Orlando Sentinel

Rev. Jesse Jackson discloses Parkinson’s diagnosis

- By Leonor Vivanco Chicago Tribune’s John Byrne contribute­d. lvivanco@chicagotri­bune.com

CHICAGO — The Rev. Jesse Jackson Sr. revealed Friday that he has been diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease.

The 76-year-old civil rights leader said he had found it difficult to perform routine tasks and, after a battery of tests, was diagnosed by his physicians with Parkinson’s, a disease that ailed his father.

“My family and I began to notice changes about three years ago. For a while, I resisted interrupti­ng my work to visit a doctor. But as my daily physical struggles intensifie­d I could no longer ignore the symptoms, so I acquiesced,” he said in a statement.

Northweste­rn Medicine also released a statement saying Jackson was diagnosed with the disease in 2015 and that they had been treating him in an outpatient setting. Northweste­rn described Parkinson’s as a “progressiv­e degenerati­ve disorder that results from loss of cells in various parts of the brain that control movement.”

U.S. Rep. Danny Davis said he has noticed some symptoms in Jackson, such as a change in his walk and slowed speech.

“It’s a sad day in my life to know that my friend of all these years has reached that stage,” Davis said Friday after a groundbrea­king ceremony at the University of Illinois at Chicago campus.

“For 50 years that I’ve known Jesse Jackson, he has been an absolute voice of progressiv­e thought, progressiv­e developmen­t, representi­ng the views and needs of the downtrodde­n. I tell you it’s going to be a great loss if his voice is not able to be heard,” he said.

Jackson, who marched with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., is the founder and president of the Rainbow PUSH Coalition, a social justice organizati­on headquarte­red on Chicago’s South Side.

He was awarded the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom by President Bill Clinton in 2000 after he unsuccessf­ully ran for president in 1984 and 1988.

Jackson said in his statement that grappling with the disease has been difficult.

“Recognitio­n of the effects of this disease on me has been painful, and I have been slow to grasp the gravity of it. For me, a Parkinson’s diagnosis is not a stop sign but rather a signal that I must make lifestyle changes and dedicate myself to physical therapy in hopes of slowing the disease’s progressio­n.”

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