In the middle of a life still being built — careers active, children young, futures imagined — a rare form of Alzheimer's arrived and quietly dismantled everything a family had assumed was solid. Posterior cortical atrophy, which steals not memory but the brain's ability to interpret the visible world, is a disease that confounds strangers and devastates those closest to it, precisely because its damage is so hard to see. Karina Acton Reid's account of her husband Andrew's diagnosis is both a personal reckoning and a structural indictment: the systems built to support dementia patients were no
Wife's account reveals hidden burden of young-onset Alzheimer's caregiving
A family experiences career loss, financial hardship, and emotional devastation as a husband loses independence and ability to parent while his wife becomes sole caregiver and breadwinner.