AWARE Meeting at the Center for BrainHealth Featured Updates from Three Grant Recipients
(Featured photo: Karen Koop, president, AWARE; Kym Shaw Day, For Love and Art; Karisti Julia, AWARE meetings chair; Teresa Coleman Wash, Bishop Arts Theatre Center; Audette Rackley, Center for BrainHealth.)*
AWARE’s membership meeting and luncheon was held at the Center for BrainHealth and featured interesting updates from three grant recipients: For Love and Art, Bishop Arts Theatre Center and the Center for BrainHealth.
Karen Koop, AWARE president, called the meeting to order and introduced
Dr. Kamilia Smith, one of the AWARE Affair chairs along with Angie Carpenter and Lacey Young. A meaningful evening with friends and family while raising money for AWARE.
After the board gave their reports, Karen announced that longtime supporter and board member Dr. Cindy Marshall, who keeps members updated with the Medical Minute at every meeting, had just been named as winner of the American Association for Geriatric Psychiatry Jeanne Jackson-Siegel Clinician of the Year Award for 2024 to a rousing round of applause.
Audette Rackely, representing the Center for BrainHealth, an AWARE grant recipient, shed light on how the grant dollars are used to further their goal: Support for the creation of a BrainHealth Help Line to offer guidance to caregivers and those with Alzheimer’s who are seeking information and tools to help them move out of a place of distress.
Appearing on behalf of grant recipient For Love and Art, Kym Shaw Day, shared a brief history of the origins of the organization and how AWARE’s grant helps with support to increase staff needed to coordinate volunteers, and assist with growth for a program bringing an interactive art experience to people with cognitive impairment and limited mobility living in long-term care facilities.
Teresa Coleman Wash, founding artistic director for the grant recipient, Bishop Arts Theatre Center, gave insight on how AWARE’s grant supports a program offering senior/elder adults customized theatre workshops and performances to enhance their social, emotional, and physical memory abilities.
For over thirty years, AWARE has given hope and help to those in Dallas and the greater North Texas area affected by Alzheimer’s disease. AWARE undertakes thoughtful research and conduct site visits to identify non-profit organizations that actively help all those affected by Alzheimer’s in the north Texas community and award grants to assist them in their work. To date, AWARE has awarded nearly $14.5 million to worthy programs and research. Learn more at the website www.awaredallas.org
AWARE Dallas 2023-2024 Grant Recipients
Baylor Scott & White Dallas Foundation: Salary support for the Baylor AT&T Memory Center to provide a trained care-navigation specialist on site at the Center. At the point of care, patients and families are provided with disease education, caregiver training and support groups, elder law and financial planning, and a 24/7 helpline.
Bishop Arts Theatre Center: Support for a program offering senior/elder adults customized theatre workshops and performances to enhance their social, emotional, and physical memory abilities.
Center For BrainHealth at The University Of Texas At Dallas: Support for the creation of a BrainHealth Help Line to offer guidance to caregivers and those with Alzheimer’s who are seeking information and tools to help them move out of a place of distress.
For Love And Art: Support to increase staff needed to coordinate volunteers, and assist with growth for a program bringing an interactive art experience to people with cognitive impairment and limited mobility living in long-term care facilities.
Jewish Family Service: Support for the Older Adults Program staff to provide in-home mental health counseling, care management, and daily living support to older adults with Alzheimer’s and other dementias, allowing them to remain living in their own home.
Juliette Fowler Communities: Support the organization’s campus-wide dementia care initiatives including I’m Still Here, Dementia Friendly Dallas, music therapy, and Caregiver support programs.
Plano Symphony Orchestra: Support for Healing Notes, a free music therapy-influenced concert designed as an interactive musical experience for seniors. The program focuses on low-income individuals living in memory care facilities and dealing with Alzheimer’s and other dementias.
Stomping Ground Theater And Training Center: Support for Improv for Caregivers, a fun and interactive program for family and professional caregivers that uses improvisational comedy techniques to teach effective communication skills that are specific to the needs of persons with Alzheimer’s and dementia.
Texas Winds Musical Outreach: Support for the Concerts for Seniors program providing interactive concerts in 86 nursing homes and adult day care facilities bringing joy, relief from isolation, and peace to individuals affected by memory loss, and providing new communication skills to their caregivers.
The Senior Source: Support for the Senior Companion Program matching trained volunteers with low-income individuals with Alzheimer’s disease and their families needing in-home assistance with meals, errands, and light housekeeping, providing caregivers with respite and/or time to work outside the home.
The University Of Texas At Dallas Center For Vital Longevity: Support for testing the theory that Alzheimer’s disease is caused in part by a severe decline in the brain’s energy system by examining neurometabolites using MRI scanning on one of seven such advanced MRI scanners in the country. Study located in the lab of Dr. K. Kennedy.
The University Of Texas At Dallas Center For Vital Longevity: Support for acquisition of a mobile Functional Near Infrared Spectroscopy ( fNIRS) system with physiological measures to assess brain-physiology in broad range of adults, and to train scientists in its use and allowing a broader range of access to study participants. . Study located in the lab of Dr. Chandramallika Basak.
Westminster Presbyterian Church: Support to expand the number of days offered by the Caregivers Day Out program and allow more individuals with Alzheimer’s and related dementias to participate and provide greater respite for their caregivers.
Wilshire Baptist Church: Support for the Friday Friends Program providing stimulating activities for participants living with Alzheimer’s and related dementias and respite for their caregivers.
Myrna D. Schlegel Aware Scholarship Fund: Scholarship support for nursing students at Baylor University, Texas Woman’s University, and Texas Christian University toward studies in gerontology, especially in the field of dementia.
AWARE is a component fund of The Dallas Foundation, a 501(c)3 publicly supported charity.
AWARE Mission: AWARE is dedicated to fighting Alzheimer’s disease by providing funding and support to programs, projects, and research provided by nonprofit organizations that actively help individuals affected by Alzheimer’s in Dallas and the greater North Texas area. Since 1989 AWARE has raised $14.5 million in support of its mission.
AWARE is a component fund of The Dallas Foundation, a 501(c)3 publicly supported charity. In partnership with the Foundation, AWARE conducts an annual grant review process by which grant applicants are carefully and thoughtfully vetted to ensure that grant dollars are awarded to organizations that provide outstanding services to Alzheimer’s patients and their caregivers, and to those research institutions that are at the forefront of medical research in the treatment, prevention, and cure of Alzheimer’s disease.
Together with compassion and dedication we can make a difference. Join AWARE now and join the fight. www.AWAREDallas.org Instagram: @awaredallas Facebook: @awaredallas
*Photos by Rob Wythe/Wythe Portrait Studio
(Sharon Adams, Adams Communications Public Relations, is honored to represent AWARE, its special events and announcements, meetings, and post this Philanthropy Lifestyles Scene.)