For people living with ALS and their families, the holiday season can bring its own set of challenges, both physical and emotional. But the season can still be a time of togetherness, peace and joy. Here are some suggestions to help manage changes and enjoy this holiday season.
It's ALS Awareness Month, an opportunity for the ALS community to work together to help educate people about this devastating disease and shine a spotlight on the impact ALS has on the families it touches. To kick off the month, we’re highlighting eight easy ways you can get involved and help raise awareness of ALS, this month, and beyond.
We recently talked with Ashley Wong, one of the 2022 scholarship recipients, to learn more about her personal connection to ALS, what receiving the scholarship means to her, and her future plans in healthcare.
See the results of personal testimonies given by advocates and key stakeholders who appeared before the Ohio House Finance Committee in support of the ALS Amendment which would drastically increase funding for ALS care in Ohio.
The ALS Association, the country’s largest nonprofit committed to making ALS livable and finding a cure, today celebrated the Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) approval of AMX0035, a new treatment for people living with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), a fatal neurodegenerative disease. The Association invested $2.2 million of funds raised through the 2014 ALS Ice Bucket Challenge into the development and trial of AMX0035, and led the years-long advocacy campaign that pushed the FDA to approve the treatment prior to completion of an ongoing phase 3 trial.
In our work at The ALS Association’s National Office and Chapters, we all encounter a variety of situations involving persons with ALS and their families.
The ALS Association submitted a report to the FDA documenting the real impact ALS has on people living with the disease and their caregivers in order to inform the development of treatments. The information in the report draws from a survey of people living with ALS.
Jason Walker believes his greatest accomplishments have come since his diagnosis with ALS – specifically, being a husband and a father. He met his wife, Annie, three years into his ALS diagnosis and they started dating a year later. They were married in 2014.