Our Veterans and Dementia

June 28, 2017 - Shawn Taylor
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June is PTSD Awareness Month. The rapidly surging number of Americans with Alzheimer’s disease includes a growing number of military veterans, who may be at increased risk for dementia as a consequence of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and brain injuries suffered in service.

UsAgainstAlzheimer’s successfully works with and for communities at higher risk for dementia, including women, Latinos, and African Americans. Veterans also face unique risk factors for Alzheimer's as a result of their service. Love of country and support for our military is in my blood, and, sadly, so is Alzheimer’s. So it is fitting that I am spearheading this effort on behalf of our nation’s veterans: VeteransAgainstAlzheimer’s.

I am an only child. I idolized my mother ever since I can remember. She was beautiful. She loved me unconditionally. And she was a force to be reckoned with professionally as well, having excelled—even in a man's world—as Director of Business Development for the National Bank of Washington. Throughout my life, I admired my mother’s attention to detail, her tremendous communication skills, and her ability to work a room and network. 

My mom left her career in its prime to care for my grandparents when they started to show signs of “senility.” They moved into our home, but little did I know this would be the start of my long caregiving role. Alzheimer’s was confirmed after autopsies on both my grandmother and grandfather, a retired Army Lieutenant Colonel and West Point Class of 1932 graduate.

Fast forward 15 years, and my mother started showing the same signs as my grandparents. She steadily declined. She backed away from social engagements. Her beautiful handwriting became illegible. She stopped driving. Now she doesn’t know her own granddaughters and doesn’t recognize me. My daddy is a retired Lieutenant Colonel and Purple Heart recipient. Incredibly, he has also just been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s.

So this is very personal to me. We all know what this disease looks like and the destruction it brings to the families. I’ve been fighting for a cure for six years as a founding Board Member of UsAgainstAlzheimer’s. Now I am on a mission to raise awareness and to educate the veteran community about Alzheimer's and encourage these brave men and women to join us to help stop this indiscriminate disease.

There is so much more to be learned. But initial studies show that veterans who suffer from the “invisible wounds of war,” such as PTSD, traumatic brain injury, and blast injuries, are at a higher risk for dementia. Their families are impacted by intense caregiving needs. So our mission through VeteransAgainstAlzheimer’s is to raise the profile of Alzheimer's disease as an urgent health issue for veterans and to mobilize this community to demand the attention of industry leaders, community stakeholders, and policymakers. We want to improve supports for family caregivers and increase veteran participation in brain health initiatives and, ultimately, clinical trials. Without clinical trials there is no cure: to quote Paul G. Rogers, the late founder of Research!America, “Without research, there is no hope.”

As PTSD Awareness Month comes to a close, I encourage you to learn more as we work together to sound the alarm about the impact of Alzheimer’s on veterans and their families.

About the Author

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Shawn Taylor

Shawn recently founded VeteransAgainstAlzheimer’s, a new network of UsAgainstAlzheimer’s. Her work as both an Alzheimer’s and a veterans’ advocate has given her insights into the perspectives of those who are directly affected by this disease and who are best positioned to address this health crisis in the military and veteran communities.

Shawn is a founding board member of UsAgainstAlzheimer’s and