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Living with Alzheimer's, ex-Sen. Proxmire is cut off from his storied past
The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel ^ | January 26, 2003 | Katherine M. Skiba

Posted on 12/02/2003 2:22:50 PM PST by Mr. Morals

Living with Alzheimer's, ex-Sen. Proxmire is cut off from his storied past
BY KATHERINE M. SKIBA
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

WASHINGTON - KRT NEWSFEATURES

(KRT) - He was a poster child for health and fitness, a physician's son from a tony enclave near Chicago. His degrees bore the imprint of Harvard and Yale.

For more than 31 years he toiled in the U.S. Senate, becoming the nation's best-known scold against government waste. His public relations genius was such that his name became a household word.

Bill Proxmire.

His legendary hand-shaking among throngs at the Wisconsin State Fair, Green Bay Packers games and Milwaukee Brewers games made the people of Wisconsin feel they knew him - personally.

He was a most public man - until the curtain came crashing down.

Brainy, willful and disciplined, the author of "Your Joyride to Health" and "You Can Do It! Senator Proxmire's Exercise, Diet and Relaxation Plan" was sick.

He had Alzheimer's disease.

Today he is 87 years old. He lives out a fog-shrouded twilight, one no one would have predicted, far from the klieg lights that once trailed him.

"Prox," as he's called, is oblivious to many chapters of his life, notably his Senate years from 1957 to 1989.

---

He resides in a state-of-the-art long-term care facility near Baltimore but rarely, these days, can identify his loved ones when they visit.

He confuses wife Ellen, 78, for his late mother. He mixes up eldest son Ted, 55, with a brother of his who died in a plane crash decades ago.

Proxmire was placed in the facility, Copper Ridge in Sykesville, Md., about a year and a half ago.

As his relatives tell it, the placement capped a nerve-jangling odyssey marked by his nighttime escape from an Alzheimer's unit in a Washington hospital, a temporary stint in its psychiatric ward and, finally, a stretch at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore.

It was in March 1998, almost five years ago and years after leaving the Senate, that he disclosed publicly that he had Alzheimer's.

"I can't remember what I've read," he said then. "Sometimes I can't remember where I am, although it doesn't happen very often."

---

Much has changed since. Long a devotee of the Library of Congress, where he kept a study carrel, he got lost once on Washington's Southwest Freeway - on foot. He fell down a lot. Once he put his running sneakers in the microwave - and burned them to a crisp, Ellen Proxmire says.

His gait is unsteady. His right front tooth is missing. The left side of his face wears old scars from cuts suffered when he has dropped to the floor.

About a year ago, he had a minor stroke.

But the once-fastidious weight watcher now eats heartily. Given his illness, his weight had fallen to 129 pounds before he arrived at Copper Ridge. Now Proxmire, who stands 5 feet, 10 inches, weighs about 175.

He has a full-time personal attendant who keeps him, in Ellen Proxmire's words, "pink and polished."

But his wife remains blunt about his fate. "He doesn't know where he is, or who he is," she acknowledges of the man she remembers as "absolutely brilliant, with tons of energy, and never sick."

They married 46 years ago.

Now, she says, her once-famous, once-vibrant spouse is "happy like a 3-year-old."

---

She and Ted Proxmire, her stepson, invited a reporter to Copper Ridge to see the former senator this month, asking only that he not be photographed.

Ted Proxmire, an investment counselor who lives in Bethesda, visits every Saturday. As he did last week, he brings along Mikey, a 2 1/2-year-old wheaten terrier, a hit with Dad and others in the 126-bed facility.

"Hello, doggie," Ted's father said. "You have no fleas. You have no bad manners."

All told, Proxmire said little - and less that made sense. Mostly, he kept up a low, incessant hum.

"What have you got there?" he asked the reporter at one point, sizing up her notebook and tape recorder.

The reporter identified her newspaper, whose predecessors devoted a mountain of newsprint to the man over his decades in public life.

"She's making notes," the son said.

"You've got your shirt off?" the father replied.

"No, no, no. She's making notes," the son said.

"I'll be darned," father said.

---

Copper Ridge, owned by the Episcopal Ministries to the Aging, sits, coincidentally, on the site of an old dairy farm.

Ellen Proxmire said she visited more than a dozen facilities before choosing it. Ironically, it was Sibley Memorial Hospital - the place from which her husband escaped in 2001 - that recommended it.

The family had hoped Sibley would be perfect; it was in northwest Washington near their old home, which Ellen has given up in exchange for a high-rise apartment.

Remembering Sibley, she says: "He wasn't there more than two days when he escaped. And I had a caregiver stay with him during the day, thinking that would make the transition easier.

"Then we didn't know where he was. And he just showed up at the front door, and said, `I've had a long day at work.'"

"A week later, he was at Sibley in the psych ward, before he could be transferred to Johns Hopkins."

Ellen Proxmire, long a noted event planner in the nation's capital, remarks: "He could have been murdered or hit by a car. And under no circumstances would Sibley ever take him back.

"But they knew about Copper Ridge."

---

Copper Ridge has an affiliation with the renowned Johns Hopkins. Doctors kept Proxmire at Hopkins for three or four weeks, taking him off all medications so they could evaluate him afresh and plan a new course of treatment.

The family says he took to his new home at Copper Ridge. "His moods were not nearly as erratic, they were more consistent," Ted Proxmire says. "He seemed to be happier and much more mellow."

Ellen Proxmire says she went for months before getting up the nerve to ask Prox how he felt about Copper Ridge.

"I adore it," he told her.

Prox was nothing if not a creature of habit. The hand-shaking? In his days on the campaign trail, he kept a clicker in his other pocket to keep track of the handshakes - and there were millions, says Matt Flynn, a longtime friend and former state Democratic Party chairman.

Flynn knew. He shook hands alongside Prox in Flynn's own campaign for the U.S. Senate - and discovered the clicker.

---

Prox used to compete against Gaylord Nelson, long his Senate counterpart from Wisconsin, to see who could do the most push-ups. He jogged the 5-mile route to work, rain or shine. He had been rising early to exercise since he was a teen.

He set records for consecutive roll-call votes in the Senate. He gave thousands of speeches, one day after the next, for an anti-genocide treaty. He was a compulsive newspaper reader. He devoured crossword puzzles.

And he loathed vacations.

From Ellen:

"You keep reading that if you eat properly and exercise a lot and go to bed early and don't drink and don't smoke - I mean, Bill was the most disciplined individual you could ever find.

"He ran. He was almost compulsive about exercise. He was very cautious about his diet. He was always to bed at 9:30. And he always got up early.

"If you could design a surefire, healthy regime, it was him.

"And it didn't keep him from getting this."

Alzheimer's is a progressive disease in which the nerve cells in the brain degenerate and brain matter shrinks. Four million Americans are thought to have the affliction, said not to play favorites among rich and poor, famous and ordinary.

Ronald Reagan, the former president, underscores that point as well as Proxmire.

Constantine Lyketsos, 41, is a Johns Hopkins professor of psychiatry who specializes in Alzheimer's. He doubles as chief of psychiatric services at Copper Ridge, which he says has a can-do attitude toward the disease.

"We don't see ourselves warehousing people, but treating them in a way that maximizes their quality of life, functioning and dignity," Lyketsos says.

He says the degenerative illness afflicts about one in three people ages 85 and older. He believes that in about 70 percent of the cases, genetics are the culprit. In the other 30 percent, factors such as head injury, stroke or depression factor in.

"I don't know if it's the case with the senator, but if it runs in the family, there's very little you can do," he says.

Ellen Proxmire says it's hard to say; Prox's parents didn't live as long as he has.

What of Proxmire's noted health regimens? The psychiatrist says only that, generally speaking, people like Prox - with previous good health, high socioeconomic background, intelligence - have more reserves to cope with the illness.

Prox was best known for his Golden Fleece awards, lampooning federal spending on chauffeurs for federal officials, wasteful military spending and some research studies, such as a $27,000 project on why prisoners escape.

He championed credit and finance reforms. He banged the drum - loudly - for an anti-genocide treaty, until he got it.

Today there are no more TV interviews, no more dinners in Georgetown, no more engagements from coast to coast, no more books and columns.

No more speeches.

No more Fleeces.

"You Can Do It!," his plan for exercise, diet and relaxation, is out of print; used copies are for sale on the Internet for $2.57.

People occasionally write for an autograph, though Ellen says his handwriting is barely legible now.

His aide, Shelby Muse, 56, from Baltimore, with him six days a week, with a sub on the seventh, might take him to Red Lobster or Wal-Mart. They used to go to movies together - Proxmire delighted in popcorn and favored comedies or political dramas - but not lately.

Copper Ridge, meanwhile, has a busy schedule of offerings: bingo, exercise, bean-bag toss and parties with mini-pizzas.

Ellen says he doesn't take part in much but goes to church sometimes.

Son Ted says he visits every week as a way to reciprocate for all Dad did. "He was willing to make all kinds of personal sacrifices for the benefit of his children, particularly in terms of money and time." He paid the tuition - for colleges and boarding schools - without a dime in scholarship money.

Ellen and Bill Proxmire have five children in all, and nine grandchildren. After a long, arduous journey, facing an uncertain future, they have come to terms with Prox's fate.

"He's very comfortable," Ellen says. "He's at peace, I guess, is the only way to describe it."


TOPICS: Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Wisconsin
KEYWORDS: alzheimers; prox; ussenate; williamproxmire; wisconsin
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This is a heart-breaking story about former Wisconsin Senator William Proxmire (1957-1989). :-(...
1 posted on 12/02/2003 2:22:51 PM PST by Mr. Morals
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To: Mr. Morals
Heart-breaking isn't the word.

Sometimes, I wonder just how much we do with research. Where does it all go?

2 posted on 12/02/2003 2:27:18 PM PST by Old Sarge (Serving YOU... on Operation Noble Eagle!)
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To: Old Sarge
Second to Ron Paul, he was my favorite member of Congress. Very sad.
3 posted on 12/02/2003 2:31:36 PM PST by Captain Kirk
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To: Mr. Morals
Sad. Very sad. Do hope research soon finds a way to end this hideous disease.
4 posted on 12/02/2003 2:34:26 PM PST by cricket
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To: Mr. Morals
Heart-breaking all right. I am going to visit my father in Miami next weekend. He can't recognize anyone, and is only 74.

There may be a worse disease out there, but I haven't experienced it in my family.
5 posted on 12/02/2003 2:38:54 PM PST by You Dirty Rats
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To: Old Sarge
Some research money is basic; it goes into uncovering the basic questions of how things work, without any immediate apparent application to a particular problem. Some research money is more applied; it is aimed at exploring a particular problem. Of course, nothing is actually as cut and dried as this. But in this case, as in many others, the people who are working more towards the applied end still are working with incomplete knowledge of the basic end. Usually, someone uncovers something at the basic end that gains the attention of someone who's more oriented towards application.

Your question taken to an extreme (that you didn't take it to, I hasten to add) is like those who figure that AIDS is a government plot, because if it wasn't all the money that's been spent on it by now would have come up with a cure. These things take their own time. I spent a significant part of my life in biochemistry research labs, and I can tell you that the people there are very smart, not all that well paid, and very dedicated to what they're doing.
6 posted on 12/02/2003 2:43:26 PM PST by RonF
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To: Mr. Morals
Always did like the Golden Fleece awards (although it must be pointed out that Proxmire was hypocritical in his support of dairy price supports and subsidies). I am sorry to hear of his, or anyone's, being ill with this ailment.
7 posted on 12/02/2003 2:46:40 PM PST by pogo101
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To: You Dirty Rats
I think paranoid-delusional disorders are even worse. My mother believed for most of her life that everyone was spying on her and out to get her, and she was abusive toward everyone who tried to explain otherwise. She drove away every friend and relative she had (except me - I was probably just too stupid to give up on her). Though there are medications to treat such conditions, just try getting a paranoid to take one. As long as she was able to fool the doctor into thinking she was rational (which she was, about half the time) then nothing could be done.

Eventually, her paranoia did her in - she didn't follow her doctor's instructions to deal with her congestive heart failure, and died last year at 70. It sounds cruel to say it was a relief to everyone in the family...but it was.

8 posted on 12/02/2003 2:47:05 PM PST by Mr. Jeeves
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To: Mr. Morals
"heart-breaking"? Perhaps to Proxmire's family; my heart goes out to them.

However, I think we would all do well to remember just what Senator Proxmire's public career was like with respect to scientific research. Yep, he was a big enemy of funding R&D, with his stupid "Golden Fleece" awards that never seemed to be awarded to crummy social welfare boondoggles, but always to some group of scientists on a federal grant that were guilty of thinking outside the box, pursuing research in some way that Proxmire didn't or couldn't understand. NASA alone has never recovered from his career.

And so he now sits in a fog of unknowing blankness. Who's to say that we might not have made some huge advances in understanding Alzheimer's decades ago from some research he helped s***-can? If we might have, then his fate might not be poetic justice, but it is still ironic.
9 posted on 12/02/2003 2:51:55 PM PST by Paladin2b
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To: RonF
VERY informative! Thank You!
10 posted on 12/02/2003 3:05:16 PM PST by Old Sarge (Serving YOU... on Operation Noble Eagle!)
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To: Mr. Jeeves
"She drove away every friend and relative she had (except me - I was probably just too stupid to give up on her)"

Never confuse the words "stupid" with "faithful" (and loving as well.) You did good Mr. Jeeves.

11 posted on 12/02/2003 3:06:30 PM PST by davisfh
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To: Mr. Morals
So very very sad, but at least he is at peace, and happy as a 3 year old. It is the family that is suffering, because the person who you loved isn't really there anymore.
12 posted on 12/02/2003 3:10:29 PM PST by ladyinred (The Left have blood on their hands!)
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To: Old Sarge
Sometimes, I wonder just how much we do with research. Where does it all go?

Actually, research is coming along. There are drugs now that if taken in the very beginning of the disease can slow down or retard the effects of Alzheimer's. Also taking a motrin type product is being shown to help. They are making progress thank God.

13 posted on 12/02/2003 3:13:07 PM PST by ladyinred (The Left have blood on their hands!)
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To: Mr. Morals
Cry me a river! I never expected to reveal this on FR..BUT!....

I'm a full time caregiver to an Alzheimer infected Mom.

I singlehandedly take care of her. I have no government help, monitarily or otherwise. I gave up my life in '96 when her disease almost destroyed her. She's 81 now. I never married.

I don't have $3 to $7 thousand a month for nursing homes or nursing care. I pay for everything out of my personal life savings which is almost at an end. Nurses cost $18 to $22 an hour. Her requirements are luckily minimal but her disease is in the final stages.

For me to walk out my front door costs me an avg of $20 bucks an hour for nurses. I have no family help. I shop once a week and pay all my bills online.

Medicare has no provisions for alzheimers. Medicaid does, but requires signing over her estate to the government if her retirement income does not cover the expenses, so inotherwords useless.

I'm pretty fed up with hearing all these sob stories from ex Senators or Hollywood big wigs or even our cherished President Reagan's family that have "other people" care for their familie's alzheimers patient and look for sympathy.

Try doing this sometime in your life and get back to me with the tears.

Lastly, my passion for my Harley is still strong and sneaking out at 1am (hoping she doesn't wake) for an hour and a half ride is my only escape.

Looking forward there is only a funeral and my own old age.
14 posted on 12/02/2003 3:14:08 PM PST by JoeSixPack1 (POW/MIA Bring 'em Home, Or Send us Back!! Semper Fi)
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To: ladyinred
Platlets attach themselves to the brainstem neutralizing the electrical impulses to the brain. These platlets form under a gelatinous shieled between the brainstem and the skull cap.

There is no known drugs that can enter the gelatinous tissue to eradicate the platlets.
15 posted on 12/02/2003 3:16:44 PM PST by JoeSixPack1 (POW/MIA Bring 'em Home, Or Send us Back!! Semper Fi)
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To: You Dirty Rats
God bless you and your father. My mother suffered from that hideous disease for the last ten years of her life.
16 posted on 12/02/2003 3:18:11 PM PST by billhilly (If you're lurking here from DU, I trust this post will make you sick)
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To: Paladin2b
NASA alone has never recovered from his career.

I remember a quote that "NASA neglected to figure out a way to run the rockets on either milk or cheese" with regard to Sen. Proxmire.

Don't forget about all the farm subsidies that never got the golden fleece either.

Great observation about starving R&D. It is very poetic. And just. He practiced short term politics, rather than long term common sense and planning.

Wasn't he one of the first to have hair transplants? I wonder how grants for that suffered under his reign.

I'll have a emphathetic thought for his family.

17 posted on 12/02/2003 3:43:28 PM PST by Calvin Locke
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To: Mr. Morals
I think everyone in Wisconsin met this man at least once. I know that I shook his hand in front of the flower building at the Wisconsin State Fair several different years.

He's the only Democrat I ever voted for. All though the last time he ran I pulled the "R" lever for the first time, and have been doing so ever since.

18 posted on 12/02/2003 3:59:18 PM PST by StACase
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To: You Dirty Rats
My 87 year old mother is sitting behind me right now, talking to her brother who has been dead three years. She started having symptoms about 9 years ago.

We activated the alarm system to beep when a door is opened about 4 years ago. She doesn't try to leave anymore. She would sneak out and sit in the car.

She is happy. Doesn't have a care in the world. Doesn't remember her husband of 50 years--which seems to be what triggered it.

We take it one day at a time. I have help during the day but it is confining at night because nobody wants to work for an hour or two.
19 posted on 12/02/2003 4:32:38 PM PST by lonestar (Don't mess with Texas)
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To: Mr. Morals
Proxmire appears in the third volume of Caro's life of LBJ, as a Democratic senator with the guts to defy Johnson.

By the way, smoking prevents Alzheimer's. Depending on how you look at it, it either cuts the incidence in half, or postpones the onset by five years.

20 posted on 12/02/2003 4:41:23 PM PST by aristeides
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