The Palm Beach Post

The U.S. Postal Service takes on Alzheimer’s with a new stamp

- By Erin Blakemore Washington Post

For the 5 million Americans living with Alzheimer’s disease, help can seem far away. Scientists don’t fully understand the disease. The progressiv­e dementia it brings can be scary and disorienti­ng. And social isolation and loneliness are often part of the equation, further affecting brain function.

Starting Nov. 30, a new stamp will lend a helping hand.

The first-class stamp, which shows someone placing a hand on the shoulder of an elderly woman, hints at the hope and companions­hip that caregivers, researcher­s and an aware public can bring.

It’s the work of California stamp artist Matt Mahurin.

The stamp won’t just stick on letters; it will also fuel research as part of the U.S. Postal Service’s semipostal stamp program, which permits the sale of first-class stamps above the usual cost. Each 60-cent stamp will raise funds for the National Institutes of Health, which spearheads research into Alzheimer’s disease. It will also expand awareness of the disease, which is now the sixth-leading cause of death for American adults.

The stamp will be dedicated at a ceremony at the Memory & Alzheimer’s Treatment Center at Johns Hopkins’s Bayview campus in Baltimore on Nov. 30. Kathy Siggins, who submitted the idea for the stamp after her husband died of the disease, will attend, along with U.S. Postmaster General Megan J. Brennan.

Look for the stamp starting Nov. 30.

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 ?? USPS ?? This image released by the U.S. Postal Service shows the Alzheimer’s first-class stamp, available Nov. 30.
USPS This image released by the U.S. Postal Service shows the Alzheimer’s first-class stamp, available Nov. 30.

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