February 13, 2019 - Issue: Vol. 165, No. 28 — Daily Edition116th Congress (2019 - 2020) - 1st Session
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President Ronald Reagan and Alzheimer's (Executive Session); Congressional Record Vol. 165, No. 28
(Senate - February 13, 2019)
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[Pages S1317-S1318] From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov] President Ronald Reagan and Alzheimer's Mr. MORAN. Mr. President, I wish to speak this afternoon in recognition of our late President, Ronald Reagan. I want to speak also about his wife Nancy, and I want to highlight their honest and passionate work to educate Americans about the real effects of Alzheimer's. Last Wednesday, February 6, would have been President Reagan's 108th birthday, and we paused then to reflect not only on the life and legacy of President Ronald Reagan, but we also remember the way he carried himself, the vision he set for our country, and the direction he steered our Nation. Years after he left the White House, the President and Nancy Reagan continued their public service to our Nation with grace and class, and that was true even as President Reagan was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease. In November of 1994, President Reagan wrote a handwritten letter to Americans announcing this diagnosis that ultimately took his life. I read lots of biographies, I read lots of history, and this past week I finished a book, ``Reagan: An American Journey,'' written by Bob Spitz. The story of his circumstance with Alzheimer's captured my attention. The book quotes President Reagan telling his daughter, Patti: ``I have this condition . . . I keep forgetting things.'' The doctors finally put a name to it. On November 4, 1994, a doctor from the Mayo Clinic informed Nancy Reagan that, having had an adequate chance to observe the president, the diagnosis was conclusive: he had Alzheimer's. According to Fred Ryan, a staff member for the President and Mrs. Reagan, ``She was quite upset, emotional.'' She spoke at length later that evening: ``So we're going to tell him tomorrow,'' she said, ``and I'd like you to be there.'' The next morning, a Saturday, they gathered in the library, a small, comfortable room at the front of the house where the Reagans typically received guests. The president seemed puzzled when the doctor and Ryan arrived. ``Honey, come over here and sit down,'' Nancy said, directing him to a couch opposite the two men. ``The doctor has something he wants to talk about.'' The doctor didn't beat around the bush. ``We think you have Alzheimer's,'' he told Reagan. [[Page S1318]] ``Okay,'' he responded faintly. ``What should I expect?'' ``We don't know much about it,'' the doctor admitted. ``It's a degenerative disorder.'' He ran down a few of the effects that Alzheimer's patients experienced while Nancy Reagan struggled to control her emotions. She tried her utmost to be supportive, but was overcome hearing about the devastations of the disease. . . . He acknowledged, quite bluntly, ``There is no cure.'' ``Can I ask a few questions?'' Ryan interjected. While he and Nancy discussed how to handle the president's activities--his schedule, office hours, appointments, and appearances--Reagan wandered over to a small round table in a corner and sat down, staring hypnotically into the yard. After a few minutes, he picked up a pen and began to write. When he finished, he handed two sheets of paper filled with his cramped handwriting to [his staffer]. ``Why don't we get this typed up and put it out,'' Reagan suggested. It was a letter dated that November 5, 1994. My Fellow Americans-- It began-- I have recently been told that I am one of the millions of Americans who will be afflicted with Alzheimer's disease. . . . At the moment I feel just fine. I intend to live the remainder of the years God gives me on the earth doing things I have always done. . . . Unfortunately, as Alzheimer's Disease progresses, the family often bears a heavy burden. I only wish I could spare Nancy from this painful experience. When the time comes I am confident that with your help she will face it with faith and courage. And with faith and courage, indeed, President and Nancy Reagan faced the disease together. Together, they founded the Ronald and Nancy Reagan Research Institute at the Alzheimer's Association in Chicago, IL, focused on researching, understanding, and treating Alzheimer's disease. Over the past several decades, this research institute has awarded millions of dollars in Alzheimer's research grants and has continued to see breakthroughs in our understanding of this aggressive and disastrous disease. Congress has also rightfully come together in a nonpartisan manner to fight this disease head-on. For example, last December, just a few months ago, with legislation that was sponsored by our colleague from Maine, Senator Susan Collins, Congress passed and the President signed our BOLD Infrastructure for Alzheimer's Act, which aims to combat Alzheimer's through a collaborative public health framework. The BOLD Act will create an Alzheimer's public health infrastructure at the direction of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which will establish Alzheimer's centers for excellence across the country, award funding to public health departments to increase early detection and diagnosis, and increase data collection, analysis, and reporting through cooperative agreements with public and nonprofit entities. I am a member of the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Health and Human Services, led by my colleague from Missouri, Senator Blunt. I have advocated and successfully worked with my colleague Senator Blunt and the members of the committee to provide $2.3 billion for Alzheimer's disease research in FY 2019, finally reaching the $2 billion funding goal for research laid out by the National Plan to Address Alzheimer's. I am the cochair of the Senate NIH Caucus, and I am optimistic that these funding increases, combined with NIH initiatives to map the human brain and further develop personalized medicine, will, I hope, lead us closer to an Alzheimer's treatment and a cure. Eleven years after President Reagan's death, Nancy Reagan continued her Alzheimer's advocacy work, helping to dramatically increase the attention and resources paid to the research of this disease. She recognized that degenerative diseases like Alzheimer's not only pose a financial burden to our Nation and health system but, more importantly and more significantly, these diseases threaten families with significant financial difficulty and tremendous emotional hardship. As President Reagan's primary caregiver during his battle with Alzheimer's, Nancy reminded us of the importance of caretakers and families and the struggles they themselves go through while watching loved ones suffer. As we continue our work to treat, cure, and prevent Alzheimer's and other degenerative diseases, we will also continue looking for ways to ease the financial and mental turmoil on caretakers, for they suffer so much as well. When President Reagan announced his Alzheimer's disease, he did so much more than just admitting to having the disease. He fought it, and he destigmatized it not only for himself but for those who came after him and for those still to come who may be faced with this same circumstance. In the closing letter that President Reagan wrote--and, incidentally, when he handed it to the staffer and said, ``Type it up and send it out,'' they read it and said, ``Let's just send it in your handwriting, Mr. President.'' So that is what happened, and in that closing letter, President said this: Let me thank you, the American people, for giving me the great honor of allowing me to serve as your President. When the Lord calls me home, whenever that may be, I will leave with the greatest love for this country of ours and eternal optimism for its future. I now begin the journey that will lead me into the sunset of my life. I know that for America there will always be a bright dawn ahead. I, too, believe that America's best days are ahead of us, and I implore Washington to reflect upon President Reagan's enduring optimism. Civil in disagreement and often willing to cross party lines to work toward solutions, I hope we can all remember, like President Reagan, to focus on the real issues facing our Nation, and I hope that all Members of the Congress, from all walks of life, will be bold in leveraging their life experiences to achieve greatness for our Nation, just as President Reagan and Nancy Reagan did, deepening America's resolve to fight this terrible disease. I honor President Reagan and his wife Nancy. I thank them for their service to our country, and I thank them for their attention to this disease, Alzheimer's. May we also have the courage and will to continue the battle to rid our country, its citizens, and the world of this affliction. I yield the floor. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Alaska.
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