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PARKINSON'S CASES SET TO DOUBLE
Arbor Books , Arbor Books
Published 05/14/2009 - 1:31 p.m. EST ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Arbor Books
Website:
http://www.arborbooks.c...

(PressMediaWire) - Springfield, GA - While the number of people diagnosed 
with Parkinson's disease worldwide is already thought to be more than four 
million, a new study says that the world's largest nations are set to see a 
doubling of that number within twenty-five years.
According to a study published by the journal Neurology, countries like 
China, India and the United states have allocated relatively few resources 
to chronic diseases such as Parkinson's, focusing instead on communicative 
illnesses such as HIV. In addition, world populations are growing older, 
meaning more people are living long enough to develop diseases like 
Parkinson's.
"It's so important that the world's leaders realize how devastating 
Parkinson's is," says author and Parkinson's advocate Kay Mixson Jenkins. 
"Certainly many diseases are challenging, but the degenerative diseases 
present a major burden to every aspect of a country's medical 
infrastructure."
Ms. Jenkins' book, Who Is Pee Dee? Explaining Parkinson's Disease to a 
Child, is the story of Colt, a young boy whose mother has been diagnosed 
with Parkinson's. It is set to go international, and Ms. Jenkins says she 
hopes the book will make more people aware of the devastating effect the 
disease can have on families.
"It affects a person's ability to do even the simplest things," says Ms. 
Jenkins. "Even tying shoes or going for groceries can become a nightmare."
That nightmare could cost developing nations as much as $550 billion in 
national income over the next ten years, according to the study.
In Who Is Pee Dee?, Ms. Jenkins explains how some of these new Parkinson's 
patients might be affected through various characters including:
. Mask, a stuffed bear that represents the way the disease can wear people 
down and rob them of their affectionate personalities.
. Pee Dee, a stuffed bear that explains the disease to the story's main 
character, Colt,
. Colt, who believes his mother doesn't love him because she is often too 
tired to play.
. The adults around Colt's mother, who are upset and unsure of what to do.

"This disease affects everyone in a family," says Ms. Jenkins. "When one 
person has PD, everyone around them does too in some ways."

For more information, contact the author directly via 
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(Who Is Pee Dee? Explaining Parkinson's Disease to a Child by Kay Mixson 
Jenkins; illustrated by Richard Morgan; ISBN: 978-0-9819129-0-5; $12.95; 33 
pages; 8" x 8"; hardcover; UCB, Inc.)

Rayilyn Brown
Director AZNPF
Arizona Chapter National Parkinson Foundation
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