Triple Your Impact This Holiday Season
Triple Your Impact This Holiday Season
Celebrate the holidays with a year-end gift that can go 3x as far to help provide care and support to the millions affected by Alzheimer's disease, and to advance critical research. But please hurry — this 3x Match Challenge ends soon.
Donate NowHouston & Southeast Texas Chapter Advocacy
We did it, Texas! Proposition 14 has passed.
Texas has secured its position as as National leader in dementia research. With the passage of Proposition 14, Texans have approved a $3 billion investment to launch the Dementia Prevention and Research Institute of Texas (DPRIT). Learn more here!
Become an Advocate
Advocates in Texas communicate with elected officials across Texas and Washington, D.C. via petitions, social media, phone calls, in-person meetings and other calls-to-action, participate in area events, and share their stories to help pass critical bipartisan legislation in Congress to help people living with dementia and their caregivers by increasing federal research funding and advancing Texas policy priorities.Become an advocate today and help advance public policies that help us make Alzheimer’s a local and national priority.
Texas policy priorities
Working with the Alzheimer's Impact Movement (AIM), a separately incorporated advocacy affiliate, the Alzheimer’s Association and the Houston & Southeast Texas Chapter fight for critical research, prevention and care initiatives at the federal and state levels. From increased research funding to improving Alzheimer’s care and support, we aim to advance critical federal and state policy priorities.
Learn about Texas policy priorities.
Texas Advocacy Day
Register today to join us for Advocacy Day at the Texas Capitol on Tuesday, May 6, 2025.Hear from our bipartisan legislative champions, get the latest updates on bills that support people living with dementia and their family caregivers, and meet with your state legislators.
Sign up to become an advocate
Texas public health data
A public health approach is necessary to lessen the burden and enhance the quality of life for people living with Alzheimer’s and dementia, caregivers, and their families.Texas public health data:
- Alzheimer’s Statistics (PDF)
- Cognitive Decline (PDF)
- Dementia Caregiving (PDF)
- Risk Factors (PDF)
- County-level Alzheimer’s Prevalence (PDF)
Take charge of your brain health today.
See the 10 Healthy Habits
Know the 10 warning signs of Alzheimer's.
Learn the Signs