Soapbox
“My campaign wasn’t just about raising money; it was also about sharing personal stories of
loved ones we’d lost to Alzheimer’s.”
Declaring War
On Alzheimer’s
An author keeps up the
fight against the disease
By Tess Gerritsen
American lives
than terrorism in
this country ever
has. Isn’t it time we
declared war on
this devastating enemy?
This war won’t be fought
on battlefields but in
research facilities, and our
soldiers will be scientists.
As a medical doctor, I’ve
witnessed dramatic changes
in medicine over the
decades, and I’m certain that a cure for
Alzheimer’s is within reach. In 2013, to
help fund that research, I began my War
on Alzheimer’s fund drive. I chose to
work with the nonprofit Scripps Research
Institute, an internationally known
leader in basic biomedical research,
because I knew the money would go
straight to their Alzheimer’s research
program.
I had noticed the importance of small
donations to political campaigns, and I
thought that same strategy might work
for my campaign. Every $5 given to my
cause (managed through GoFundMe)
automatically placed the donor in a random drawing for various prizes, including autographed copies of my books;
Rizzoli & Isles T-shirts, hats, and DVDs;
and two grand prizes: the chance to name
a character in my next Rizzoli & Isles
novel. The more money you donated, the
more chances you had at a prize. I pledged
to match donations up to $25,000.
We raised over $50,000 in that first
drive two years ago. My campaign wasn’t
just about raising money; it was also about
sharing personal stories of loved ones we’d
lost to Alzheimer’s. On my campaign’s
tribute page, donors wrote about their
once-vibrant mothers and fathers who had
faded into oblivion, just as my own father
had. They posted photos and shared their
fears that they too would one day succumb. They found comfort in knowing
that they were not alone.
When I contacted the
two grand-prize winners to
ask which names they
wanted as characters in my
novel, one winner said,
“Please use the name of my
late mother. She died of
Alzheimer’s, and I want to
see her live again.”
This, I felt, was a sacred
assignment. The character
had to be worthy of his
mother’s name, someone
who wouldn’t simply walk on the page
and walk off again. Someone who would
have an adventure of her own and would
live to tell the tale. And so Millie Jacob-
son, named after a woman who died of
Alzheimer’s, made her entrance on the
very first page of Die Again. Stranded in
the African bush, Millie falls in love,
fights for her life, and nearly loses her
sanity. She emerges triumphant, a
scrappy survivor who helps Jane Rizzoli
catch a killer. Alzheimer’s disease may
have killed her namesake, but this Millie
Jacobson would live on.
Millie’s fictional adventure may be over, but my War on Alzheimer’s will continue
until there’s a cure. I’ve already launched
a second fund-raiser on GoFundMe, and
once again, two winning donors will have
a chance to name a character in my next
Rizzoli and Isles novel. I hope other
authors will join the fight for more
Alzheimer’s research dollars by spreading
the word, or by launching their own fund-raisers. There are a number of excellent
biomedical research institutes around the
country, and they can all use our support.
Words are the tools of our trade. Let’s use
them now to fund a cure, so those words
won’t slip away from us forever. ■
It may be something small, but it’s
enough to scare you: you misplace your
car keys, or you can’t remember the name
of the movie you saw last week. Or your
mind suddenly goes blank as you try to
retrieve a word that hovers maddeningly
out of reach. And you think, that’s it, I’m
getting Alzheimer’s disease. While most
people of a certain age have probably
experienced that stab of anxiety, I’m particularly fearful. My father died with
Alzheimer’s.
Isay he died with it, not of it, because one can live with Alzheimer’s for years until some other illness—a
heart attack, a stroke—mercifully ends
the agony. For two decades, Alzheimer’s
ate away at the man who was once my
father, robbing him of speech, leaving
him mute through a long, grim twilight.
As a writer, I’m particularly horrified
by the prospect of words, the tools of my
trade, slipping away from me. Like many
of my friends, I’m trying to avoid the
disease by staying physically fit and
mentally active, but Alzheimer’s remains
the only cause of death in the U.S.’s top
10 that can be neither prevented nor
cured. It costs the U.S. $226 billion to
care for our current five million Alzheimer’s patients, and by 2050, it’s projected
that Alzheimer’s will cost our nation a
trillion dollars. It destroys many more
Tess Gerritsen is a physician and bestselling
author of several medical thrillers and the Rizzoli
& Isles crime thrillers. She lives in Maine, where
she is currently at work on her next suspense novel.
©
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