FINDING ALTERNATIVES AT ALL STAGES —Talking with ALS Center Director
Jeffrey Rosenfeld
Jeffrey Rosenfeld |
by Margaret Wahl
Jeffrey Rosenfeld has directed the MDA/ALS Center at Carolinas Medical
Center in Charlotte, N.C., since 1998. He's also chief of neurology
at Carolinas and an associate professor of neurology at the University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
In 1983, Rosenfeld completed a doctoral degree in neuroanatomy at
the University of Connecticut in Storrs, followed by postdoctoral studies
at Johns Hopkins in Baltimore.
After deciding that he wanted to treat patients as well as conduct
research, he completed his medical degree at the University of Maryland
in 1990 and, after a general medical internship, completed residency
training in neurology at the University of Pennsylvania in 1994.
From 1994 to 1998, Rosenfeld was on the neurology faculty at Emory
University in Atlanta, where he also served as director of the MDA/ALS
Center.
Q: How did you first become interested
in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis?
A: ALS is perhaps the
most devastating of the neurodegenerative diseases. But when you can
make a difference in the life of an ALS patient, the magnitude of that
difference is very obvious. That became very motivating to me.
Q: How would you describe the philosophy
at your center in Charlotte?
A: Our
center in Charlotte is unique in many ways. The way it came into being
was quite unusual. About six or seven years ago, a group of prominent
families in Charlotte got together. Each had been touched by ALS.
Because of their means, they had all been to different areas of the
country for care. They came together to discuss what patients without
those resources could do, and they then created an endowment of several
million dollars within a year. [The center is now supported by the original
endowment, with additional support from Carolinas Medical Center, from
MDA and from the community.]
When they contacted me, I was directing the MDA/ALS Center at Emory
University, and I wasn't looking for a job. I was under the impression
the Charlotte families were asking me for ideas on how to start a center,
and I was happy to come up there and give them my best ideas. In most
instances, those were things that I couldn't do at Emory. I painted
the sky — creating the most ideal situation I could imagine if
resources weren't an issue.
After a time, it became obvious they were looking at me to be the director.
What became of all this was that we were able to create the best-case
scenario for care of patients with ALS.
Our philosophy is that we will offer the most aggressive, proactive,
multidisciplinary care available, and that care will be delivered independently
of patient resources. The stress of getting care should never be more
than the stress of having the disease.
Q: Describe your center now.
A: The center now has
a treatment team of 24 members who span at least 14 different disciplines,
and most of them are dedicated just to our center. We have a physical
therapy coordinator, a nutritionist, a speech therapist and a social
worker, all of whom are working with us 100 percent of their time. We
also have several research coordinators, a nurse manager and a variety
of essential support staff members.
Q: What's the first visit like?
A: Patients who come
to our ALS program come for an initial two-day evaluation. During those
two days, they're seen by all of our team specialists, regardless of
the problems they're having. At the end of that process, I sit down
with them to tell them two things: what I think is going on —
what I think the diagnosis is — and what we're going to do next.
The most gratifying part of this job is watching the transformation
in patients and families
Solving problems for patients with ALS is Rosenfeld's priority
at his center in Charlotte, N.C. |
who come in overwhelmed by fear and leave overwhelmed by the number
and diversity of hopeful treatment alternatives that exist. I don't
think there's a patient to whom I can't offer something as an alternative,
another something to try.
Q: What goes on in the clinic at a follow-up
visit?
A: During our follow-up
clinic sessions, up to 40 patients return to the clinic, with their
families, and spend the day visiting with each other as well as with
our entire team.
If a patient with an unstable gait needs a piece of equipment, he leaves
here with the equipment, not just a prescription for equipment. We figure
out how to get it paid for after we provide the care.
We have one of the largest, best-equipped communications labs for motor
neuron disease patients in the country. When switches and mounts have
not been available, we've had them engineered.
Q: What clinical trials are going on
at the center?
A: We currently have
seven trials going on. In one of our newest efforts, we're doing a pilot
study of a multiple drug cocktail. It will be a small, open-label
feasibility study, with 10 to 15 patients. There will be a lot of compounds
with some potential interactions we will be evaluating. In the treatment
of ALS, I think multidrug combinations, or drug "cocktails,"
will be one of the mainstays of treatment.
There are probably multiple spots along the cascade that leads to motor
neuron death that can result in a treatment opportunity. Any single
intervention may not have the same impact as adding interventions.
One compound we've just tested is oxandrolone, which is an anabolic
steroid. The study showed that there may be a selected group of muscles
— those that are weakest at the outset — that benefit the
most from oxandrolone treatment.
Q: What do you think about the various
theories of ALS causation that are now being discussed?
A: I think what we've
learned in the recent past is that there are multiple mechanisms contributing
to and interacting in motor neuron death. What's most exciting is that
hypotheses that we used to think of as independent now appear to be
interrelated.
A few years ago, I would have said maybe one hypothesis would pan out.
Now we understand that they cross over.
Q: Some people feel that ALS should be
treated as more of a chronic disability, like a spinal cord injury,
rather than as a rapidly fatal disease. What do you think?
A: The short answer is
that ALS is a progressive disease, while a spinal cord injury is often
static. A spinal cord injury patient can accommodate to a problem and
move forward from that point. The ALS patient does that, too, but down
the road there may be another hurdle to jump.
But we don't tell patients that they're going to die with this disease.
Instead, we tell them that they're going to live with this disease.
That difference between living and dying with the same disease is very
powerful.
That's the challenge for the health care community — to provide
different and new opportunities for treatment alternatives. For some
people, a new communication device is the difference between working
and staying home, between communicating with grandchildren and not.
For others, maybe it's the motorized wheelchair that makes the most
difference. Or it might be participation in a research trial and contributing
to the fund of knowledge.
Instilling hope and offering alternatives at all stages are critical
in ALS.
Multidrug
Study at Carolinas Center
A small, open-label, multidrug study is
opening this month at the MDA/ALS Center at Carolinas Medical
Center in Charlotte, N.C.
For information, contact Ruth King at (704) 355-8699 or ruth.king@carolinashealthcare.org. |
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ALS Research Roundup
MDA Seeks Researchers
to Conduct Cord Blood Trial
In response to recent developments, MDA is calling on researchers to
begin a trial of cord blood transfusion for ALS.
Transfusions of human umbilical cord blood — which contains stem cells
that can form blood and immune cells, and perhaps other cell types —
have recently been tested in mice with ALS. At least one U.S. company
is offering the procedure to people with the disease, at a price of
nearly $25,000 for a one-time intravenous infusion.
After a thorough review, MDA's scientific advisers have concluded that
this experimental
treatment holds promise, but that it must be done in a way that ensures
patient safety and meaningful results. In keeping with this goal, MDA
has issued a request for applications (RFA), offering to fund a clinical
trial of cord blood transfusion against ALS.
This would be the first trial of its kind. Over the past decade, cord
blood transfusion has become an accepted treatment for diseases of the
blood and immune system, but it hasn't yet been tested in people with
neurological diseases.
In 2001, Robert Brown, director of the MDA/ALS Center at Massachusetts
General Hospital in Boston, reported that transfusions of human cord
blood produced a small but significant increase in the life span of
mice with ALS.
But for people with the disease, the risks of the procedure might outweigh
its potential benefits. Cord blood transfusion can trigger graft-versus-host
disease, a potentially fatal condition wherein immune cells in the transplant
attack the recipient's tissues. Also, preparation for transfusion usually
involves total-body or partial irradiation and treatment with immunosuppressant
drugs, leaving the body vulnerable to infections.
For these reasons, MDA discourages people with ALS from seeking cord
blood transfusion until the procedure can be safely and adequately tested
in a clinical trial. MDA has requested that researchers respond to its
RFA by Feb. 1.
Topiramate Shows
No Benefit in ALS
A 20-center, phase 2 study of the drug topiramate (see "MDA-Supported
Topiramate Trial," April 2001),
 Merit Cudkowicz |
at a dosage of 800 milligrams per day, has
shown no benefit in ALS, says MDA grantee Merit Cudkowicz, an investigator
on the study. Side effects of the drug included nausea and loss of appetite,
she said.
The disappointing results were announced at the 13th International
Symposium on ALS/Motor Neuron Disease held in Melbourne in November.
The trial was conducted by the Northeast ALS Consortium, with support
from MDA and the National Institutes of Health. Cudkowicz, a neurologist
at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston and an MDA research grantee,
said there are no plans to do further studies of this drug.
Topiramate was considered a candidate for ALS treatment because it
blocks molecular structures called AMPA receptors and decreases release
of the chemical glutamate in the area around nerve cells, Cudkowicz
noted. AMPA receptors are cell-surface docking sites for glutamate,
an excess of which has been implicated in ALS causation or progression.
'Corn Belt' Study
Expands Across United States
Naomi Bienfang at the University of Northern Iowa in Cedar Falls has
expanded her study of the possible role of environmental exposures in
the development of ALS to include people beyond the U.S. corn-growing
regions (see
October 2002). She's studying people with ALS and people with a
similar background without ALS.
Bienfang is now including everyone in the United States for the mail
survey portion of the study, while people from the Corn Belt will contribute
a survey and a blood sample.
For more information, contact Bienfang at (319) 273-3689 or nomeinroma@yahoo.com.
Gene Behind pmn May
Hold Clues to ALS
Two new studies, published in November in Nature Genetics and in the
Journal of Cell Biology, reveal the defective gene harbored by the progressive
motor neuronopathy (pmn) mouse, used as an animal model of ALS in older
studies.
Like humans with ALS, pmn mice lose their muscle-controlling nerve
cells (motor neurons) and undergo progressive muscle wasting and paralysis.
But because they don't have all the characteristic features of ALS,
in new studies, they've been largely replaced by mice carrying mutations
in the SOD1 gene — discovered in the early 1990s to cause some
25 percent of familial ALS (FALS).
Still, the defective gene found in pmn mice — which encodes a
protein called the tubulin-specific chaperone e (Tbce) — should
be considered a possible cause behind unexplained cases of human FALS,
the authors of the new studies say.
Tbce normally helps maintain the stability of microtubules, long cablelike
structures that provide support and help move essential nutrients within
neurons.
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ALS — A Disability or a Fatal Disease?
by Cheryl Carter New
Health professionals both in and out of neurology have told me I will
die of ALS. The
Cheryl Carter New |
common theme is "three to five years after diagnosis."
I have had the disease for more than seven years now and am losing
the battle to walk. I lost my speech a few years ago.
What I want to know is why ALS isn't treated like any other disability.
Why are we told we will die of it? ALS affects voluntary muscles, not
the critical ones one needs to live. Eventually it affects one's diaphragm,
which is necessary for breathing, but there's technology to restore
that function.
Disease or Disability?
Quadriplegics with spinal cord damage aren't necessarily told they'll
die of their injuries. Yet their functions are similar to those of us
who have ALS.
Quadriplegics have rehabilitation centers. We have hospices.
Comparable diseases such as Parkinson's, multiple sclerosis and various
muscular dystrophies are seen by many doctors as disabling conditions
— not inevitably fatal diseases. If you have one of these diseases,
it's assumed that health care professionals will help you to "overcome"
the symptoms and get on with your life.
Too Expensive?
The first time I visited a prominent center for ALS, the coordinator
told me it was "too expensive" to prolong my life. She told
me to take that trip I'd always wanted to take before "it was too
late."
When I asked about research, she said, "Well, last year we thought
XYZ would be a cure but it did not work out so we don't get excited
about anything now." I left there with no hope and no future.
I'm a researcher by profession. So when I got over the shock of visiting
this center I did some in-depth research.
I learned what nerves and muscles are affected in ALS. I learned what
devices are currently on the market to overcome the most severe of the
problems affecting ALS patients.
I looked at Christopher Reeve, who is making a difference in the world
in spite of being on a tracheostomy tube for breathing. I looked at
Stephen Hawking, perhaps the world's premier theoretical physicist.
He teaches classes, writes books, has fathered children and has a full
and active life. When he received his ALS diagnosis in 1963, he was
undoubtedly told he would die.
Quality of Life
Too often, health care professionals tell people with ALS: It's too
expensive to prolong your life, it's too much of a burden on caregivers,
and "you don't want to live that way, do you?"
Let me take these one by one and give you my perspective.
1. It's too expensive to prolong your
life.
Who are these people who put a price on a life? Do they know what I
will contribute to the world if I live? Do they know the value of my
life to those who care for me?
I've talked to many people who choose to live and have willing caregivers
in the home. They aren't all rich. In fact, some would be considered
low-income by the standards of many health professionals, but they manage
just fine.
2. It's too much of a burden on caregivers.
This is a personal matter and not one for judgment by outsiders. There
are people to whom a loved one with ALS is so important that they gladly
provide care.
I know a woman with the disease whose husband provides such good care,
the local hospice program said the family didn't need assistance. Her
daughters-in-law have offered to spell her husband so he can get out
and pursue his own interests.
My husband is a wonderful caregiver and we have become even closer
through the challenges we face.
3. You don't want to live that way, do
you?
Let's see — I don't lose my sight, hearing, sense of feeling
or the ability to taste. I can still see the beauty of nature, hear
the music of the wind in the trees, feel the rain on my cheeks, and
experience the love of my husband and family. I can watch the boats
go by on my little lake and see Big Bird (our great blue heron) as he
walks in his dignified way along the shore.
With technology, I can continue to write and correspond with my family
and friends. I can even talk. And there's new technology every day.
With a power chair, even if I have to go on a trach I can be mobile
and can travel. I may not be able to move, but I can experience the
world.
How many people, in their rush to do the next thing, don't experience
their world to a tenth of the degree that I may?
Focus on Living
It took many visits with various doctors of neurology and lots of miles
on the car, but I finally found a clinic where every person is focused
on helping you live with the disease — the MDA/ALS Center at Carolinas
Medical Center in Charlotte, N.C. I am fortunate; I have talked with
dozens of people who are not so blessed.
Living with ALS or dying of it is a personal choice. It's a choice,
not for the health care professional to make, but for each person with
the disease.
New, of Inman, S.C., is president of Polaris Corp., a grants consulting
firm. She has co-authored four books in the field of grants acquisition
published by John Wiley and Sons; a book on negotiation; and numerous
articles on various business topics.
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Nodaros Helps Others While Helping
Himself
by Tara Wood
Andy Nodaros fully understands why someone who has received an ALS
diagnosis might want to slink away to hide from the world and hope the
disease will go away.
But you won't catch Nodaros, who learned he had the disease in November
2001, doing any such thing.
Instead, the 56-year-old Brentwood, Pa., man has focused on making
a difference by capitalizing on his most notable traits: motivating
others and promoting ALS awareness with his keen "talkability."
Specifically, Nodaros has extensively involved himself with MDA and
made a big effort to connect with others with ALS.
"I'll do what I can as long as I can for this organization and
feel good about it, and that's my way of coping," Nodaros said.
Putting Himself Out There ... Way Out
A key step has been getting the story of how ALS has changed his life
into the news media.
 Andy Nodaros is joined by his wife, Carol, granddaughters Jordan
(left) and
Chandler, and friend Drew Gilbert. |
Nodaros has given a Pittsburgh-area newspaper up close access to his
life for an ongoing series titled "Life Without a Cure." The
articles, complete with unflinching details, show the progress of the
disease and the effect it's had on his life and family.
Nodaros has been featured in other area newspapers, and was seen in
a taped profile and live interview on the local broadcast of the 2002
Jerry Lewis MDA Telethon. He has even traveled to Washington to encourage
legislators to increase spending on ALS research.
Nodaros admits that the publicity at times makes him feel like a movie
star. But part of his motivation for thrusting himself and his family
(he's often accompanied by any of his five grandchildren to help "affect
people") into the public eye is that it"s also a way to reach
others with ALS, he said.
"I do it because I wanted people to know that, like I have MDA
in my corner, they have Andy Nodaros in their corner," he said.
On a smaller scale, Nodaros has taken advantage of a free service of
his local cable television company's information station to post an
advertisement for anyone diagnosed with ALS to contact him.
The result has been a small but growing network of area friends with
ALS with whom Nodaros regularly keeps in touch and works to encourage,
either by phone, e-mail or visits.
"I want to let other ALS patients know that Andy Nodaros, who
is in every newspaper in this city, on television, does MDA lunches,
etc., is not giving up," Nodaros said. "I do have my down
time, but I'm not giving up."
Now, with the help of MDA staff, he's expanding his efforts to start
an ALS support group for the area, which is south of Pittsburgh. His
goal is to include lots of member input and to schedule guest speakers
who will give people useful information, such as vendors of mobility
products.
A People Person to the Core
Nodaros' upbeat attitude, gift for gab and tendency to pepper his conversations
with witty one-liners has helped him enjoy success in both his former
and current occupations.
After a successful decade in the bar business, Nodaros decided that
he wanted a 9-to-5 job in which he could help people.
A friend suggested what turned out to be a perfect match for his outgoing
personality: the Turtle Creek Valley Mental Health/Mental Retardation
Center in Homestead, Pa., where Nodaros helps people with cognitive
disabilities find and keep jobs.
"It's so much fun. It's challenging to convince managers that
giving these people a chance is the right thing to do," Nodaros
told a local newspaper.
Nodaros plans to work as much as possible for as long as he can. In
his spare time, he strives to maintain his "Mr. Healthy" lifestyle,
which has always included plenty of weightlifting and exercise.
A former champion body builder, Nodaros now combines a modified exercise
program with a diet filled with herbs, vitamin supplements and "crazy
shakes" like a carrot-wheat grass-parsley drink he makes.
Some might find the regimen extreme, but to Nodaros it's all about
fighting ALS in any way he can — and that includes not being afraid
to look good, too.
Nodaros credits his glowing complexion to a "bronzer" lotion
that gives him an artificial, but fresh-from-the-beach-looking tan.
Just don't let him get emotional when he's wearing it.
"My tan will run!" he jokes. "Recently, somebody said
to me, "Boy, you look good, Andy. You'd never know you have an
illness," and I said, "As long as there's hair dye, makeup
and shoulder pads, I'll be all right.'"
Nodaros knows that his new life with ALS is full of irony: He's a body
builder who has a muscle-wasting disease; he works with people with
disabilities and is now coping with his own progression toward disability.
Don't expect to hear him moan about it, but do expect an energizing
pep talk.
"I would like people to know and understand, that this isn't
the end of your life ... to not let this disease dictate what you feel
like and want to do,' he said. "Don't give up!".
DROP HIM A LINE! Anyone who wishes to correspond with Andy Nodaros can e-mail him at a.nodaros@att.net.
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Caregiver Support Programs
Innovative — But Going Nowhere
by Christina Medvescek
This is the best and worst of times for family caregivers, at least
in terms of legislation designed to address their needs.
"There are some positive things — states are recognizing
the need to increase funding for home and community-based care,"
says Sandra Newman, policy specialist for the Family Caregiver Alliance
(FCA). But the uncertain economy and shifting national priorities mean
that "legislators are really challenged right now by how to do
that."
The FCA, a national caregiver advocacy group, sponsored a conference
for legislators, policymakers and advocates in October 2001. "Who
Will Provide Care? Emerging Issues for State Policymakers" focused
on ways to strengthen and support informal family caregiving as part
of long-term care (LTC) service delivery.
A summary of the conference proceedings and text of seven policy briefs
written expressly for the conference are available at the FCA Web site, www.caregiver.org. The full proceedings, published in 2002, also
may be ordered for $30 from FCA, Suite 600, 690 Market St., San Francisco,
CA 94104; (800) 445-8106; or through the Web site.
Families Take on Responsibility
Approximately 12 million Americans, almost half under age 65, require
LTC. (LTC refers
"Who Will Provide Care?" focuses on ways to strengthen family caregiving. |
to assistance with daily living activities such as eating, bathing,
dressing, etc.) Some 80 percent of LTC is provided by family and friends
("family caregivers"). These caregivers, many of whom also
hold down jobs, save states upwards of $196 billion a year.
FCA says that, to continue providing this level of care, family caregivers
need help, such as respite services, in-home assistance, education and
training, easy access to information about services, financial help,
affordable long-term care insurance and greater control over how service
dollars are spent. Working caregivers also need support from employers.
At present, these concerns are being addressed in a piecemeal fashion
by individual states and some federal proposals, Newman says.
At the federal level, a proposal to double funding for the National
Caregivers Family Support Program (NCFSP), which funds state caregiver
support programs, is stalled along with other 2003 appropriations bills.
Other promising but immobile proposals include the Lifespan Respite
Care Act, which would provide states with grants to expand respite care
services, and a proposal to extend Medicare benefits to caregivers.
On the state level, Newman pointed to several successes: California's
enactment of a paid family leave program; Hawaii's creation of a statewide
long-term care safety net; and Florida's extension of a project that
gives cash allotments directly to LTC consumers and allows them to decide
how to spend the funds. (For more on these programs, visit the FCA Web
site.)
Cooperation Is Key
In the current political and economic climate, the key to success is
collaboration, Newman says. Caregivers and care recipients should work
with local advocacy groups and lobby their state and national representatives.
States can be encouraged to maintain and improve existing programs if
resources aren't available for new programs.
"It's urgent that people speak up now," says Bonnie Lawrence,
communication manager at FCA. "Legislatures all over the country
are slashing programs. They need to hear that these programs are essential
for public health."
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Scientist Traces His Journey
I Choose to Live: A Journey Through Life With ALS,
by William Sinton, 2002, 155 pages. Banbury Publishing, (800) 247-6553, www.banburypublishing.com.
This autobiography chronicles Sinton's experience with ALS, from his
first symptoms to his current life relying on a ventilator. It's also
a memoir that spans his boyhood adventures, military service in World
War II, the nurturing of his interest in science and the progress of
a distinguished career.
An astrophysicist and professor of physics and astronomy, Sinton has
a scientific nature which permeates the book, whether he's explaining
the nature of the disease or a medical procedure he's undergone.
Readers also may find curious some of the factors in Sinton's past
that coincide with some theories about what causes ALS. For example,
he's experienced significant exposure to mercury, other chemicals and
heavy metals in his work; been exposed to viruses and bacteria; and
suffered a shrapnel injury in the war.
Sinton, who lives in Flagstaff, Ariz., seems to approach life's challenges
with a scientist's analytical thinking, and his conclusion about having
ALS is that he, as the title suggests, chooses not to dwell on what
he has lost, but on what he still has.
"There are so many things that are interesting in life that I
look forward to each day," Sinton writes, crediting his wife, Marge,
family, friends and caregivers who enable him to do so.
As is the case with many other self-published memoirs, this book is
best approached not as a profound piece of literature, but as a candid,
first-person view of how one man with ALS and his family face the challenge
of maintaining a good quality of life.
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ALS Chats Gear Up for New Year
As you open the brand new 2003 calendar that you received from Santa
Claus last month, MDA's ALS Division would like you to take note of
some upcoming events that you're invited to attend — without having
to leave the comfort of your home.
Clinical-Research Online Chats
The 2003 MDA clinical-research online chat series is under way, offering
you the opportunity to chat live with experts from the front lines of
MDA's fight against more than 40 neuromuscular diseases, including ALS.
Two sessions should prove to be of special interest to those with ALS:
• Jan. 22 — Management of Pain with Neuromuscular
Disease, hosted by Greg Carter, co-director of the MDA/ALS
Center at the University of Washington Medical Center in Seattle. (Read
an interview
with Carter in The MDA/ALS Newsletter, October 2002).
• Feb. 19 — Respiration/ Ventilation with NMD,
hosted by Jerold Reynolds, respiratory therapist in the Department of
Neurology at Ohio State University in Columbus.
All clinical-research chats are scheduled on Wednesday
nights from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. (EST). Registration
and participation are free. For more information,
simply point your Web browser to
http://www.mda.org/chat/calendar.html.
Chats Continue
MDA's regularly scheduled chat sessions will also continue in 2003:
Living With ALS, hosted by Jeff "ragingbear"
every Monday at 2 p.m. (EST), is for people with ALS and caregivers
to share information about life with ALS and ideas for making it better.
Jeff received his ALS diagnosis in October 1994, and has used a ventilator
since December 1997.
Issues That Matter, hosted by Julie "julie-s"
Scurich and David "david-j" Jayne, a longtime advocate of
issues important to people with ALS. (This monthly chat, held the last
Tuesday of each month from 9 to 10 p.m. (EST), is on hiatus while Jayne
continues to recover from surgery.)
ALS Chat Group from Connecticut
is hosted by local MDA/ALS Task Force on Public
Awareness members Dave "dgals" and
Bill "friar-tuck" and MDA Health Care
Service Coordinator Elissa "woof."
This chat promotes a wide-ranging discussion
about ALS and how MDA is helping those affected.
It's held the third Thursday of each month from
2:30 to 4:30 p.m. (EST).
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