2/3 evening, Frontline TV program on PD

Just in case you haven’t received the word on this PBS Frontline hour-long program airing tonight (Tuesday 2/3) in the evening (10pm on channel 9, for me)….

The program is called “My Father, My Brother, and Me.” It’s the story of Dave Iverson, who was diagnosed with Parkinson’s Disease. His father had PD, and his brother was diagnosed with PD ten years ago. He interviews Dr. Bill Langston, CEO and Founder of the Parkinson’s Institute, Michael J. Fox, and others.

An excerpt will be shown on tonight’s PBS NewsHour (see pbs.org/newshour).

If you’ve read the terrific book “The Case of the Frozen Addicts,” by Dr. Langston, video from 1982 of George and at least one other addict patient is shown in the Frontline series. In the book and in the Frontline program, Dr. Langston discusses the fact that the addicts injected MPTP and got Parkinson’s. He followed the trail and learned that MPTP is very similar to the widely used herbicide paraquat.

You can watch the full program online here:
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline … sons/view/
(I’m not sure for how long this program will be available online.)

There are five two- or three-minute excerpts of the hour-long program here:
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline … eview.html

Part of the Michael J. Fox interview is here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dGeMX_h67mI

I’ve copied below the text posted on the Frontline website about the program*.

Dave Iverson and Frontline have done a great job generating awareness for the Frontline program on PD. Check out:

#1 KQED Radio’s Forum program yesterday (2/2) on Parkinson’s Disease
http://www.kqed.org/epArchive/R902020900
“On Tuesday, KQED-TV will air ‘My Father, My Brother, and Me’ a Frontline documentary on Parkinson’s disease co-produced by Forum’s Friday host Dave Iverson. In this hour, we find out about the latest research on Parkinson’s, and talk to Iverson about his personal journey with the disease.” Hosted by Michael Krasny. Guests include: Dave Iverson, Forum’s Friday host and a veteran television and documentary producer; Dr. Bill Langston, founder, CEO, chief scientific officer and board member of The Parkinson’s Institute; Dr. Clive Svendsen, professor at the Waisman Center at the University of Wisconsin (Madison). This program runs 52 minutes. KQED is based in San Francisco.

Local support group member Barrie listened to the Forum program yesterday and found it very worthwhile. She said: “While the majority of the conversation was about PD, there was occasional mention of atypical parkinsonism too.” The host Michael Krasny’s father-in-law had PSP.

#2 NPR’s Fresh Air (radio) program yesterday (2/2) on Parkinson’s Disease: A Family History
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/stor … =100072610 (click on “Listen Now”)
Dave Iverson “examines the potential offered by stem cell research and also reports on possible genetic and environmental triggers of disorder.” This program runs 28 minutes.

Robin

* Text about the Frontline program from its website:

In My Father, My Brother, and Me, Iverson sets off on a personal journey to understand the disease that has taken such a toll on his family. Along the way, he meets some remarkable people — a leading Parkinson’s researcher whose encounter with “frozen” heroin addicts led to a major breakthrough; a Parkinson’s sufferer given a new lease on life by an experimental brain surgery; and a geneticist who helped identify some of the gene mutations responsible for Parkinson’s and who is now working on drugs to fix them.

Iverson also has intimate conversations with fellow Parkinson’s sufferers actor Michael J. Fox and writer Michael Kinsley, who describe how they became caught up in the politics of Parkinson’s research after the Bush administration greatly restricted federal funding for promising stem cell research in 2001, three years before Iverson got his diagnosis.

“When you’re talking about the potential to heal and cure, and it’s not going forward because of its value as a political wedge issue,” Fox says of his reaction to the Bush stem cell restrictions, “it pissed me off, and I wanted to do something.” In speaking about the funding restrictions that President-elect Obama has signaled he might soon reverse, Michael Kinsley tells Iverson, “Six years have gone by [since the stem cell restrictions were imposed], and those are pretty important years for people like me.” At the same time, Iverson talks to others like the syndicated columnist Charles Krauthammer, who suffers from a spinal cord injury. While Krauthammer is generally supportive of stem cell research, from which he might directly benefit, he believes President Bush drew an important moral line in the sand. “The fact that [an embryonic stem cell] has the potential to become human, and if unmolested and implanted it will become human, deserves a certain kind of respect,” he says.

Until recently, genetics was thought to play no real role in Parkinson’s disease at all, but Iverson’s family history leads him to enroll in a genetic study at the Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, Fla. To date, researchers have identified at least six genes where mutations can cause Parkinson’s, and while the familial form of the disease remains unusual, it may provide researchers with a ready-made target to fix the genes. “We’re a lot closer than we were 10 years ago,” says Mayo Clinic geneticist Matthew Farrer, “a lot closer.”

Finding a cure for Parkinson’s disease may still be on the distant horizon, but in the interim, millions of Americans find ways to live with the condition. Iverson examines one of the experimental surgical interventions that attempts to compensate for the lack of dopamine that characterizes Parkinson’s: a fetal brain cell transplant. “Now we talk about the concept of brain repair,” says surgeon Dr. Ivar Mendez. “Brain repair, when I was in medical school, was not even something that was thought about. So we have advanced tremendously over these years to be able to understand there’s the possibility that we can potentially repair the brain.” While some forms of fetal cell transplant surgery appear to have yielded positive results, others have proved disappointing, in some cases even making patients worse. Dr. Bill Langston of The Parkinson’s Institute tells Iverson: “There’s an old saying in science that research is the process of going up alleys to see if they’re blind. And more often than not they are. But that’s what we do.”

Toward the end of the film, Iverson finds a new source of hope in a very unlikely place: new research that indicates that regular exercise may help delay or slow down the progression of Parkinson’s. Says one leading researcher: “It’s not at all hard for me to imagine that the results of a properly designed exercise program are going to be more effective than many of the medications and surgeries we have now.”

The New Face of Caregiving: Male Caregivers

This article from a recent AARP Bulletin Today is about male caregivers. The seven tips for male caregivers at the bottom of the article certainly apply to all caregivers. John Young, president of the LBDA (Lewy Body Dementia Association) Board, is mentioned in the article. He attended our December 2008 support group meeting in San Mateo, CA. He told many stories about caring for his wife with LBD.

Robin



The New Face of Caregiving: Male Caregivers 
By: Cathie Gandel 
Source: AARP Bulletin Today 
January 23, 2009 

When his wife, Chris, was diagnosed with breast cancer on their 19th wedding anniversary, Dave Balch suddenly found himself with two full-time jobs: running his home-based software business and taking care of her. “I don’t know how I managed everything,” says the 60-year-old from Twin Peaks, Calif., whose wife continues to fight recurrences of the disease six years later. “But you do what you have to do.” 

Each year, more Americans are finding themselves in a similar situation—and challenging preconceived ideas about men and caregiving. 

“People think that male caregiving means that the guy calls home from the job and asks his wife how his mom is doing,” says Donna Wagner, professor of gerontology at Towson University in Towson, Md. “That’s not true at all.” 

A 1997 survey conducted by AARP and the National Alliance for Caregiving, a research and advocacy coalition, found that 27 percent of caregivers were men. By the 2004 update, that figure was almost 40 percent, with more male caregivers (60 percent) working full time than women caregivers (41 percent). Among the reasons for the increase: smaller families, longer life spans, more women working outside the home and greater geographic separation of family members. 
While male caretakers face many of the same challenges as their female counterparts—including depression, stress, exhaustion and reduced personal time—they approach their caretaking role differently, say some experts. 

“Men approach caregiving as a form of work, a series of tasks that needs to be accomplished,” says Edward H. Thompson, coeditor of Men as Caregivers and director of gerontology studies at Holy Cross College in Worcester, Mass. “I don’t mean that to sound harsh. It’s just the way they look at things.” 

Because they are used to delegating, they are more comfortable seeking outside help when they need it, says Richard Russell, associate professor of social work at the State University of New York’s College at Brockport. 

Donald Vaughan, a 51-year-old freelance writer in Raleigh, N.C., has an aide come in three times a week to bathe and shave his father. “It’s worth every penny I pay,” he says. 

But despite feeling isolated, men tend not to seek help for themselves, at least not from traditional support groups. Instead, some forge their own connections. In Rochester, N.Y., some fellow caregivers meet once a week for breakfast. “The men talk about sports, politics and grandchildren,” Russell says. “They don’t mention caregiving. It’s as if they have made a pact that this is their time to be just regular guys.” 

Men also try not to bring their caregiving situation into the workplace. They not only have been socialized to keep things close to the vest, they also perceive a stigma associated with taking time off for caregiving responsibilities—and sometimes a lack of understanding from employers. 

John Young experienced that feeling firsthand. The 55-year-old nursed his late wife through Lewy body dementia, a disease that combines the mental deterioration of Alzheimer’s disease with the physical disability of Parkinson’s disease. When his wife became ill, Young was teaching in a police academy in a Houston suburb. At first she was able to stay on her own while he worked, but one day she called with an emergency and he had to rush home. “When I returned, my boss called me in and asked, ‘How much longer does she have?’?” Young says. “I knew it was time to go.” 

Even those who work at home have trouble juggling responsibilities. “Taking care of my dad has had such a dramatic impact on my life,” Vaughan says. “One part of my brain is always on my father. And my time is nickel-and-dimed throughout the day. It’s hard to get a long period when I can do my work.” He interrupts his writing intermittently to make sure his father drinks enough fluids and walks up and down the hallway for exercise. 

“The worst part is the exhaustion,” says Gary Noble, 64, who cares for his wife, who has multiple sclerosis. He also works as a bus driver in Livermore, Calif., and often has split shifts. He may come home at 8:30 p.m. Before he goes to bed at 9:30, he has to cook, clean up and tend to his wife’s needs. He needs to be up again at 3 a.m. “I’d appreciate just a few hours off sometimes,” he says. 

John Carlson, 57, of Woodbury, Minn., takes care of his 88-year-old father, who is in the early stages of Parkinson’s. “The most difficult part is having time away from home,” he says. “Dad covets my time, as most of his days are spent alone.” 
While any relationship may suffer in the caregiving equation, the issues are particularly difficult for those caring for a spouse, says Donna Wagner. Richard Anderson, president of the Well Spouse Association, a nonprofit organization that provides peer support to those caring for a partner with chronic illness or disability, agrees. He took care of his late wife, who had an autoimmune disease, for 29 of their 31 years of marriage. 

“Spousal caregivers are different because of the intimacy of the relationship,” he says. “It’s hard to have sexual feelings toward your partner if you have to deal with incontinence and other personal issues.” 

Despite the difficulties these men face, there is some good news. “My wife and I spend a lot more time together,” says Ray Heron, 57, of Charlottesville, Va., who has been caring for his wife, who has MS, for 10 years. 

The caregiving relationship has brought Chris and Dave Balch closer, too. “This can really put your love for each other to the test,” Chris says. “In our case, it made it stronger.” 

Tips for Male Caregivers 

“There is no manual on this,” says Vaughan, the freelance writer in Raleigh, N.C., who cares for his father. “You learn day by day.” But here are seven tips passed on by men on the front lines of caregiving. 

1. If someone asks what they can do to help, have a list in the back of your mind and tell that person. 

2. Have something to look forward to—whether it’s a big trip or just a rental movie to watch at home. Remind yourself that you will get through this. 

3. Acknowledge your emotions. You’re human, not a robot. 

4. Set up a group e-mail to keep family and friends in the loop. 

5. If you’re a spousal caregiver, don’t put off shared pleasures. If you and your wife always dreamed of going to the Caribbean and the trip is still feasible, do it now. 

6. Remember that most of the little issues don’t count. Discuss them and find what works for both you and your patient. 

7. Learn as much as you can about your patient’s disease, even though it might be scary. 

——————————————————————————– 
Cathie Gandel is a freelance writer based in New York.

Advocate for NIH Funding

This email about NIH funding may be of interest here. I received it earlier today from the Association for Frontotemporal Dementias. (CBD is a subtype of FTD, and PSP is considered a related disorder.)

Date: Mon, 2 Feb 2009 20:44:56 +0000 (GMT)
From: <[email protected]>
To: Robin Riddle
Subject: Advocate for NIH Funding

Dear AFTD Community:

Here is a quick and easy way to contact your local Senators to support science investment in the Economic Recovery Package!

Senator Arlen Specter (R-PA) is prepared to offer an amendment on the Senate floor as early as today, Monday, February 2, 2009 to provide $10 billion for the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in the economic recovery package. Please take five minutes to ask your senator to support this crucial amendment today.

This amendment would provide funding for grants that could be distributed by NIH right away. NIH funding is fundamental in promoting research to improve the diagnosis, treatment and quality of life for people suffering from neurological and psychological disorders, including Frontotemporal Dementias. Attaching this amendment to the Economic Recovery Project highlights the importance of science funding for its potential to create jobs and stimulate state and local economic growth.

Our colleagues at the American Brain Coalition are urging all of us to join them in voicing our support for expanding research funding at the NIH. Please follow this link and with a few clicks of the mouse, you can send letters to your Members of Congress. Please visit http://capwiz.com/americanbraincoalition/home/. There will be a ‘Take Action Now’ box. Simply click on “Contact Senators to Support Science Investment in Economic Recovery Package” and follow the steps. The suggested text is fully editable and we encouraged you to personalize your message.

As a community, we can effect change and make sure that FTD gets the awareness and funding it deserves!

Thank you for your immediate attention to this initiative.

Sincerely,

Louise O’Conner and Bill Brown
Co-Chairs
AFTD Advocacy Committee