UB’s Alzheimer’s Disease and Memory Disorders Center Expands Outreach to Patients, Caregivers and Providers

Funding from the New York State Department of Health is enabling the center to expand care to families experiencing dementia in all 8 WNY counties

BUFFALO, N.Y. – To improve the care of Western New Yorkers with Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias, the University at Buffalo’s Alzheimer’s Disease and Memory Disorders Center is significantly expanding its geographic outreach to patients, families, caregivers and medical providers.

IMAGE: https://www.buffalo.edu/news/releases/2023/05/UB-Alzheimers-Center-expands.html

Designated a Center of Excellence for Alzheimer’s Disease (CEAD) by the New York State Department of Health in 2016, the UB center is using its current round of $2.3 million in funding to expand and bolster its connections with patients, caregivers, providers and organizations throughout all eight counties of Western New York.

Educating families about dementia across WNY

“Our mandate is to work throughout Western New York to improve the level of awareness about the symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease among providers, patients, families and the public,” explained Kinga Szigeti, MD, PhD, director of the CEAD and UB’s Alzheimer’s Disease and Memory Disorders Center, associate professor of neurology in the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences at UB and a neurologist with UBMD Neurology.

“With improved awareness, we can boost early screening and detection, which significantly benefits outcomes for patients and families,” she said.

Since receiving the additional funding last year, the center has participated in dozens of community events and conducted education programs for community members throughout Western New York, including in Allegany, Chautauqua, Cattaraugus, Genesee, Wyoming and Orleans counties.

CEAD also holds training sessions and grand rounds for a full range of providers, from primary care and internal medicine to neurologists, psychiatrists and physician assistants, as well as nurses, nurse practitioners, social workers and community health workers. The new funding has allowed for CEAD to hire additional staff to help bolster outreach to specific professions, such as social workers, nurses, emergency medical technicians and law enforcement.

“We have different presentations for different groups,” explained Alison Case, CEAD program director. “There are lots of different professionals who are going to come into contact with patients with a cognitive disorder/dementia who may not behave in ways that are easy for others to understand. Our job is to educate them about these behaviors and provide strategies that will help them to respond and manage them so that everyone experiences a better outcome.”

Educating current and future providers

A key way that the CEAD accomplishes this is through its connection to the Jacobs School, where the center can educate the next generation of health and social sciences professionals. The center’s staff works closely with various medical resident and student programs in the Jacobs School, as well as in UB’s School of Nursing, School of Social Work and School of Public Health and Health Professions.

CEAD is also working with the resident, health sciences and social work programs at local hospitals and institutions, providing didactics on dementia from clinical, nursing and social work perspectives.

In addition to continuing to provide services to patients in Erie and Niagara counties, the emphasis of this second cycle of funding is for the CEAD to expand visibility in the region’s more rural counties, namely Allegany, Cattaraugus, Chautauqua, Genesee, Orleans and Wyoming. The CEAD is working closely with the Offices of the Aging in these counties and reaching out to area doctors and hospital systems.

“Our mandate is to more fully inform the communities throughout all the Western New York counties that the Center of Excellence for Alzheimer’s Disease at UB is here to help anyone in the eight-county area who is affected by Alzheimer’s and dementia,” said Szigeti. “That means we provide accurate assessment, diagnosis and treatment plans for patients and their families, as well as a broad range of education programs to raise awareness and understanding for local physicians, nurse practitioners, physician assistants and social workers.”

“We are also focused on improving outreach to underserved communities, both in the more densely populated parts of Western New York as well as in rural areas,” said Case.

This year, CEAD has presented educational programs about Alzheimer’s disease for patients and caregivers in public meetings in Wyoming, Chautauqua and Cattaraugus counties, in addition to Niagara and Erie counties. The center’s staff also makes presentations to groups of professionals in numerous health sciences fields, from radiology to primary care to social work.

“Brain Train” is the CEAD’s most successful community education program; it is free and available to community organizations. These sessions take a positive approach to brain health, presenting user-friendly information about how diet, exercise, social interaction and physical activity can all contribute to keeping one’s brain healthy. The sessions provide information on early signs of dementia, local research on Alzheimer’s at UB’s Alzheimer’s Disease and Memory Disorders Center and clinical trial opportunities; there is also plenty of time for questions and answers.

Community organizations interested in hosting a Brain Train session can contact cead@buffalo.edu or call Karen Zakalik, program officer, at 716-829-4003.

The post UB’s Alzheimer’s Disease and Memory Disorders Center Expands Outreach to Patients, Caregivers and Providers appeared first on Buffalo Healthy Living Magazine.

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Hochul promotes her agenda with state-funded ad campaign

Gov. Kathy Hochul does not appear in the ads directly though it encourages people to visit a New York run website touting her accomplishments towards more affordable housing.

HOCHUL’S AD CAMPAIGN: Gov. Kathy Hochul’s office is using taxpayer money to fund an advertising blitz promoting her agenda, brushing up against a ban on governors appearing in promotional material.

State law prohibits elected officials from appearing in ads paid for with state funds.

Hochul doesn’t directly appear in any of the ads. Instead, they encourage people to visit a state-run website where she’s prominently featured talking about wanting to cut red tape to build affordable housing.

“They’re skirting the very intent of what that law was meant to do, and that’s using taxpayer dollars to promote the image or likeness of the governor,” Republican Assemblymember Matt Slater said. “It’s clearly something that needs to be looked into so we can figure out what consequences she should be facing if she is in fact violating the law.”

The ads have appeared over the past week on Facebook, YouTube, and at least one billboard. The governor’s office said a FOIL request would be required to see the full scope.

One example is a YouTube commercial that simply states “Let Them Build” and directs people to the state’s website. The Executive Chamber has spent between $10,000 and $15,000 on that ad — one of 21 to air on YouTube or Google over the past week. The ad has been viewed one million times.

"The state routinely engages in awareness and education campaigns on critical policy priorities and this campaign was designed in compliance with all ethics laws,” said Hochul spokesperson Jen Goodman.

Reinvent Albany’s Rachael Fauss said that if the 20-year-old law had been written today, “it probably would take into consideration” campaigns like this.

“From a technical perspective, she may not be violating the law,” she said. “But I think the spirit of the law is to not have the governor’s likeness be promoted through the use of taxpayer funds. That was the intent of it. Unfortunately, this is an area where the law hasn’t kept up with the way people consume media and ads these days.”

The ban on advertising came about after former Gov. George Pataki ran state-funded commercials during an election year in which he encouraged people to register in a new healthcare program. Ethics reforms passed as part of former Gov. Eliot Spitzer’s inaugural agenda included language prohibiting the practice.

Hochul isn’t the first elected official to brush up against the intent of the law in recent months. New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s likeness has appeared on WiFi kiosks, a practice that’s permitted since the city is given the screentime for free. And Mamdani, unlike Hochul, isn’t up for reelection anytime soon.

“She’s got plenty of campaign funds that she could be using to pay for these things,” Slater said. “What she’s doing right now is spending taxpayer money to enhance her image when she’s on the ballot this year.” — Bill Mahoney

FROM THE CAPITOL

Attorney General Letitia James appeared in Albany this morning to support regulating algorithmic pricing legislation.

PRICING POLITICS: Democratic state Attorney General Letitia James is throwing her support behind a bill meant to crack down on retailers’ use of algorithmic pricing.

James was in Albany this morning to back legislation meant to halt the practice, which uses a consumer’s personal data to set individually tailored prices.

The bill, backed by Assemblymember Michaelle Solages and Deputy Senate Majority Leader Mike Gianaris, is part of a broader push being made by elected officials to address peoples’ pocketbook concerns.

“This online pricing model hits hardest where it hurts the most — food, medicine, diapers and other essentials,” James said at a news conference. “We all have all been focused on the issue of affordability across this state.” Nick Reisman

FROM CITY HALL

Former NYPD sergeant Tim Pearson (third from left) served as a top mayoral aide to former Mayor Eric Adams.

EVIDENCE HUNT: The former NYPD sergeant accusing former mayoral aide Tim Pearson of sexual harassment wants to get her hands on the evidence that prompted the Mamdani administration to stop paying for Pearson’s legal bills.

In 2024, the former sergeant, Roxanne Ludemann, sued Pearson, a confidant and top adviser to former Mayor Eric Adams, accusing him of sexually harassing her at work and then professionally retaliating against her when she rejected his overtures.

Thanks to an unusual arrangement greenlit by Adams’ Law Department, Pearson received taxpayer-funded private lawyers to defend him against Ludemann’s suit. But Mamdani’s corporation counsel, Steve Banks, announced last week that he had rescinded Pearson’s arrangement, citing unspecified “new evidence” that warranted terminating it.

In a court filing late Friday, John Scola, an attorney representing Ludemann, demanded that the Law Department provide his client with access to the evidence in question, arguing it’s relevant to her ongoing case.

“Produce all documents, records, evidence, reports, memoranda, and materials of any kind that constitute, refer to, or relate to the ‘new evidence’ relied upon, reviewed, considered, or referenced by corp counsel in making its determination to decline or withdraw representation of Defendant Timothy Pearson in this matter,” Scola wrote in the filing.

Also last week, Banks terminated a similar arrangement that allowed Jeffrey Maddrey, an Adams ally and former NYPD chief of department, to receive taxpayer-funded attorneys in the Pearson matter, too. Maddrey is accused by Ludemann of helping Pearson retaliate against her.

Scola’s filing demanded access to the information that prompted Banks to slash Maddrey’s arrangement as well.

Pearson and Maddrey, who resigned from city government in late 2024 after being ensnared in unrelated corruption investigations, have denied any wrongdoing.

A Law Department spokesperson did not comment when asked today about Scola’s demand.

New York City taxpayers have already paid more than $620,000 to cover Pearson’s legal tab alone. — Chris Sommerfeldt


FINANCE SHUFFLE: Mamdani is zeroing in on a pick to run the Department of Finance, a normally under-the-radar agency that has taken on new prominence amid the mayor’s push to raise property taxes.

Mamdani’s administration is in talks to hire Richard Lee for the job, according to three people with knowledge of the discussions who were granted anonymity to discuss an internal personnel matter.

Lee currently serves as director of the City Council’s Division of Finance. That means his move to Mamdani’s finance department would leave Council Speaker Julie Menin without her top budget adviser amid increasingly tense negotiations over the city’s $127 billion spending plan for the upcoming fiscal year.

The Council is conducting budget oversight hearings throughout the month to better ascertain how city agencies are planning to operate amid a precarious fiscal situation. The city is facing a projected multi-billion dollar deficit over the next fiscal year, and Mamdani’s administration is relying on cash reserves, optimistic revenue projections and an increase in property taxes to bridge that gap and balance the spending plan for the fiscal year beginning July 1.

Increasing levies on property owners would require approval from the Council, and Menin has dismissed the idea as a nonstarter. She has argued the city needs to look for other ways to cut costs beforehand. The mayor, by contrast, says drastic steps like property levy hikes can be avoided if Albany gives the city the authority to raise local taxes on millionaires and corporations — proposals Menin has declined to support.

Lee, should he ultimately join Mamdani’s administration, would be working for the finance department as it tabulates a key variable — the assessed value of property in New York City — which helps determine how much revenue the city collects from owners each year.

Read the story from Joe Anuta and Chris Sommerfeldt in POLITICO Pro

AROUND NEW YORK

MACHIAVELLIAN MAMDANI: The mayor forced his political will on fellow lefty lawmakers, including by squashing Tiffany Cabán’s congressional prospects and threatening Chi Ossé. (The New York Times)

ADAMS OFFICIAL UNDER PROBE: The former commissioner of the city’s probation department under Mayor Eric Adams is being investigated by the Manhattan district attorney. (Gothamist)

MAYOR DINES WITH KNICKS: Mamdani broke his Saturday Ramadan fast with Senegalese Knicks player Mo Diawara. (GQ)

Missed this morning’s New York Playbook? We forgive you. Read it here.

Tom Homan scrambles to explain ICE airport duties after Trump puts him under the gun



Donald Trump’s impulsive weekend decision to deploy U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents to the nation’s airports to do the jobs of TSA agents not being paid by the administration, put his border czar on the spot on CNN.

Early Sunday morning, the frustrated president said ICE would pulled from their jobs grabbing immigrants off the street to help out at airports plagued by TSA sick-outs and that Homan would be responsible for getting it done.

Appearing on CNN’s “State of the Union,” Tom Homan, who inherited former DHS Secretary Kristi Noem’s duties after she was fired, was pressed by host Dana Bash over training for agents who have no airport security experience .


According to Homan, it is a “work in progress” and details are still be worked out before the Monday deadline.

“Are ICE agents even remotely trained to handle security at airports?” the CNN host asked.

“Ice agents receive high-level training,” Homan insisted. “And, you know, ICE agents are assigned at many airports across the country already. They do a lot of investigation, criminal investigation on smuggling reports. But, you know, there's, I mean, there's a lot TSA agents covering exits, you know, people that enter through the exits. You know, certainly a highly trained ICE law enforcement officer can cover an exit that makes people don't go through those exits entering the airport, through the exits. That stuff like that relieves that TSA officer to go to screening and to, to reduce those lines. “

“I don't see an ICE agent looking at an x-ray machine because they're not trained in that,” he admitted.

After the Trump official elaborated, “So hopefully we'll have all those answers here by this afternoon, but we're working on it. And when we deploy tomorrow, we'll have a well-thought-out plan to execute,” the skeptical CNN host asked, “With respect, if you're doing this in 24 hours, how well thought out could it possibly be?”

“Again, ICE has been at airports across the country for a long time. It's just expanding those things,” Homan pushed back. “Look, it does it –– how much of a plan does it mean to guard an exit, to make sure no one comes through that exit? And we're talking about security options. And these officers are well-trained in security and they're well-trained in identification. And we're going to do what we can to help TSA move those people through the line.”

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