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Alzheimer's Disease: Survivor or Victim? Know the Facts

Dr. Debbie Brassell

 FormatISBN Price  
This Book is Available Paperback (8.25x11)9781438903095 £ 6.40  
About the Book
Alzheimer's Disease: Survivor or Victim? is a comprehensive study of the ever-evolving effect Alzheimer's Disease has on both a societal and personal scale. Approximately five million Americans are afflicted each year. Over the next twenty-five years the largest segment of society will be over the age of eighty five, the ramifications are likely to be enormous.  Citing numerous risk factors including heredity and lifestyle, the author puts for the an impressive array of findings that could lead to encouraging future clinical results.  A case study of former President Ronald Reagan, perhaps the world's most well-known sufferer of the disease, aids putting a human face on the cold, hard, statistical facts pertaining to the disease.
About the Author

Dr. Debbie Brassell, with 30 years experience as a Speech Pathologist, is a U.S. Consultant to Ireland.  She and her husband live in Bedford, Virginia   Dr. Brassell has a Ph.D in Health Administration, JD, Executive JD in Healthcare Law, MS in Speech Language Pathology, BA in Speech Communication Sciences, and a Graduate Certificate in Hippotherapy.  Dr. Brassell developed a Hippotherapy Program (using the horse in speech, physical, and occupational therapy) at Many Blessings Farm in Bedford, Virginia. 

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Alzheimer’s disease (AD) has no known cure, and the secrets to preventing it are not yet known.  Research supported by the National Institute on Aging (NIA) and other public and private agencies offers tantalizing clues about the origins and development of AD; these findings are raising hopes that someday it might be possible to delay the onset of AD, slow its progress, or even prevent it altogether. In his 2003 book on preparing for the onset of AD, Kuhn suggests that delaying the time when AD symptoms begin by even five years could greatly reduce the number of people who have the disease (p. 1).

AD is now estimated to affect nearly 5 million Americans, Kuhn (2003) states, the vast majority of whom are over 65 years old.  Although AD is a genuine concern for aging individuals, statistics indicate that no more than 10 to 15 percent of people from age 65 to 100 show symptoms of clinically diagnosed senile dementia (Ratey, 2001, p. 217), however, because of the growing concern thanks to prompting, or perhaps priming, by the popular press, a great majority of the aging population would swear to having the disease.