Experts reveal toll of Alzheimer’s — physical, emotional and financial
USC’s Arthur Toga is joined by Still Alice author Lisa Genova for Visions & Voices event.
Alzheimers disease not only takes a profound physical toll but has a huge emotional and financial impact on society as well, two experts on the disease told a USC crowd.
Today in the United States, we spend $250 to $260 billion dollars a year to take care of Alzheimers patients. By 2050, we will spend over $1 trillion a year, USC neuroscientist Arthur Toga told the audience at Somethings Not Right With Alice: Understanding Alzheimers, a Visions & Voices event Feb. 4 at Bovard Auditorium.
Toga, director of the USC Mark and Mary Stevens Neuroimaging and Informatics Institute, was joined by Lisa Genova, author of best-selling novel Still Alice. Moderated by NPR correspondent Ina Jaffe, the talk between Genova and Toga touched on the many impacts of the disease.
If we dont solve this problem, it will not only bankrupt our families financially and emotionally, it will bankrupt this country.
Arthur Toga
Those people who are over 65, one in nine will get Alzheimers disease. Those who are over 85, one in three will get Alzheimers disease, said Toga, who has created some of the largest databases and data mining tools used to support global efforts against Alzheimers and other neurologically degenerative diseases.
This is the grandest challenge we have in neuroscience. If we dont solve this problem, it will not only bankrupt our families financially and emotionally, it will bankrupt this country.
Once rarely discussed
Genova, a Harvard-trained neuroscientist who was inspired to write Still Alice her first novel after her grandmother was diagnosed with Alzheimers, sees her work as a vehicle to spread understanding and galvanize action toward a once rarely discussed condition.
I always start with the science, but my job is to write a compelling, human story that brings compassionate understanding.
Lisa Genova
I always start with the science, but my job is to write a compelling, human story that brings compassionate understanding, that gets you in the heart, that creates an awareness that has empathy, which is a motivation for action, she said about her fiction, which is dedicated to exploring the human dimension of neurological diseases and disorders.
While there is still no cure for Alzheimers, both Toga and Genova say the situation is moving in a positive direction. For instance, the public conversation created by increased awareness of the disease helped in part through the successful film adaptation of Still Alice, for which Julianne Moore won an Oscar in 2015 as an early-onset Alzheimers sufferer is leading to greater investments into a cure.
Accelerated progress
The progression of knowledge of Alzheimers disease has been impressive in the last 25 years and continues to grow in a very accelerated way, not only in terms of the technology, which is able to identify whats happening, but the number of trials that are happening is unprecedented, Toga said. Money that is being spent by Big Pharma like never before, investments from the National Institutes of Health (NIH), which just two months ago pledged $350 million more toward Alzheimers disease.
There is great hope, great excitement and great enthusiasm among scientists to push forward with this disease.