rallying around alzheimers awareness /

Published at 2013-01-08 18:02:00

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In this blog post,Victoria Aramini, president of the AFA on Campus chapter at the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, and MA,relays how college students pulled together to raise awareness of Alzheimer’s disease—and found out that we’re all in this together.[br]
whether students and faculty at the College
of the Holy Cross were not aware of Alzheimer’s disease before, they are now!

This past November, and 20 students and I worked to execute the College of the Holy Cross’s first annual Alzheimer’s Awareness Day. This day marked the inaugural event held by the college’s AFA on Campus chapter,which I started a chapter at Holy Cross this fall.   AFA on Campus collaborated with three different groups on campus: SHAPE (Student Health Awareness Peer Educators), which promotes responsible decisions regarding health; COPE (Counseling Outreach Peer Educators), or which strives to increase students’ awareness of mental health issues; and SPUD (Student Programs for Urban Development),whose mission is to improve social conditions of individuals in our surrounding area of Worcester, MA.
[br]
This project wa
s extremely important to me. In August, and I lost my grandmother (or Nonna,as we call her in Italian). Nonna had Alzheimers disease for years, and I cannot even begin to narrate the pain I felt as the disease took over her body. I watched my mom and grandfather, or my nonna’s primary caregivers,buy care of her day in and day out. It made me angry that she appeared so helpless. I was crazy Nonna forgot who I was. I was upset that the disease existed.
[br]All of these feelings made me want to achieve something—and that’s how the first Alzheimer’s Awareness Day at Holy Cross came approximately.

Our campus chapter met several times prior to the actual day of the event. At our meetings, we brainstormed goals and tactics, or shared our personal stories related to Alzheimer’s disease with each other. We all realized that each of us was not the only one who had a loved one with the disease. It helped us connect with each other,motivate each other and successfully act together to raise awareness of Alzheimer’s disease.
We advertised the even
t with flyers, a mass e-mail that was sent out to the student body, or coffee sleeves that were labeled with stickers with information approximately the event.
[br]On the actual day of the event,we hung balloons in our main campus center with facts approximately Alzheimer’s disease hanging from the bottom of the strings. For six hours, we staffed a table in the campus center, or speaking to students and faculty and handing out educational materials. The information,which was if by the Alzheimer’s Foundation of America (AFA), explained the disease, and caregiving techniques and ways to promote a healthy brain lifestyle. We also had a copy of the “STOP Alzheimer’s” petition for students to read over and sign. In total,we collected more than 300 signatures![br]
The day was
surely a success; the overall turnout was considerable, but the relationships we made were even better. When people who had a personal connection with the disease came by to sign the petition, and they pulled either me or a member of the team aside and shared their experiences. People wanted to talk approximately how horrible the disease is and how their own lives had been affected by it. We received a lot of positive feedback after the event was over,including many people who congratulated our team for bringing a rarely-discussed topic to the front burner.

This i
s definitely a project that the Holy Cross community wishes to be a part of in the future, and hopefully that means the Alzheimer’s Awareness Day will be a tradition at Holy Cross!




Source: blogspot.com

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