
Stories from the my alzheimer's video project
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After chronicling the experiences of Alzheimer’s patients in seven cities across the country, documentary filmmaker Zach Jordan says that despite everyone’s unique journey, he found almost
all encounter stigma related to the disease and experience no clear path through the health care system. “We only visited seven American cities, but the diversity and depth of each story we
collected is profound,” says Jordan, who is working on the project with fellow filmmaker Peter Schankowitz. “While each story is unique and personal, the larger issues that every American
city faces are the same: In 2019, aging and Alzheimer’s remain difficult issues to tackle because of stigma.” The venture, sponsored by AARP and called “My Alzheimer’s Story Project,” plans
to take these stories and use them as an aid for research at the Penn Memory Center in Philadelphia. The findings will be used to better understand patients and direct individual care. “You
walk into a doctor’s office, you get the diagnosis of Alzheimer’s, but then you are pretty much sent on your way. You have to come up with your own path and you have to create your own
journey,” says Jordan, 42, who previously documented his father’s experience with Alzheimer’s. “You have to answer your own myriad of questions and challenges that you’re facing. So, part of
the issue related to care is this lack of road map for everyone.” Katharine Halpin, 60, sat beside her partner, Bonnie Meyer, 79, when Meyer first was diagnosed with mild cognitive
impairment. She says her participation in My Alzheimer’s Story Project allowed them to celebrate living with the disease. “For us, we both have so much more joy and excitement for life,”
Halpin says. “Bonnie is no longer reserved but instead extends herself to children in the grocery store, strangers at parties and, of course, our friends. She has much stronger opinions and
shares them freely now.” The two have been together for 37 years, “before it was chic to be gay,” Halpin says. Documenting vulnerable moments on video teaches the nuances of Alzheimer’s and
brain health, Jordan says. Moving forward, the filmmakers and Jason Karlawish, M.D., and Jason Moore of the memory center will work together to make sense of the almost 80 interviews from
a scientific perspective.