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Guest Post: We Don’t Have Five Months to Wait
Under current law, people disabled with ALS who qualify for Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) must wait five months before receiving SSDI benefits. Every person must wait, regardless of the level of disability or how fast the Social Security Administration (SSA) approves their claim.
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ALS Takes Away a Person's Livelihood
This weekend, people across the country will pause to reflect on and celebrate the economic and social value of American workers. And on Monday, many of them will enjoy a paid holiday off from work.
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With ALS, Every Day Adds Up
For people living with ALS and their caregivers and family, every day adds up. ALS is a journey that begins months, even years, before a diagnosis. Because there’s no definitive test for ALS, doctors must run through a battery of tests, ruling out other potential syndromes, conditions, and diseases before making a diagnosis of ALS.
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Memory Boxes Help Kids Impacted by ALS Cope with Loss
A diagnosis of ALS takes its toll in many ways. The person living with ALS eventually loses the ability to move, eat, speak, and breathe. But the effects of this disease don’t end there. Witnessing a loved one’s experience and being a caregiver have profound effects on family members and children, too.
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Guest Post: Steven’s Stompers and Bladen County Aim for a Cure for ALS
The story of Steven’s Stompers begins with Steven Davis. Steven is a lifelong resident of Bladen County, N.C., an avid outdoorsman, a pipe fitter by trade, and an outstanding athlete. He began noticing symptoms in February 2012 and was diagnosed with ALS by a neurologist on April 30, 2012, at age 34.
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Dr. Stephen Goutman: Passionate Clinician Dedicated to Improving the Lives of People with ALS
We are joined today by Dr. Stephen Goutman, an associate professor of neurology at the University of Michigan and the director of Michigan Medicine’s ALS Center of Excellence and Multidisciplinary ALS Clinic. The clinic was recently awarded an ALS Association Clinical Management grant to support Dr. Goutman’s important study aimed at improving non-invasive ventilation for people with ALS through the use of custom-printed 3D masks.

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Home, Smart Home
Assistive technology can provide a major benefit to people living with ALS and their caregivers. That is why some of the advances we have seen in recent years, thanks to generous donations from the ALS Ice Bucket Challenge and beyond, are so exciting.
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Join Us at ALS Community Workshop: Developing Drugs for Treatment, Guidance for Industry – July 12
The ALS Association is hosting ALS Community Workshop: Developing Drugs for Treatment, Guidance for Industry on July 12 in Washington, D.C., and the entire ALS community is invited. The goal of the workshop will be to provide targeted feedback and information to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) from people with ALS, caregivers, and stakeholders to inform revisions of the FDA’s Draft Guidance on ALS Drug Development.
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Sophie Rubin: ‘Saying Something and Doing Something Are So Different’
In recognition of ALS Awareness Month, we’ve been sharing a lot of new stories about people living with the disease and their caregivers, the volunteers and health care providers who help make the lives of people with ALS better, the powerful fundraisers and the participants in Walk to Defeat ALS and Team Challenge ALS events, and the researchers fighting for a cure. This is the 14th profile in that series.

“I raise my voice for the people who can’t. Someone I love was affected by ALS, so it affected me as well. I say what I [feel] the people who lost their communication abilities would want to be said,” 13-year-old Sophie Rubin said.
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Guest Post: ‘ALS is What I Have, Not Who I Am’
Bad things happen to good people every day. That’s just the nature of life. But it doesn’t mean we stop living and loving. My ALS story officially started on a warm fall afternoon in September 2001. I had been having difficulties with speaking and swallowing for several months. After more than two months of seeing about a dozen different medical professionals, and having more tests than one can imagine, I sat in the small examination room of a local neurologist.
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Dawn Loves Nash: Inspiring Hope Through Song
Dawn & Nash are a husband and wife duo called “Dawn Loves Nash.” They’re also artists who are living and sharing their “hippie gypsy pop” music in and around Nashville, Tenn. Influenced by Sting, John Denver, Paul Simon, Bob Dylan, Fleetwood Mac, Willie Nelson, and Patsy Cline, Dawn Loves Nash aspires to help others through music.
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Margot Vaughan: ‘We Are Too Close to Quit’
Margot Vaughan has been fighting ALS for more than two years. But she hasn’t been fighting alone. “My family is totally devoted to me,” Margot said. “They keep me going and I’m lucky and grateful to have such an amazing family by my side.”
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Donna Boring: “Laughing It Is”
“If I have to be the face of ALS,” Donna Boring said, “it’s not a bad face to have.” Donna was diagnosed with ALS in 2008, at the age of 37. She is one of the heroes in The ALS Association’s new public service announcement (PSA) campaign showing “The Reality of ALS.”
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Guest Post: This is The Fight of Our Lives
My name’s Aaron, but my friends call me “Bankz.” I’m a 39-year-old husband to Abbie and father to seven-month-old Lincoln. It was a real shock when I received my ALS diagnosis less than six months ago. But now that I’ve had some time to let things sink in, it’s time to make some noise.
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Certified Treatment Center of Excellence Spotlight: Froedtert & Medical College of Wisconsin
Studies have shown the value of attending a multidisciplinary clinic for a person with ALS, including longer survival, increased quality of life, and improved access to potential therapies. Since 1998, The ALS Association’s national Certified Treatment Centers of Excellence (CTCEs) network has provided ALS care and services in a supportive atmosphere, with an emphasis on hope and quality of life.
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Meet Anthony Giampetruzzi: A Bright, Young ALS Researcher
The ALS Association is happy to continue our tradition of supporting bright, young scientists in ALS research through our Milton Safenowitz Postdoctoral Fellowship Program. These awards encourage young scientists to enter and, importantly, to remain in the ALS field.
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