • mark r 4 mths ago
        THC has been proven to help stave off this disease later in life. Now if only it were legal to use, there probably would be no need for a cure.
    • Charles  •  4 mths ago
      How about the goal of 2013.... Then I may be able to use it.....
      • G 4 mths ago
        Sounds good.
    • Black Knight  •  Norristown, Pennsylvania  •  4 mths ago
      I sure hope so as this is a horrible disease. It is sometimes worse then other more publicized diseases as the victim can be in perfect physical health but essentially trapped in their own body. My Grandmother was an RN in Intensive care until she was 67. She walked daily and was often mistaken to be in her mid 50's when she fell victim to the disease. I watched this brilliant woman deteriorate rapidly before my eyes. Sometimes you would get hope when her eyes would "clear" and she would be totally herself only to slip away again. Judging from the comment from "Me" I won't even read the posts of the idiots who ridicule the illness. I just hope they themselves or a loved one never have to experience the disease.
    • Jay  •  4 mths ago
      Notice they said "treatment." Because we all know there is no money in "cure."
      • rico 4 mths ago
        It isn't money for a cure that stops a cure it is the nature of the disease. Read up on it, there likely will never be a cure. A very worthwhile goal is in fact effective treatments to arrest the disease's progress. Die of old age or something instead of your brain turning to mush is a worthy goal. Read up on Alzheimer's and you'll understand why there will likely never be a cure. Evidence suggests you may have it as early as in your 20's.
      • Capitan Pantelones del Fu ... 4 mths ago
        look up a pair of doctors in 1943 that cured cancer using Vitamin C. Jay is right on the money.
      • Capitan Pantelones del Fu ... 4 mths ago
        Look up Linus Pauling. This information was never used because there's absolutely no money in this - it's vitamin c - one of the easiest of the vitamins to produce and also one of the cheapest natural vitamins as well.
    • Kodiak  •  4 mths ago
      Both of my parents died of Alzheimer's in the past couple of years, so I've done a lot of study on it. As far as I know, scientist and researchers do not know what causes it. I think that the cause needs to be known before a cure can be found. Blaming Alzheimer's on miscellaneous and sundry global pollutants, etc., etc., is not productive and most unrealistic. Alzheimer's has been with us for centuries. It was given the name as the result of the man who first identified and listed the defining characteristics of the disease that sets it apart from other forms of dementia.
      • What me worry? 4 mths ago
        Seems like ther much more of it than in years past. Like autism which has skyrocketed and this not due to substitute diagnosing . Experts say there is a real increase.
      • seethepositive 4 mths ago
        the aluminum particulate in chemtrails may be one large factor in the increasing rate of alzheimers and cancers. and maybe autism. we can not opt out of breathing air.
      • Joshua 4 mths ago
        what other kind of air is there. Aluminum...........? you get a thousand times more aluminum from an antacid tablet............It's 8 percent of the Earth's crust. It's in every organic vegatable no matter how certified organic...........No matter how far or remote you are even in the middle of the jungle there is aluminum in the soil on a parts per billion level and you eat it every day.
    • mike  •  Lake Worth, Florida  •  4 mths ago
      As someone who not only works with alzheimers patients but has family member who have it, this is some good news..
    • jsf  •  4 mths ago
      At the moment "the belief that nothing can be done" is belief in a fact. As far as I know, current experts cannot even tell the patient or the family how best to cope.
    • Ned  •  4 mths ago
      Treatment means another cocktail, no cure. There already was a cure AN-1792, it was squashed. There will never be a cure for Altzheimers, it's not cost effective. What happens to Aricept, Exelon etc. etc. if there was a cure?
    • gonzo  •  4 mths ago
      OK, but one of the reasons people don't want to get the diagnosis is that you will lose EVERYTHING you own to pay for the treatment and care. My mother had a paid for $350,000 home that had to be sold to pay for her care in a nursing home. If she had sold the home first and given away the money, her insurance/medicare would have paid for the nursing home anyway. So by getting diagnosed, she lost $350,000.
    • Jon  •  Selinsgrove, Pennsylvania  •  4 mths ago
      I heard that marijuana helps...
    • Observer  •  Boston, Massachusetts  •  4 mths ago
      And Richard Nixon declared a War on Cancer. . . way back when?
    • Monty  •  4 mths ago
      We all want an effective answer to ALZ; it's an awful disease. Putting a date of 2025 just sounds juvenile.
    • Thor's Hammer  •  Greenville, South Carolina  •  4 mths ago
      How about 2012?
    • next  •  4 mths ago
      Has anyone noticed that diseases no longer get cured? They are only managed. There is no profit in curing diseases. The profit is in keeping patients in the chronic stage as long as possible. Our drug companies do a good job of that. Curing a disease would be a bad business practice that their investors would not tolerate.
    • AMightyWind  •  4 mths ago
      Why not change the target date to 2015?
    • AquaBuddah  •  Boston, Massachusetts  •  4 mths ago
      That last paragraph is key. As the person suffering from the disease becomes less capable, the caregiver becomes more involved and often isolated from normal social support. One thing we didn't do that would have helped a lot is to get involved with Hospice sooner.
    • seethepositive  •  4 mths ago
      why dont we outlaw our government from speading aluminum, strontium, and barium in our clouds and sky? aluminum is a well known toxic.
    • Mike Y  •  4 mths ago
      Why don't they want it now?
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