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Fireside Publications
Essays: On Living with Alzheimer's Disease: The First Twelve Months
Essays: On Living with Alzheimer's Disease: The First Twelve Months
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September is World Alzheimer's Month. Who do you know who has Dementia or Alzheimer's?
Has Alzheimer's disease touched your life yet? If not, it will be near impossible to escape its affect on family, friends or even yourself, as it reaches epidemic proportions in the near future. Every 70 seconds someone develops AD. By mid-century, scientists predict the incidence will increase to one every 33 seconds. The clock is ticking unless we find a cure.
Essays: On Living with Alzheimer's Disease: The First Twelve Months shares an overview of scientific and historical data, along with personal experiences of the author, a psychologist, in becoming a caregiver and ultimately a patient.Become privy to the intimate feelings of the author as she watches loved ones suffer then has the dreaded diagnosis applied to her own life in a rather bizarre way. Share her feelings as she makes the decision to not become a victim--to do what she can to slow the process then to get on with her life. Find out what comes next after the diagnosis; read about steps the author has taken to adjust and perhaps extend her mental function a bit longer. The journey can be a long, lonely one.
Has Alzheimer's disease touched your life yet? If not, it will be near impossible to escape its affect on family, friends or even yourself, as it reaches epidemic proportions in the near future. Every 70 seconds someone develops AD. By mid-century, scientists predict the incidence will increase to one every 33 seconds. The clock is ticking unless we find a cure.
Essays: On Living with Alzheimer's Disease: The First Twelve Months shares an overview of scientific and historical data, along with personal experiences of the author, a psychologist, in becoming a caregiver and ultimately a patient.Become privy to the intimate feelings of the author as she watches loved ones suffer then has the dreaded diagnosis applied to her own life in a rather bizarre way. Share her feelings as she makes the decision to not become a victim--to do what she can to slow the process then to get on with her life. Find out what comes next after the diagnosis; read about steps the author has taken to adjust and perhaps extend her mental function a bit longer. The journey can be a long, lonely one.
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