12/11/2025
We are proud to be partners with the Seattle area American Indian and Alaska Native community on the UW Alzheimer's Disease Research Center (UW ADRC). This week, PBS NewsHour featured the center’s efforts to improve the lives of Native American people living with 's disease and related dementias.
Indigenous faculty and staff at IREACH from the WSU Elson S. Floyd College of Medicine and WSU College of Veterinary Medicine Paul G. Allen School for Global Health lead a component of the UW ADRC that focuses on building trust among American Indian and Alaska Native people in research and researchers. As Linda Holt, a former health director of the Suquamish Tribe who is enrolled in the study, shared in the PBS story, “Native Americans are very hesitant about volunteering for these types of things, and that comes historically from studies that were involuntarily done on Native American people.” Cultural beliefs, higher rates of risk factors for Alzheimer’s and dementia, and a population over 65 that is expected to double by 2060 require researchers to make thoughtful considerations to include American Indian and Alaska Native people in ways that are congruent with their unique worldviews.
Under the guidance of a community advisory board, the IREACH team is conducting outreach and engagement to increase knowledge and awareness of Alzheimer’s and dementia among American Indian and Alaska Native people. Information shared by study participants will help shape communication materials and recruitment strategies, as well as best practices for the return of biomarker and genetic results, for participants and their communities.
As a result of the IREACH team’s efforts, research on Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias is more likely to benefit all populations, and particularly American Indian and Alaska Native Peoples. Learn more about our efforts in the story below.
WSU Spokane
UW Memory and Brain Wellness Center
UW Medicine
It’s estimated that around 7 million Americans have Alzheimer’s disease, a number that’s expected to double by 2060. But researchers have found that some of the highest rates of cognitive impairment and dementia exist in a population that’s long been one of the most difficult to study: Nativ...