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News Brief

Nov. 18, 2024 |  By: Mark Moran - Public News Service

Expanding outreach to Iowa caregivers during Alzheimer's Awareness Month

Alzheimers patient with caregiver

By Mark Moran - Public News Service

The Iowa Alzheimer's Association chapter is making new resources available to caregivers during November, a month set aside to educate and help people with the disease and those who care for them.

Nearly 100,000 Iowans are family caregivers, helping more than 62,000 people living with this form of dementia.

Erica Eikern - program manager with the Alzheimer's Association, Iowa chapter - said the group is making a huge effort this month in particular to get resources to those caregivers, letting them know they are not alone.

"We have approximately 50 local caregiver support groups, in many communities across the state of Iowa," said Eikern. "We also have a virtual support group that we just started for young adult caregivers who are taking care of a parent or older family member."

Nationally, nearly half of all caregivers who provide help to older adults are doing so for someone with Alzheimer's disease, according to data on the association's facts and figures website.

Eikern said the association is working at the state level to give those caregivers some respite options.

Eikern said caring for a person with Alzheimer's can take a heavy physical and emotional toll. So, she said the association is trying to make sure they know help is available.

"At our Iowa chapter, we're averaging about 30 programs that we're doing per month, out in various communities throughout the state," said Eikern. "We have a goal of trying to reach everyone in all 99 counties through our awareness presentations, through support services."

Those resources are also available on the association's website.

More than 11 million people in the U.S. are providing unpaid care to a person living with Alzheimer's or other form of dementia. Last year alone, that care was valued at more than $346 billion.