Voluntary work may benefit Alzheimer's patients

A reader sent me a link to this report on today's NPR Morning Edition, about the potential benefits of voluntary work for patients with Alzheimer's Disease.

The program describes the work of Peter Whitehouse, who founded a school in Cleveland, Ohio 8 years ago, which regularly engages people who have been diagnosed with Alzheimer's and other forms of dementia in voluntary work with the pupils.

Voluntary work necessarily involves social interactions, which Whitehouse believes has significant health benefits for the patients. There is some evidence to support his claim - recent research shows that socializing promotes the survival of newborn cells in the zebra finch brain, and may preserve memory in humans by a similar mechanism. 

More like this

Radiation therapy is a common treatment for adults and children who present with tumours in or close to the brain. In the last 20 years, advances in radiotherapy have significantly improved the prognosis for brain cancer patients. However, the resulting longer survival rates reveal that the therapy…
A new study, published today in the open access journal PLoS One, provides evidence that remaining mentally active throughout life reduces the rate of age-related neurodegeneration and may therefore stave off Alzheimer's Disease and other forms of dementia. Valenzuela et al used the Lifetime of…
Photo by Einat Adar  Our feathered friends provide us with some beautiful examples of the link between brain and behaviour. In some bird species, groups of cells involved in seasonal behaviours die after they have performed their function, but are regenerated by neurogenesis as and when they…
Grrrr. Tell me if this article bugs you as much as it does me: Social Dementia' Decimates Special Neurons By Michael Balter Being human has its pluses and minuses. Our cognitive powers are superior to that of other animals, and we can act consciously to alter our destinies. On the other hand, our…

It makes sense that volunteering would be healthy for the brain. While brain games, song lyrics, fill in the blanks are all fine, we know (even if we have Alzheimer's) what's important and worth our time and what's just a time filler.

Purpose, deep satisfaction and pride that comes with knowing you've impacted a life does more than just kick on a few synapsis--it fills the heart and "soul."

My mother played the piano at her church (even with Alzheimer's and Parkinson's) until she was 89 years old. It meant so much to her that they needed her.

Thanks for this article and nice ot meet you.

~Carol D. O'Dell
Author of Mothering Mother: A Daughter's Humorous and Heartbreaking Memoir
available on Amazon
www.mothering-mother.com