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Lauren Kovach

Brighton resident named Advocate of the Year by state Alzheimer’s Assoc.

Brighton resident Lauren Kovach was named the Alzheimer’s Association Michigan Chapter 2020 Advocate of the Year during the Association’s “Alzheimer’s, Long-term Care and COVID-19 Town Hall with U.S. Senator Debbie Stabenow.”

Kovach was awarded the inaugural honor for her work as an ambassador for the Alzheimer’s Association and the Alzheimer’s Impact Movement, serving as the main point of contact with local government representatives, including Senator Stabenow.

Kovach’s grandmother, Helen Tannas, was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s nearly 20 years ago at the age of 82. At that time, Kovach and her mother, Pat, took on caregiving responsibilities and vowed to take care of their “chupe” (Macedonian for “little girl”) at home.

Kovach reached out to the Alzheimer’s Association to learn more about the devastating disease — and she’s been a volunteer, fundraiser and advocate ever since.

“Volunteering helps me cope, turning pain into action,” Kovach said. “The people I have met in my 10 years volunteering, both advocates and their families, they are what truly give me hope.”

She has attended the Alzheimer’s Impact Movement Advocacy Forum numerous times and has advocated for the Palliative Care and Hospice Education and Training Act (PCHETA), the Bold Alzheimer’s Act, and the Improving Hope for Alzheimer’s Act, among many others.

“All of these pieces of legislation would help the 190,000 Michiganders living with Alzheimer’s and other dementias,” Kovach said. “Early diagnosis is key so that families and their loved ones can come up with a long term care plan. And of course, every year we fight for more federal funding from the NIH. Research is crucial. Someone told me once the cure is sitting in a Petri dish out there somewhere. We just need the money to find it.”

Additionally, Kovach has headed up the planning committee for her local Walk to End Alzheimer’s, which raises awareness and funds for Alzheimer’s care, support and research. She also was recently recognized by the Alzheimer’s Impact Movement (AIM) as a member of the 2020 Alzheimer’s Congressional Team (ACT) of the Year.

Though Tannas died from Alzheimer’s in 2017 at age 97 after a 15-year-long battle, Kovach continues on in her fight against the disease.

“I crawled in bed and laid my head on her chest as she was taking her final breaths,” Lauren says. “I told her through tears that it was OK to go. And I promised her that I would never stop fighting for her, for the three of us, and the immeasurable bond we shared.”

For more information or to get involved, visit alz.org/gmc or alzimpact.org. To join a Walk to End Alzheimer’s in your community, visit alz.org/walk today.

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