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What Julianne Moore's Oscar-Winning 'Still Alice' Role Gets Right About Alzheimer's


In her Best Actress acceptance speech, Julianne Moore expressed gratitude that her film “Still Alice” could raise awareness about early-onset Alzheimer’s disease. (Getty Images/Craig Sjodin)

Julianne Moore took home one of the night’s top honors at Sunday’s Academy Awards, winning Best Actress for her role as a professor with early-onset Alzheimer’s disease in Still Alice. In the film, Moore portrays a highly respected Columbia University linguistics expert who starts to get lost on her regular runs and, ironically, begins to grasp for words.

"I’m so happy, I’m thrilled actually, that we were able to hopefully shine a light on Alzheimer’s disease," Moore said in her acceptance speech for the Academy Award. In post-Oscar press interviews, she added, “I like stories about real people, and real relationships, and real families, and that’s what I respond to, and this movie had all of those things in it. It’s about a real issue.”

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Early-onset Alzheimer’s is defined as Alzheimer’s disease that affects a person younger than 65. The Alzheimer’s Association says that up to 5 percent of Americans with the disease have early-onset Alzheimer’s.

The symptoms are very similar between younger and older people with Alzhemer’s disease, says James Leverenz, MD, director of the Cleveland Center for Brain Health atCleveland Clinic’s Neurological Institute. “There has been a general sense that the younger onsets have a more aggressive and rapidly progressing disease than the older onsets, but every patient is a little bit different,” he tells Yahoo Health.

So-called “normal” memory loss, which can begin in the mid-30s, is characterized by a slowing in the retrieval of information, Leverenz says. It might be more difficult to come up with words and names, but you can still learn and hold onto new memories, he explains.

Alzheimer’s disease, on the other hand, involves difficulties learning and remembering new things. People with the condition “may be having a conversation over dinner and then an hour or two later they don’t remember that conversation,” Leverenz says. “In younger-onset patients, we also sometimes see problems with planning, organizing, and multitasking. A lot of people are still working, and they notice that at work they’re struggling to keep up because they don’t have the speed and organization that they used to have.” (For more telltale symptoms, the Alzheimer’s Association offers a guide to 10 early signs of the disease.)

Related: 5 Ways To Lower Your Risk For Alzheimer’s Disease (That Actually Work)

The challenge of coping with a new sense of self, portrayed inStill Alice, is a common experience for many patients, Leverenz confirms. It’s normal to feel frustrated that things that used to be easy and second nature are now difficult. 

“There can be a real loss of self,” he says. “I’ve had a lot of patients say to me, ‘This is something I always used to be able to do, in fact I took a lot of pride in my memory, and now it’s not a strength, it’s a weakness.”

Especially for people with early-onset Alzheimer’s disease, a proper diagnosis is important because many other conditions — such as hormone and nutritional deficiencies — can trigger similar symptoms, Leverenz explains. The Alzheimer’s Association recommends having an evaluation with a doctor who specializes in the condition.

Academy Award winner Julianne Moore struggles with her fading cognitive abilities in “Still Alice.”(Photo: Still Alice/©Sony Pictures Classics/Courtesy Everett Collection)

“So many people with this disease feel isolated and marginalized,” Moore said toward the end of her Oscar acceptance speech. “One of the wonderful things about movies is it makes us feel seen and not alone. And people with Alzheimer’s deserve to be seen, so we can find a cure.”

Although there is no cure for Alzheimer’s disease, a correct diagnosis can help you know what to expect and plan for the future. An early-onset diagnosis can create difficulties with work and retirement planning that many people don’t anticipate, Leverenz adds. “From my perspective, it is harder for early-onset patients,” he says. “We all think, ‘I could get Alzheimer’s when I’m in my 70s, 80s, or 90s,’ but nobody plans to get Alzheimer’s when they’re 55.” 

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