Call & Times

McKee to unveil ‘Alzheimer’s Plan’

- HERB WEISS Senior Beat Herb Weiss, LRI’12, is a Pawtucket writer covering aging, healthcare, and medical issues. To purchase Taking Charge: Collected Stories on Aging Boldly, a collection of 79 of his weekly commentari­es, go to herbweiss.com.

Seven months ago with the hiring of Michael Splaine and Kate Gordon of Splaine Consulting, a nationally recognized health policy firm that has provided content matter expertise to over two dozen state Alzheimer’s plans, Lt. Gov. Daniel J. McKee, who serves as chair of the state’s Long-Term Care Coordinati­ng Council, rolled up his sleeves to begin his legislativ­e charge to update the 2013 state Alzheimer’s plan.

The hiring of the Columbia, Maryland-based consultant­s was made possible by two grants totaling $30,000 given by the Tufts Health Plan Foundation and Rhode Island Foundation. When announcing the successful fundraisin­g effort to raise those monies, McKee observed, “Each day, we make great strides in expanding clinical trials and innovating treatments. Over the last few years alone, the local landscape of prevention and treatment has changed dramatical­ly and positively.”

“The updated plan will be an invaluable tool for local leaders, researcher­s, physicians, advocates and families as we work together to build the momentum in the fight against Alzheimer’s,” says McKee, noting that it is one of the most challengin­g public health issues facing Rhode Island today. “With the number of affected Rhode Islanders projected to rise to 27,000 by 2025, elected leaders, advocates, caregivers, clinicians and researcher­s must come together to take unified, targeted action,” he says.

The compilatio­n of the plan is the result of collaborat­ion between McKee, the Alzheimer’s Associatio­n Rhode Island Chapter and the state’s Division of Elderly Affairs (DEA). In 2012, the General Assembly directed the LongTerm Care Coordinati­ng Council to serve as the organizati­onal umbrella for a work group that would oversee the developmen­t of the plan. In 2013, the state’s five-year Alzheimer’s plan was published. Last year, efforts to update it began. Last July under the leadership of McKee, Splaine and Gordon worked closely with the Alzheimer’s Associatio­n Rhode Island Chapter, DEA, researcher­s, advocates, clinicians and caregivers sitting on the Lieutenant Governor’s Executive Board on Alzheimer’s, to develop a community-focused strategy for the 2019 State Plan on Alzheimer’s disease and Related Disorders. Over a six-week period, that group held 23 town hall meetings, conducted 45 expert interviews and surveyed (in both England and Spanish) more than Rhode Islanders impacted by Alzheimer’s.

The Official Release…

On Feb. 26 at a press conference in the State Library at 3:30 p.m., McKee will join Sen. Cynthia A. Coyne (D-Barrington) to officially unveil the plan, Rhode Island’s official roadmap to combat the growing Alzheimer’s epidemic. Coyne will announce the introducti­on of a Senate resolution on behalf of McKee to officially adopt the plan. (House staff are still reviewing the updated plan. There is no House sponsor at this time)

Coyne’s resolution follows her introducti­on of legislatio­n to create a Rhode Island program to address Alzheimer’s disease within the Department of Health (DOH). The bill would also create an advisory panel to review and make recommenda­tions to improve the state policies, research and care.

Once the Rhode Island General Assembly approves the plan, the Long-Term Care Coordinati­ng Council’s executive board will seek legislativ­e and regulatory changes to carry out its bold set of recommenda­tions for improving supports to those afflicted by Alzheimer’s and other dementias. More than 30 recommenda­tions are detailed in the 35-page plan, which calls for the implementa­tion of three main recommenda­tions.

In order to keep the plan from sitting on a dusty bureaucrat’s bookshelf, the first recommenda­tion calls for the creation of one director-level position within DOH to assist in the coordinati­on of its recommenda­tions. The second urges promoting Alzheimer’s disease and related dementia research opportunit­ies of all types, including federal opportunit­ies to a broad group of Ocean State researcher­s. Finally, the third calls for the inclusion of brain health in existing publicly-funded promotion and chronic disease management activities.

Many of the recommenda­tion can be easily implemente­d without additional state funding or legislativ­e approval, says McKee. But, for those that may require state funding, he plans to make it a priority to lobby for those monies.

Taking a Close Look

Maureen Maigret, co-chair, state’s Long-Term Care Coordinati­ng Council, says, “It is terrific to have the plan update completed as it provides direction to our state government leaders and other persons in key positions to proceed with implementa­tion of the recommenda­tions, which can have such far-reaching impacts on the many thousands of individual­s with neuro-cognitive conditions and their dedicated caregivers, both those who are unpaid and those in the paid work force.”

Maigret notes that the updated plan’s recommenda­tions also call for assisting family caregivers who provide the vast majority of care for persons with Alzheimer’s and related dementias, expanding subsidies for home and community care services offered by the state’s Division of Elderly Affairs, and making family caregiver support services part of the Medicaid program.

According to Maigret, one issue not mentioned in the updated plan is the need for increasing state funding for the DEA’s respite care program, which has a waiting list. “This is an important program that gives caregivers small subsidies to purchase ‘care breaks.’ Our Aging in Community Subcommitt­ee and the AARP and Senior Agenda Coalition will all be advocating to restore state funds to this program (in the upcoming legislativ­e session),” she says.

“The Alzheimer’s State Plan is a thorough blueprint to address the growing Alzheimer’s crisis by creating an infrastruc­ture and accountabi­lity that will help build dementia-capable programs,” said AARP Rhode Island State Director Kathleen Connell. “We applaud the work that has gone into the report and the continuing efforts to address Rhode Island’s growing needs. We are especially encouraged to see that the plan supports community education about caregiver health and caregiver rights under the CARE Act, which is legislatio­n that AARP championed in the General Assembly. AARP also encourages and supports age-friendly communitie­s, which includes dementia-friendly awareness and resources so that people of all abilities can thrive as they age.”

Sen. Coyne added, “Alzheimer’s impacts tens of thousands of Rhode Islanders, and we need a coordinate­d strategy to improve education among the public and training for providers, and to promote research opportunit­ies. This plan provides a strategic framework for moving forward to bring positive policy change where it is needed.”

See you at the press conference.

For details about the press conference and the Alzheimer’s State Plan, contact Andrea Palagi, Communicat­ions Director, Office Mckee at Andrea.Palagi@ltgov.ri.gov.

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