VIDEO & ARTICLE:
While battling dementia, the most successful basketball coach in history opened the Pat Summitt Alzheimer’s Clinic. See how it’s becoming a huge resource for people, families, & caregivers living with Alzheimer’s.
VIDEO & TRANSCRIPT:
See Pat discuss life since leaving the court to battle dementia. Hear about her new book, "Sum It Up".
The Pat Summitt Foundation and The University of Tennessee Medical Center established the Pat Summitt Alzheimer’s Clinic.
The clinic is a strategic partnership that significantly expands the scope and capacity of the Medical Center’s existing Alzheimer’s Clinic.
Continued below video…
The Foundation’s Advisory Board Chairman James A. Haslam II said, “The Pat Summitt Foundation Advisory Board with Tyler and Pat have been exploring how our three-year-old Foundation could have the most significant impact at this point in time on the ever increasing need for Alzheimer’s services.”
“We are unanimous in our belief that this alliance with The University of Tennessee Medical Center is the right fit for the mission of Pat’s foundation and will benefit an enormous number of families in our region and the state.”
The Foundation plans to raise $500,000 per year over the next five years – $2.5 million – to support the Clinic’s operation and services.
“We currently serve 3,000 patients and their families at our Alzheimer’s clinic and project the need will double to 6,000 in the next five years. The Pat Summitt Foundation partnership will allow us to help so many more families and expand discovery by virtue of new national clinical trials, made possible by the establishment of a clinic dedicated exclusively to the care, family support and advancement of new treatments of Alzheimer’s disease.”
The American Alzheimer’s Association’s 2014 Alzheimer’s Disease Facts and Figures report that more than 120,000 senior citizens in Tennessee faced Alzheimer’s disease in 2010, a 20% increase from a decade prior. By the year 2025, more than 160,000 Tennesseans are expected to have Alzheimer’s disease.
“The Pat Summitt Alzheimer’s Clinic will provide timely, comprehensive and compassionate care, with an experienced multi-disciplinary team, to East Tennesseans faced with cognitive disorders,” said Dr. Monica Crane, a geriatric medicine physician at The University of Tennessee Medical Center. “It will allow us to further grow the services we’ve provided to patients and families faced with degenerative neurological disorders for the past 35 years at the medical center. Further, it will assist us in our unending goal of discovering a cure for Alzheimer’s disease through expansion of our participation in clinical trials.”
A key step in the launch of the Pat Summitt Alzheimer’s Clinic, according to foundation and medical center representatives, is to recruit and retain a full-time medical director with national recognition for work in both treating and researching Alzheimer’s disease. The medical director will lead the development of the Clinic including recruitment of other clinicians and researchers to advance its scope and impact.
In a joint statement Pat and Tyler Summitt said, “We could not possibly be any more excited about The Pat Summitt Foundation and the University of Tennessee Medical Center partnering in the creation of the Pat Summitt Alzheimer’s Clinic. We are looking forward to the clinic becoming a huge help to patients and their families, caregivers, and friends, who are living with Alzheimer’s disease and its related dementia’s. It is our hope that by creating this clinic, everyone will have access to resources that will help them as they walk through this difficult journey.”
VIDEO & TRANSCRIPT:
See Pat discuss life since leaving the court to battle dementia. Hear about her new book, "Sum It Up".
Pat and the Foundation’s leadership are committed to aggressively raise funds to fulfill her vision and support this milestone initiative. Pat is inviting individuals, corporations, and foundations to help with this battle by joining her team and making a contribution to The Pat Summitt Foundation. For more information, visit www.patsummitt.org to learn about the many ways anyone can give or get involved.
SOURCE:
- The University of Tennessee Medical Center