• “The Team”

    I was listening to the BBC World Service broadcast this weekend and heard a very interesting interview with John Harbaugh, coach of the Baltimore Ravens NFL football team.  One of his guiding coaching philosophy’s  came from the legendary University of Michigan coach Bo Shembechler who believed in “The Team.”  Many of the Parkinson’s support organizations talk about the need for a team approach in battling Parkinson’s.  For example, The National Parkinson’s Foundation (NPF) have designated Centers of Excellence and Care Centers that provide a team approach. In fact, that designation is what led to my visit to the University of Florida Movement Disorders Center in January.  You can read about my visit here.

    Now the Michael J Fox Foundation and AbbVie Inc have teamed up to form Partners in Parkinson’s which “… aims to fill in knowledge gaps, provide new educational tools and resources for the Parkinson’s community to help Parkinson’s patients and caregivers optimize care at every stage of the disease, now and in the future.”   Their motto is ‘Discover the Benefit of  Team’ and they have a great website which is chock full of good information including a section on “Building your Care Team”  In addition to the website they are conducting informational events in cities across the country (we are signed up for the Atlanta event in September) and the site includes a search tool to find Movement Disorder Specialist (MDS) in your area.

    Of course ‘My Team‘ includes my doctor, my neurologist, my physical therapist and the other medical personnel who are in charge of my medical care. But of even more importance, my team includes my wonderful wife/primary caregiver, family members, friends, the other PwP bloggers I read or follow on twitter, the members of the support groups I attend, and you, the readers of this blog. All of you provide me with needed support, both physical and mental, helping me deal with my Parkinson’s disease. You are all appreciated and I thank you for your support.

    And for me and other People with Parkinson’s ‘Our Team‘ includes the many researchers who are out to find better methods of treating or curing Parkinson’s and the many organizations such as The Michael J Fox Foundation, the National Parkinson’s Foundation, the Parkinson’s Disease Foundation, the Parkinson’s Action Network and others who provide us with up to date information, help to prioritize and fund the research, and advocate for our rights.  All of the ‘Our Team’ members need and deserve our thanks and support.

    As I mentioned in my last post, I continue use the Fox Trial Finder to look for clinical trials and I have been accepted in one that tracks my typing cadence to measure my fine motor skills.  I suppose they are measuring that cadence right now 🙂  I will get the results at the end of the 90 day test period.  I definitely notice problems with my fine motor skills so will be interested to see what they discover.

    Last week was support group week and we attended both groups.  The East TN group included a presentation on adaptive equipment available to deal with problems like putting on shoes, buttoning shirts, cooking, eating, etc.  The local group presentation was from a Physical Therapist who is trained in the LSTV BIG program developed for Parkinson’s patients.   The program is a four week, four days a week training program that aims to improve gait, trunk rotation and balance.  I had read about the program but was not aware it was offered locally.  Last weekend was also high school graduation weekend for our oldest grandson, Garrett , more on that exciting event in the next post.

  • West Coast Travels

    Hello from San Diego! We have had a wonderful trip to the Southwest and West Coast.  We spent the first couple of days in Tucson with Karen and Jerry, friends from Bay City, MI.  Jerry was diagnosed with Parkinson’s at about the same time as I was so we spent some time comparing our different symptoms, medications, and such. As always, I found it interesting how each of us experience different PD symptoms, what a crazy disease.

    We explored Tucson and the surrounding area for a couple of days before leaving for San Diego.  Karen and Jerry were excellent hosts and we had a great time hiking in Sabino Canyon, walking around downtown Tucson and enjoying the happy hour at the Ritz Carlton at Dove Mountain where we could hear echos from a flutist playing Indian flutes across the canyon from the outside patio.

    We left Tucson and drove to San Diego where Ryan, Sarah and Julian were in the process of moving out of their apartment and into their new residence a few blocks away.  They had just started the move and we got to help with emptying boxes, putting away household items, etc.  and still found time to attend a couple of Julian’s Lacrosse games, go to the beach for sunsets and nice walks, and visit with Sarah’s sister Allison and her husband Kevin and their new little baby, Jack, born two days before we got here.  We have enjoyed several great meals, a trip to San Clemente, and a great lunch at the Stone Brewery World Bistro – Liberty Station in San Diego.  It has been a great visit and we are glad to enjoy their company and to help them with the move.

    I’ve been on the new increased medication dose for about a week and a half and have seen good improvement with my gait and balance.  Also I haven’t had problems with fatigue despite the busy days.  I have been keeping up with my research and saw an interesting article today about the benefits of acupuncture for balance and gait problems.  It certainly sounds promising and worth looking into further.  I applied for two clinical trials last week but didn’t meet all of the criteria for either one this time around.  Lack of research participants is a big problem and I am registered with the Michael J Fox Trial Finder to get notifications of any new trials that I might qualify for so maybe next time.  I urge all you PWPs out there to register, we need to support the research being done to defeat Parkinson’s.

    We are off to Sierra Vista, AZ next for a few more days of visiting with friends before we return home.  In the meantime, don’t forget it is still Parkinson’s Awareness Month. This video by Davis Phinney, former Professional and Olympic bike racer with Parkinson’s, is inspirational and worth watching.  It is about 23 minutes long and was filmed at one of his Victory Summits that he holds around the country.  You can view the video here .  Until next time, remember It Is What It Is!

  • Will This Winter Ever End?

    Hello from cold and snowy Eastern Tennessee, where we are forecast to set a new record low tonight, 28 degrees, which will do wonders for all the fruit trees and new plants just coming up after a nice warm typical April week.  But we have a plan, we are leaving for Tucson tomorrow morning where it is forecast to be 90 degrees!

    The East Tennessee Parkinson’s Unity walk was great, a nice turn out on a cool and windy Saturday morning, about 150 walkers.  Several nice exhibits, a nice send off talk from a local Neurologist and away we went for a nice 1.5 mile walk around the park in Oak Ridge.  Another great opportunity to meet and talk with other PWP’s.

    I had an appointment with my Neurologist today and we have decided to increase the amount of my medication to see if we can improve my balance and fine motor skills.  We discussed when to switch to the ‘gold standard’ drug, Levadopa.  He felt that as long as I am getting effective response from my current drug with limited or no side effects, we should hold off, so that is the plan for now.

    As you have noticed, I still haven’t posted a list of blogs I follow, but one I follow Parkinson’s Journey, by Sherri Woodbridge, has a list of blogs as part of her Parkinson’s Awareness Month posts and I was pleased to see mine listed.  You can view her entire list here , and if you have time, I highly recommend reading her other posts for April, they have all been informative and I look forward to each daily post.

    As I mentioned in the opening, we are off to Arizona to visit with friends and to San Diego to visit with my son and his family so my next post will be from the western side of the country.  Until then, remember, It Is What It Is!

Beaching, Exercising and Blogging!

Last week was another great week at the beach. Our son, daughter-in-law and two granddaughters arrived on Saturday and we had a couple of great beach days and some pool time, when the weather cooperated, along with good food, good conversations and lots of just hanging out time. We managed a couple of trips to Capt Curt’s for clam chowder and celebrated Mara’s birthday at one of our favorite restaurants, Ophelia’s on the Bay. We were sorry to see them off for home in Seattle after a fun week.

Monday we attended a Parkinson’s event at the Asolo Theatre in Sarasota. The event was organized by Lynn Schramek, founder of the Parkinson’s Cafe.  After getting to know everyone over coffee and cookies, we were treated to a backstage tour by Alex Suczewski that was fascinating. After a short history of the Asolo, we saw both stages, the rehearsal space, the green room, a dressing room, learned about costume design and saw the nifty way they move the sets back and forth on rails controlled by a computer. After the tour, we enjoyed a box lunch and a great presentation by actress Carolyn Michel who has been preforming at the Asolo for 25 years. After talking about her career and fielding our many questions, she performed a couple of monologues and it was amazing to see her drop right into the character, changing her voice and facial mannerisms to match. It was a wonderful event and we are looking forward to next month’s visit to the Sarasota Ballet.

On the Parkinson’s front, we are very pleased with the new medication routine. Our walk times to the same turn around point on the beach have dropped enough that we have moved the point further out. My rigidity is almost non existent most of the time and Mara has remarked that sometimes my walking speed is almost back to normal, we have even done a little jogging on the beach. The walking poles  help with arm movement and walking erect. Studies continue to show that exercise is the best medication for PD, in fact, a Google search for scholarly studies using ‘Parkinsons and exercise’ produced 16,400 results, 617 in 2015 alone. My Doctor’s idea to add levadopa to my medication to reduce the motor symptoms so I would be able to exercise more seems to be paying off.A few weeks ago I was asked to be a guest blogger for HealthiVibe, LLC and my article was posted today and can be seen here. HealthiVibe is a firm helping design clinical trials with the premise that patients should play a more instrumental and active role in the design process and also throughout the patient journey, a topic I have blogged about in the past. I was excited to be able to add my voice to the need for changes in the clinical trial process.  Which reminds me, don’t forget to sign up for the Fox Trial Finder, it’s easy and YOU are needed!   See you next time.

“It does not matter how slowly you go as long as you do not stop.” – Confucius

Beaching, Exercising and Blogging!

Last week was another great week at the beach. Our son, daughter-in-law and two granddaughters arrived on Saturday and we had a couple of great beach days and some pool time, when the weather cooperated, along with good food, good conversations and lots of just hanging out time. We managed a couple of trips to Capt Curt’s for clam chowder and celebrated Mara’s birthday at one of our favorite restaurants, Ophelia’s on the Bay. We were sorry to see them off for home in Seattle after a fun week.

Monday we attended a Parkinson’s event at the Asolo Theatre in Sarasota. The event was organized by Lynn Schramek, founder of the Parkinson’s Cafe.  After getting to know everyone over coffee and cookies, we were treated to a backstage tour by Alex Suczewski that was fascinating. After a short history of the Asolo, we saw both stages, the rehearsal space, the green room, a dressing room, learned about costume design and saw the nifty way they move the sets back and forth on rails controlled by a computer. After the tour, we enjoyed a box lunch and a great presentation by actress Carolyn Michel who has been preforming at the Asolo for 25 years. After talking about her career and fielding our many questions, she performed a couple of monologues and it was amazing to see her drop right into the character, changing her voice and facial mannerisms to match. It was a wonderful event and we are looking forward to next month’s visit to the Sarasota Ballet.

On the Parkinson’s front, we are very pleased with the new medication routine. Our walk times to the same turn around point on the beach have dropped enough that we have moved the point further out. My rigidity is almost non existent most of the time and Mara has remarked that sometimes my walking speed is almost back to normal, we have even done a little jogging on the beach. The walking poles  help with arm movement and walking erect. Studies continue to show that exercise is the best medication for PD, in fact, a Google search for scholarly studies using ‘Parkinsons and exercise’ produced 16,400 results, 617 in 2015 alone. My Doctor’s idea to add levadopa to my medication to reduce the motor symptoms so I would be able to exercise more seems to be paying off.A few weeks ago I was asked to be a guest blogger for HealthiVibe, LLC and my article was posted today and can be seen here. HealthiVibe is a firm helping design clinical trials with the premise that patients should play a more instrumental and active role in the design process and also throughout the patient journey, a topic I have blogged about in the past. I was excited to be able to add my voice to the need for changes in the clinical trial process.  Which reminds me, don’t forget to sign up for the Fox Trial Finder, it’s easy and YOU are needed!   See you next time.

“It does not matter how slowly you go as long as you do not stop.” – Confucius

Tag: Clinical Trials

  • Beaching, Exercising and Blogging!

    Beaching, Exercising and Blogging!

    Last week was another great week at the beach. Our son, daughter-in-law and two granddaughters arrived on Saturday and we had a couple of great beach days and some pool time, when the weather cooperated, along with good food, good conversations and lots of just hanging out time. We managed a couple of trips to Capt Curt’s for clam chowder and celebrated Mara’s birthday at one of our favorite restaurants, Ophelia’s on the Bay. We were sorry to see them off for home in Seattle after a fun week.

    Monday we attended a Parkinson’s event at the Asolo Theatre in Sarasota. The event was organized by Lynn Schramek, founder of the Parkinson’s Cafe.  After getting to know everyone over coffee and cookies, we were treated to a backstage tour by Alex Suczewski that was fascinating. After a short history of the Asolo, we saw both stages, the rehearsal space, the green room, a dressing room, learned about costume design and saw the nifty way they move the sets back and forth on rails controlled by a computer. After the tour, we enjoyed a box lunch and a great presentation by actress Carolyn Michel who has been preforming at the Asolo for 25 years. After talking about her career and fielding our many questions, she performed a couple of monologues and it was amazing to see her drop right into the character, changing her voice and facial mannerisms to match. It was a wonderful event and we are looking forward to next month’s visit to the Sarasota Ballet.

    On the Parkinson’s front, we are very pleased with the new medication routine. Our walk times to the same turn around point on the beach have dropped enough that we have moved the point further out. My rigidity is almost non existent most of the time and Mara has remarked that sometimes my walking speed is almost back to normal, we have even done a little jogging on the beach. The walking poles  help with arm movement and walking erect. Studies continue to show that exercise is the best medication for PD, in fact, a Google search for scholarly studies using ‘Parkinsons and exercise’ produced 16,400 results, 617 in 2015 alone. My Doctor’s idea to add levadopa to my medication to reduce the motor symptoms so I would be able to exercise more seems to be paying off.A few weeks ago I was asked to be a guest blogger for HealthiVibe, LLC and my article was posted today and can be seen here. HealthiVibe is a firm helping design clinical trials with the premise that patients should play a more instrumental and active role in the design process and also throughout the patient journey, a topic I have blogged about in the past. I was excited to be able to add my voice to the need for changes in the clinical trial process.  Which reminds me, don’t forget to sign up for the Fox Trial Finder, it’s easy and YOU are needed!   See you next time.

    “It does not matter how slowly you go as long as you do not stop.” – Confucius
  • At the Beach — Again!

    At the Beach — Again!

     

    I am writing this from the deck of a beautiful home overlooking the Atlantic Ocean on Bald Head Island, NC.  Yep, at the beach again!!  More about how we got here later in this post.

    I have looked at several more clinical trials but again find that I don’t qualify because I am already on medication.  It seems to me that communication between Movement Disorder Specialists (MDS) or Neurologists and clinical trial operators could increase trial participants.  If the Doctors were aware of the trials being conducted nearby, they could then offer their newly diagnosed patients the opportunity to particpate in the trial before they prescribed a medications.  Of course another issue is travel, most of the trials that I have tried to join are at least 200 miles away and the travel costs are usually not covered.  In her latest blog post, Soania Mathur MD states “…close to 85% of all clinical trials are delayed due to recruitment difficulties and a shocking 30% fail to recruit a single subject.”  The post goes on to discuss both the logistical and the lack of knowledge issues I have discussed above.  The Michael J Fox Trial Finder website does a great job of listing all of the trials in my home radius of 300 miles and they notify me if a new one is added that meets the criteria but the newly diagnosed need to know where to look.  Perhaps one or more of the National organizations can develop a simple brochure that can be supplied to MDS and Neurologists for them to hand out or make available to patients.  It might be a start?

    I was asked this week to be a PatientsLikeMe Research Ambassador.  PatientsLikeMe is an online support group I belong to and I had applied to be a member of a research advisory committee they were forming.  While I wasn’t selected for the advisory group I was asked to be a Research Ambassador. Per the email ..”Like the Team of Advisors, our Research Ambassadors are being asked to commit to a program that’s designed to put you in the driver’s seat of making research better.”  As an Ambassador, I will get special communications each month for the rest of the year about new research initiatives, information about data being collected and how it will be used, and use my blog and other social avenues to share this information with the Parkinson’s community.  I have participated in a couple of their research projects already, including the one where I did the voice test over the phone to see if they can track the progress of my Parkinson’s. Sounds interesting and I am looking forward to participating.

     

    We had a great visit with my daughter Holly and grandchildren Charlie and Kayla.  The weather was great until the last evening so we got in a lot of boating, tubing, swimming, fishing and stand up paddle boarding along with side trips to the Ripley’s Believe It or Not museum and a couple of rounds of mini golf.

    Kayla turned out to be the fisherperson extraordinaire hooking a couple of nice catfish and a bunch of sunfish from the dock.  Charlie loved being on the water and riding the tube. Holly and Kayla both enjoyed stand up paddle boarding so much the first time, they went back for more before leaving for home.  It was a great visit and a good time was had by all.

    We are enjoying our time at the beach in Bald Head Island.  The island is reachable by ferry from Southport, NC and once you are here, you travel by foot, bike or golf cart.  We have been lucky to spend a week here for the past several summers with my stepson David and his wife Shelly and the two grand kids Breanna and Garrett.  This year Breanna is in MN so this is the first time we have been here without her.  Garrett always brings along a friend or two, this year he brought along 4 high school buddies and they are having a blast.  Dave and Shelly’s friends Mario and Missy have also joined us for the week.  It is a great place to just relax, read books, take long walks on the beach and watch the World Cup.  I am trying to catch up with all of the magazines I haven’t read since we returned from Florida in early March and produce this blog post.  Looks like the blog post will make it, we’ll see about the magazines.

    Our friends Mary Ann and Don live nearby in Wilmington, NC so they came over for a day and we had a great time, we hadn’t seen them for almost 2 years so we had a lot of catching up to do.  We enjoyed a nice lunch with them and a couple of ‘slow’ rides around the island as one of our golf carts is not super speedy. 🙂

    Next up is a visit from my son Ryan and his wife Sarah and grandson Julian and his half brother Trysten for the Fourth of July, look for more fun on the lake in the next post.