Parkinsn's Email List Message
Posting to the Parkinsn List is a benefit of Subscription
Re: Front page of today's Kennebec Journal,daily paper of Maine's capital, Augusta
Camilla, Txs for the post re:Parkinson tulip bulbs. Who would the contact
person be if a support group would like to order said bulbs to fund
raise/raise awarness of pd in our own area?
Jeanette Fuhr
----------
From: Camilla Flintermann <flintepc@xxxxxxxxxx>
To: PARKINSN@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Front page of today's Kennebec Journal,daily paper of Maine's
capital, Augusta
Date: Thursday, October 14, 1999 2:33 PM
With Harold's permission I'm posting this excellent piece of public
relations on the lists:
>Date: Thu, 14 Oct 1999 09:29:08 -0400
>From: Harold Jones <harwin@xxxxxxx>
>Subject: Front page of today's Kennebec Journal,
> daily paper of Maine's capital, Augusta
>To: flintepc@xxxxxxxxxx
>Reply-to: harwin@xxxxxxx
>MIME-version: 1.0
>X-Priority: 3
>X-MSMail-priority: Normal
>Original-recipient: rfc822;flintepc@xxxxxxxxxx
>
>Camilla: I am no longer on list , but I wanted to share with you an
article
>which highlights the Maine Parkinson Society efforts to build awareness of
>PD in our state by using the beautiful spring flowers of tulips for a
>symbol. Karen worked with Ann Rutherford to bring their successful ideas
to
>Maine. MS and MD have such a higher awareness than PD. In the long run,
>success in Congress will be based on public awareness of the depth of PD
>incidence . We have found print media to be very helpul to us in the short
>life of our organization. We have formed an alliance with APDA so as to
>maximize our impact.
>
>Harold L. Jones
>
> Thursday, October 14, 1999
>
> Flower power
> Parkinson's tulips raise awareness
>
> By MECHELE COOPER, Staff Writer
> Copyright © 1999 Blethen Maine Newspapers
> Inc.
> E-mail this story
>to a friend
>
> AUGUSTA ? Michael J. Fox, Mohammed Ali and Janet Reno
have
> something in common with Karen Bardo.They all were diagnosed with
>Parkinson's disease.
> Bardo, 46, a Cony High School graduate who lives in Alna, was diagnosed
>with the disease three years ago.
>
> In her search for more information on Parkinson's disease, Bardo,
>anadministrative secretary with the Wiscasset School Department, conducted
>a search on the Internet. Stumbling upon an
> Internet support group called the Parkinson's Information Exchange, she
>found a way to
> cope with her affliction ? by helping others.
>
> In Canada, Dr. James Parkinson Colour Tulip Bulbs are sold by Parkinson's
>disease support
> groups as a way to raise awareness and funds for research.
>The red tulip with white edges was named after Dr. James Parkinson, who
>first described the
> symptoms of Parkinson's disease in 1817. J.W.S. Vander Wereld, a
>Dutch horticulturist with Parkinson's disease, developed and registered
>the Dr. James Parkinson Tulip in 1981.
> Bardo, who last year founded the Maine Parkinson Society with Greg
>Leeman, a 39-year-old from Portland who has had the disease for 10 years,
>wanted to sell the tulips in Maine.
>
> "Newfoundland's support groups use the Dr. James
>Parkinson Tulip very successfully to raise awareness, and as a symbol of
>their hope for a cure," Bardo said. "I really liked this idea, so I
>e-mailed Anne Rutherford in Newfoundland and started asking her
>questions about selling the Parkinson tulip here in Maine. Anne's help
>has played a major role in the first year's success of MEPS' tulip
>project."
>In June, the organization took 8,400 orders for the tulips. Public
>"Gardens of Hope" will be planted in Augusta, Brunswick and Wiscasset. The
>Kennebec Savings Bank in Augusta purchased 500 tulip bulbs, and the city
>of Augusta received a donation of 200 from Bardo's father, Harold Jones,
>who lives in Augusta andis the group's secretary. "One of our main
>missions is to get more services in
>Maine," Bardo said. "There are no movement disorder specialists here.
>I go to a neurologist in Bath, but people in the more advanced stages end
>up seeing specialists, and they have to leave the state. A lot of them go
>to Boston, and a lot of them don't even go to neurologists;
>they see general practitioners."
> Parkinson's is perceived as an older person's disease, Bardo said, but
>one-third of those diagnosed are younger than 50. People with
>Parkinson's disease stop producing dopamine, a neurotransmitter that
>carries messages from one part of the brain to another. By the time the
>disease is diagnosed, 80 percent of the chemical has left the body.
> Carl Barker, a retired financial planner and stockbroker whose wife,
>Nancy, has Parkinson's disease, is president of the American Parkinson
>Disease Association, State of Maine Chapter. Barker, who sent Parkinson
>tulips to Michael J. Fox via his Boston specialist, agrees with Bardo
>that there is a need for greater awareness in the state and more
>funding for research programs.
> "There are a good many people in Maine and around the nation who have
>Parkinson's, and it receives the lowest level of funding," Barker said.
>"The National Institute of Health gave over $1,000*
>per patient for AIDS, and Parkinson's in the area of $30*per patient." In
>Maine, there are five support groups under the American Parkinson's
>Association. Bardo said the Maine Parkinson Society has been working with
>this group. In April, they cooperated on World Awareness Day, and in
>September the groups sponsored a Parkinson conference in Portland. She
>said they will join forces
>to start an information referral center. Bardo's father, Harold Jones,
>retired senior vice
>president of Fleet Bank, said he became involved with the Maine Parkinson
>Society as a way to support his daughter. "For our first year, we were
>quite successful; there will be two fairly large tulip gardens in
>Augusta," Jones said. "We feel it's important that information is given
>to the public. Parkinson's is less known than any other disease, and
>there are more people with
>Parkinson's than multiple sclerosis, Lou Gehrig Disease and muscular
>dystrophy combined. It's estimated that there are about 7,000 in
>Maine."
> Dave Gomeau, Augusta city arborist, chose Lithgow Public Library for
>the 200 tulip bulbs donated by Jones. The bulbs were planted on Wednesday
>as part of the continuation of the entrance
>gardens to the library. "After the tulips go, we'll plan our annuals for
the
>summer, and in the summer, mums," Gomeau said. "This is one of our 18
>garden sites that the city maintains."
>
> MAINE TODAY | Press Herald Online | WGME NewsChannel 13 |
>Maine
>
*NOTE: I do believe the figures for funding are not accurate, froim
what I've seen lately.
Camilla
Camilla Flintermann, CG for Peter 81/70/55
Oxford, Ohio
<flintepc@xxxxxxxxxx>
"Ask me about the CARE list for
Caregivers of Parkinsonians ! "
Parkinsn's Archive Treasures Doctors, students, patients and caregivers find current Parkinson's information such as the Algorithm, Caregivers Handbook, and talks by respected Movement Disorder Specialists.
Mail converted by MHonArc
2.6.10
Site Hosting donated by He.net
&
Grant from The Parkinson Alliance