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Alzheimer’s & Brain Awareness Month: Perspectives on Memory, Caregiving, and Brain Health

05 Jun 2026

Alzheimer’s & Brain Awareness Month: Perspectives on Memory, Caregiving, and Brain Health

June marks Alzheimer’s & Brain Awareness Month, a time to deepen understanding of the brain, the families affected by Alzheimer’s and dementia, and the caregivers helping loved ones navigate profound change.

These conversations are both deeply personal and widely relevant. They touch on science, memory, aging, family responsibility, grief, resilience, and the daily realities of care. From research-backed strategies for lifelong brain health to moving stories of love, loss, and connection, APB’s voices help audiences approach these topics with greater compassion, clarity, and hope.

Voices on Memory, Caregiving, and Brain Health

Dr. John Medina

Brain scientist and New York Times bestselling author Dr. John Medina makes the science of the brain accessible, practical, and engaging. In his presentations on aging well, memory, and brain health, he shares research-based insights audiences can use to better understand the aging brain and support lifelong wellness.

Kim & Ashley Campbell

Alzheimer’s advocates and family of music legend Glen Campbell, Kim and Ashley Campbell share their family’s journey with honesty, music, and hope. Their perspective offers audiences a deeply personal look at caregiving, memory, connection, and life after an Alzheimer’s diagnosis.

Molly Jong-Fast

New York Times bestselling author, award-winning host of Fast Politics, and author of How to Lose Your Mother, Molly Jong-Fast brings humor, vulnerability, and insight to the realities of caregiving, family responsibility, and loss, including the slow grief that can come with Alzheimer’s and dementia.

Kimberly Williams-Paisley

Actress, New York Times bestselling author, and Alzheimer’s advocate Kimberly Williams-Paisley brings warmth and candor to conversations about caregiving and family. In Where the Light Gets In, she chronicles her mother’s battle with Alzheimer’s, offering audiences a heartfelt perspective on coping, connection, and care.

Together, these voices offer meaningful ways to better understand aging, support caregivers, and explore what brain health means across every stage of life.

+ Learn more about the voices helping audiences approach memory, caregiving, and brain health with greater understanding and compassion.