ucneuroscience.com

UC Neuroscience Institute

234 Goodman Street Cincinnati, OH 45219 | (866) 941-UCNI (8264)

SEARCH THIS SITE

Transforming Care for Dementia and Memory Disorders

More than 200 supporters attended the Sept. xx Forget-Me-Not Gala. Photos by Joe Simon.

More than 200 supporters attended the Sept. 25 Forget-Me-Not Gala at the Phoenix in downtown Cincinnati. Photos by Joe Simon.

UC Health has begun transforming the way memory disorders are being treated in Cincinnati. Supporting this transformation is the Forget-Me-Not Gala, held September 25, which netted a record $60,000 – a 40 percent increase over last year. These funds are earmarked for Alzheimer’s disease research at the Memory Disorders Center at the University of Cincinnati Neuroscience Institute.

Joseph Broderick, MD, Director of the UC Neuroscience Institute, announced a generous donation from Dorothy “Bunny” Whitaker that has made it possible for UC Health to add a nurse practitioner and a social worker to the multidisciplinary team at the UC Memory Disorders Center.

Dorothy "Bunny" Whitaker with Dr. John Tew, center, and John Steele.

Dorothy “Bunny” Whitaker with Dr. John Tew, center, and John Steele.

“These are important positions that have a significant impact on the patient experience,” Dr. Broderick said. “They add depth to the growing clinical team, which includes physicians from neurology, sleep medicine, geriatrics, neuropsychology and psychiatry.”

This transformation has accelerated, particularly since the arrival last year of Rhonna Shatz, DO, Medical Director of the Memory Disorders Center. Dr. Shatz, who holds the Sandy and Bob Heimann Chair in Research and Education of Alzheimer’s Disease, came from Detroit, where she built a comprehensive memory disorders center at Henry Ford Hospital.

“There’s an elephant in the room: it’s called Alzheimer’s disease,” Dr. Shatz said. “It is a silent development that begins three decades before we know that it’s there. Treating it when it is dementia does not work. We must treat it before it becomes dementia.”

Tangible signs of this recent transformation include:

•    The Memory Disorders Center has implemented the National Institutes of Health’s “Toolbox,” which is a set of mental tests that enable doctors to pick up on the very earliest changes in cognition. People are being scheduled for this test annually so they can empirically track the progression of their disease. Ideally, Dr. Shatz said, all adults would take the test each year beginning in mid-life, much as they do a cholesterol test.

•    The Memory Disorders Center has expanded access geographically in the past year. People may now see memory specialists at UC Health Physicians offices in multiple locations – Clifton, West Chester and Dayton – for newly diagnosed dementia, as well as management of risk factors for dementia.

•    Another major shift has been the increasingly strong rapport and collaboration being forged between the Center and the Alzheimer’s Association’s Greater Cincinnati Chapter. Dr. Shatz views the Association’s prevention programs and lectures as critical resources for everyone, regardless whether or not they have a dementia diagnosis.

•    The Memory Disorders Center is developing specialized programs for patients who experience memory issues related to other neurologic diseases. One of these brand new initiatives is the launch of the first cognitive testing program within the Gardner Family Center for Parkinson’s Disease and Movement Disorders. Federico Rodriguez-Porcel, MD, a neurology fellow with experience in movement disorders, was recruited to assist with launching this new program.

•    The University of Cincinnati has achieved accreditation, through the UC Department of Neurology and Rehabilitation Medicine, for a new behavioral neurology fellowship from the United Council for Neurologic Subspecialties.

•    In the last year, the Center has implemented every aspect of the guidelines of the American Academy of Neurology for quality treatment of dementia in order to fit the national model of excellence.

Bob and Sandy Heimann, who established the Chair in Alzheimer's.

Bob and Sandy Heimann, whose support led to the establishment of the Memory Disorders Center.

Dr. Shatz urged those in attendance to become advocates and to speak openly about Alzheimer’s disease, which is the most expensive disease in America, costing an estimated $214 billion a year and claiming a new patient every 67 seconds.

To get involved in the Forget-Me-Not Gala or other UC Neuroscience Institute events, please contact Peggy A’Hearn at AHEARNPA@ucmail.uc.edu.

The Forget-Me-Not Gala, which netted $43,000 its first two years, was supported by
platinum sponsors
The Alois Alzheimer Center and Superior Care Plus, Inc.
gold sponsors
Episcopal Retirement Homes, Inc., and Elizabeth Grubow & Jerry Kathman.
The live auction item, a “Wellness Experience” at the organic Turner Farm in Indian Hill,
was donated by Susan and Dr. John Tew and Robert Edmiston.
Co-Chairs
Arden Steffen and Tara Steffen
Emcee
Liz Bonis, Medical Edge Reporter & News Anchor, Local 12 WKRC