Kid Caregivers is a 501c3 nonprofit organization which supports and empowers children who are acting as caregivers. Our mission is to help young people cope and to enliven the lives of adults living with Alzheimer's disease. We offer intergenerational Puzzle Time programs and training to enhance eldercare globally. We encourage young people to use their skills to benefit the dementia community.
Monday, March 23, 2026
From Caregiver to Creator: How a Childhood Moment Became a Global Alzheimer’s Initiative
When I was four years old, I sat beside my grandmother solving puzzles, one of the few activities that still brought her joy as Alzheimer’s changed her world.
In those moments, I saw something I would only later understand. Even as memory faded, connection remained.
I became involved in Puzzles to Remember and grew into the role of CEO, expanding its reach to thousands of memory care communities,globally. Through this work, I focused on how simple tools like puzzles can support emotional engagement and dignity in Alzheimer’s care.
Now, that journey has come full circle.
Springbok Puzzles,collaborated with us to further develop and share our vision. The photo on the packaging is of me at age four with my grandmother, doing exactly what started it all.
This experience reminded me that innovation is not always about starting something new. It is about recognizing what works, building on it, and bringing it to more people.
And for me, it all started with a puzzle, and the love I had for my grandma.
🧠What Your Sense of Smell Can Tell Us About Alzheimer’s (And Why That’s Kind of Amazing)
🧠A new Nature Communications study found that cells in the nose show early signs of Alzheimer’s, even before symptoms appear. This suggests the sense of smell may offer a simple window into early brain changes.
Why this matters to me
At the Regeneron International Science and Engineering Fair, where my project received a 3rd Place Grand Award, I found that smell based sensory stimulation can improve emotional engagement in a geriatric population.
This research helps explain why.
Final thought
If Alzheimer’s begins in ways we cannot see, but might be able to smell, it changes how we think about detection and care.
Sometimes the most overlooked senses hold the most important answers.
📚 Source
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-026-70099-7
D’Anniballe VM, Kim S, Finlay JB, Wang M, Ko T, Luo S, Whitson HE, Johnson KG, Goldstein BJ (2026). Olfactory cleft biopsy analysis of Alzheimer’s disease pathobiology across disease stages. Nature Communications, 17:2245.
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