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Lt. Governor Matos, RIDOH launch Alzheimer鈥檚 State Plan, define five-year goals

The plan hopes to improve quality of life, accessibility of care for ADRD patients

Lieutenant Governor Sabrina Matos and the Rhode Island Department of Health launched an updated Feb. 15 that outlines state health goals pertaining to the disease from 2024 to 2029. The new plan includes nine strategic objectives focused on empowering Rhode Islanders to 鈥渆mbrace brain-healthy lifestyles鈥 and 鈥渁chieve an optimal quality of life.鈥

Currently, some 24,000 Rhode Islanders live with some form of dementia, and the state expects at least a 12.5% increase in those numbers by 2025, according to the plan.

The growing number of ADRD patients in Rhode Island is part of a national increase in those suffering from the disorders. 

鈥淚n 2023, an estimated 6.7 million Americans were living with the disease. This number is expected to more than double by 2060,鈥 Victoria O鈥機onnor, ADRD program manager at RIDOH, wrote in an email to The Herald. ADRD diseases are chronic illnesses that are 鈥済rowing in impact,鈥 she added.

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Rhode Island鈥檚 population is aging, with adults aged 60 and older constituting 23% of the state鈥檚 population . But while Alzheimer鈥檚 disease tends to be associated with older adults, people in their thirties and forties can also be diagnosed with early-onset dementia, according to a statement by Matos and Interim Director of Health Utpala Bandy that was .

The state hopes to use this available public health data to 鈥渋nform public health decision-making and build a framework to prioritize the health needs of its aging population,鈥 the report reads.

According to Thomas Bayer, an assistant professor of geriatrics and palliative medicine, those numbers are not unexpected: 鈥淲hen a population ages, we expect an increase in the prevalence of dementia,鈥 he said. Bayer serves as the representative of the adult primary care community on the Rhode Island Advisory Council on Alzheimer鈥檚 Disease and Related Disorders, the committee that drafts and edits the plan.

The plan follows increasing interest in dementia and related disorders, Bayer explained. He noted that as the baby boomer generation ages past 65, national organizations like the National Institute of Health have prioritized ADRD research. 

鈥淎s a society, we are thinking about how we can better meet the needs of older persons,鈥 he wrote in a separate email to The Herald. 鈥淧olicies like the state's plan for dementia reflect that process.鈥

The plan 鈥渄esigns from the margins鈥 鈥 centering innovation on the most marginalized users of a product 鈥 to bolster accessibility of ADRD care regardless of patients鈥 socioeconomic status. 

鈥淭he goal is that everything from healthcare to transportation to housing and retail will be prepared to meet the needs of persons with dementia,鈥 Bayer wrote. That way, 鈥減eople living with dementia can live with dignity even if they don't have tons of money to pay for the best services.鈥

In addition to establishing frameworks of care for the growing population of dementia patients, the plan aims to alleviate the toll on 鈥渃are partners,鈥 or family members who act as unpaid caregivers for their afflicted loved ones.

According to O鈥機onnor, about 40,000 Rhode Islanders provide unpaid care to loved ones diagnosed with ADRD. These care partners invest 51 million hours of unpaid care annually, and over half must further consider their own chronic conditions, according to the plan.

The state seeks to provide care that will prevent financially disadvantaged care partners from 鈥渢aking on debt, giving up assets or deprioritizing the treatment needed to manage their own health conditions.鈥

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The updated plan has several multifold purposes, according to , including to increase the accessibility of care for ADRD patients, address health equity issues surrounding dementia care and promote local support systems for patients and care partners.

RIDOH identified four sectors 鈥 community, the health system, the workforce and public health 鈥 to focus on in in the implementation of the plan鈥檚 recommendations. In 2020, RIDOH received funding for ADRD programs from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the department has since launched statewide initiatives aligning with the plan鈥檚 goals, O鈥機onnor said. 

The CDC granted RIDOH鈥檚 ADRD Program a five-year funding award to support the state鈥檚 ADRD initiatives from 2023 to 2028, she added. The program will continue to 鈥渋dentify resources and partnerships needed to implement the State Plan.鈥

Success will be measured by both tangible and intangible impacts on patient lives, according to Bayer, who emphasized the importance of systemic approaches to improving healthcare. He noted that while medications have improved in the last 10 years, 鈥渢he experience most patients have while navigating the healthcare system has probably gotten worse.鈥

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RIDOH鈥檚 next step is to draft an 鈥淚mplementation Plan鈥 that will outline a timeline for implementation and provide specific benchmarks to measure success, according to O鈥機onnor. She added that 鈥渢he Implementation Plan will be consistently reviewed with the ADRD Advisory Council to ensure there is continuous progress.鈥

Bayer noted that 鈥渨e can improve care by listening to the end users of health care and trying to meet their needs better.鈥


Jaanu Ramesh

Ranjana 鈥淛aanu鈥 Ramesh is a Bruno Brief-er, photographer and Senior Staff Writer covering science & research. She loves service, empathetic medicine and working with kids. When not writing or studying comp neuro, Jaanu is outside, reading, skiing, or observing Providence wildlife (ie: squirrels).



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