Healthy Aging Event at Mount Vernon Presbyterian Church

Healthy Aging Event at Mount Vernon Presbyterian Church

Join us to hear from medical experts who will share their knowledge and insights into healthy aging and how to thrive as an aging adult!

By Emory Goizueta Alzheimer's Disease Research Center

Date and time

Sunday, August 25 · 1:30 - 4pm EDT

Location

Mount Vernon Presbyterian Church

471 Mount Vernon Highway Northeast Sandy Springs, GA 30328

About this event

  • 2 hours 30 minutes

Mount Vernon Presbyterian Church and the Emory Goizueta Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center are teaming up to provide a Healthy Aging event with community memory screenings!

While a confidential memory screen is not a memory evaluation, it is a helpful test. You will be given a series of questions and tasks (paper & pen assessment ONLY) designed to screen for memory, language skills, and thinking abilities. The results will be given to you at the end of the screening. If the screening reveals memory concerns, testing results will be given to you and next steps will be discussed.

Don’t miss this extremely important opportunity to get involved and learn more about the importance of brain health.

Visit mtvernonhealthyaging.eventbrite.com or call Emilie Bush at 678-841-4016.

You can find information at the Goizueta Emory Alzheimer’s Disease Center website by visiting www.alzheimers.emory.edu.

We look forward to seeing you on Sunday, August 25, 2024!

Organized by

 The Emory Goizueta Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center (ADRC) is one of 27 active centers in the nation supported by the National Institutes of Health. (For a complete list of all active Alzheimer’s Disease Centers, visit this site). The goal of these centers is to bring scientists together to facilitate their research and help learn more about Alzheimer’s and related diseases. We are also committed to the education of health care professionals, persons with Alzheimer’s disease, their families, and our community to aid in understanding, diagnosis and treatment of these illnesses.

 Memory, the ability of the brain to store, retain, and subsequently recall information is key to understanding Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias. We invite you to join us in our efforts to explore memory at Emory through an understanding of the importance of research to discover answers.

 Research is crucial to gain more information about disease, provide better care, and ultimately, prevent the burden of neurological diseases for future generations. One particular area of interest of the Emory ADRC is a better understanding of mild cognitive impairment and early diagnosis and treatment of memory disorders. To gain this understanding, some of our studies need volunteers to investigate how memory changes with normal aging in those without Alzheimer’s disease.

 We are also interested in involving persons who are often underrepresented in research. For example, more African Americans are affected by Alzheimer’s disease and we need more volunteers to insure our research applies to everyone. Research activities include a variety of preclinical and clinical studies, as well as research for family caregivers.

 On our website, learn about the ADRC research registry and how you can become involved in research. See other ways that you can benefit from and/or support the ADRC through donations or participation in an upcoming educational event.

 We hope this website will provide you with new information and a better understanding about the goals of the Emory ADRC. If you have any suggestions or comments about the website or would like to volunteer for one of the studies described, please contact us.

 

Free