Click here to sign up for our free daily newsletter

Battlefords Alzheimer’s walk raises $10k

Jan 29, 2017 | 3:00 PM

The fifth annual Walk for Alzheimer’s in the Battlefords was once again a success, raising roughly $10,000.

There were dozens of walkers at the North West Field House for the event today, including families, children, friends affected by the disease, and employees from a local Home Hardware store.

Alzheimer’s Society Coordinator Jim Walls said they were delighted with the turnout.

“We always want more people to come, and as years go by we expect that to build,” Walls said. “But most importantly it is an opportunity to raise some funds and raise awareness about Alzheimer’s, and to let people know that there are other people in the community who know what they’re going though.”

According to the Alzheimer Society of Saskatchewan, 564,000 Canadians are living with some form of dementia, including Alzheimer’s, and 937,000 Canadians will be living with the disease in 15 years.

Scott Jamieson was walking at the field house this afternoon for his father, who is living with frontotemporal dementia.

“The disease comes on in your early to mid-40s, so it affects people a lot younger than Alzheimer’s. We’re trying to raise awareness for that today,” Jamieson said.

Jamieson said it’s often difficult to explain his father’s dementia, as people use Alzheimer’s as a blanket term for dementia.

“Nobody really understands what frontotemporal dementia is. It’s a completely different disease [than Alzheimer’s],” Jamieson said. “Any part of your brain dying will affect you differently. In this case, it’s the front part of his brain that’s deteriorated so the symptoms show up as you losing your personality.”

Jamieson said the walk was a great chance to raise awareness for a type of dementia that most Canadians aren’t familiar with.

To wrap up the month-long Alzheimer’s awareness campaign, there will be an evening of Alzheimer’s education at the Battlefords Union Hospital Telehealth Room Jan. 31, where residents can talk about dementia and learn about the associated facts and stigmas.

 

Katherine Svenkeson is a reporter with battlefordsNOW. She can be reached at katherine.svenkeson@jpbg.ca or on Twitter @ksvenkeson.