skip to main content
skip to newscasts

Monday, July 7, 2025

Public News Service Logo
facebook instagram linkedin reddit youtube twitter
view newscast page
play newscast audioPlay

National Weather Service defends its flood warnings amid fresh scrutiny of Trump staff cuts; Poll: Majority of West Virginians support renewable energy policies; MI fellowship trains justice-involved youth as community leaders; Measles outbreak hits central Kentucky.

view newscast page
play newscast audioPlay

Deadly Texas floods draw a federal response as the administration reduces emergency and weather services. States prepare to deal with cuts to schools, health care and environmental protections, while Elon Musk launches a new political party.

view newscast page
play newscast audioPlay

Farmers may abandon successful conservation programs if federal financial chaos continues, a rural electric cooperative in Southwest Colorado is going independent to shrink customer costs, and LGBTQ+ teens say an online shoulder helps more than community support.

Expanding outreach to Iowa caregivers during Alzheimer's Awareness Month

play audio
Play

Monday, November 18, 2024   

The Iowa Alzheimer's Association chapter is making new resources available to caregivers during November, a month set aside to educate and help people with the disease and those who care for them.

Nearly 100,000 Iowans are family caregivers, helping more than 62,000 people living with this form of dementia.

Erica Eikern - program manager with the Alzheimer's Association, Iowa chapter - said the group is making a huge effort this month in particular to get resources to those caregivers, letting them know they are not alone.

"We have approximately 50 local caregiver support groups, in many communities across the state of Iowa," said Eikern. "We also have a virtual support group that we just started for young adult caregivers who are taking care of a parent or older family member."

Nationally, nearly half of all caregivers who provide help to older adults are doing so for someone with Alzheimer's disease, according to data on the association's facts and figures website.

Eikern said the association is working at the state level to give those caregivers some respite options.

Eikern said caring for a person with Alzheimer's can take a heavy physical and emotional toll. So, she said the association is trying to make sure they know help is available.

"At our Iowa chapter, we're averaging about 30 programs that we're doing per month, out in various communities throughout the state," said Eikern. "We have a goal of trying to reach everyone in all 99 counties through our awareness presentations, through support services."

Those resources are also available on the association's website.

More than 11 million people in the U.S. are providing unpaid care to a person living with Alzheimer's or other form of dementia. Last year alone, that care was valued at more than $346 billion.




get more stories like this via email

more stories
Residents along the Guadalupe River say it will take years for the area to recovery from the deadly flooding event on July 4. (Photo courtesy Casey Claiborne)

Environment

play sound

Tributes and memorials are pouring in for victims of the deadly flooding along the Guadalupe River in Kerr County. The storm stalled over the Texas …


Social Issues

play sound

While cuts to food support programs and Medicaid gained attention as the debate over the budget bill went on, there is also a long-term likelihood it …

Social Issues

play sound

Panic has set in at school districts across the Golden State as the Trump administration continues to withhold federal funds. Tony Thurmond…


Clean air advocates rallied at Los Angeles City Hall last spring to increase support for a rule to combat air pollution at the ports. (4th Street Productions)

play sound

A controversial bill on how best to clean up the air at California ports gets a hearing today in Sacramento. Senate Bill 34 would place limits on …

Environment

play sound

Following last year's historic drought in Montana and hot temperatures early this spring, the Blackfoot River is running at roughly 25% of normal …

The new tax cut and spending law contains the largest federal cuts to SNAP benefits in the nation's history. (Drazen/Adobe Stock)

Social Issues

play sound

Now that President Donald Trump's big budget bill has been signed into law, Arkansas nonprofits that rely on federal funding to help people in need …

Social Issues

play sound

Oregon lawmakers would have to find an extra $850 million in the state budget starting in 2028 to cover cuts to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance …

Environment

play sound

Renewable energy got short shrift in the budget bill passed by Congress last week and a New Mexico trade association said companies and their employee…

 

Phone: 303.448.9105 Toll Free: 888.891.9416 Fax: 208.247.1830 Your trusted member- and audience-supported news source since 1996 Copyright © 2021