Wisconsin
Wisconsin needs more caregivers for people with Alzheimer’s
WISCONSIN — The Alzheimer’s Affiliation launched its 2023 report, “Alzheimer’s Illness Info and Figures.”
In Wisconsin alone, the report estimated there are 191,000 Alzheimer’s household caregivers, caring for greater than 120,000 individuals 65 and older with Alzheimer’s. The work they’re doing goes unpaid.
These household caregivers are estimated to offer 213 million hours of unpaid care every year, which the report valued at $3.97 billion.
By 2025, 130,000 Wisconsinites 65 and older are anticipated to have Alzheimer’s. That is an 8.3% enhance in simply 5 years.
“The brand new Info and Figures report exhibits that Alzheimer’s illness and different dementias proceed to be a big burden for too many Wisconsin households,” stated Dave Grams, govt director, Alzheimer’s Affiliation Wisconsin Chapter. “It’s essential to proceed to work towards advancing new remedies that may cease or sluggish the development of Alzheimer’s, whereas additionally persevering with to offer care and assist companies to assist all these affected.”
In 2017, 5,086 (16%) of Wisconsinites in hospice care had a major analysis of dimentia. Per each 1,000 Wisconsinites with dimentia, there have been 1,520 visits to a hospital emergency depatrment in 2018. Hospital sufferers with dimentia had a 19.9% readmission price that yr.
Care is expensive, too. In 2020, Medicaid prices of caring for Wisconsinites with Alzheimer’s totaled in at $777 million. That complete is anticipated to rise by 18.9% by 2025.
Wisconsin is only one piece of the puzzle. Nationally, there have been 6.5 million People 65 and older dwelling with Alzheimer’s in 2022. That quantity jumped to six.7 million by 2023. By 2050, about 13 million People are anticipated to have Alzheimer’s.
About one in 9 individuals 65 and older have Alzheimer’s, and one in three seniors dies with Alzheimer’s or one other type of dementia. In 2019, 2,390 Wisconsinites died from Alzheimer’s.
Nationally, the variety of individuals 65 to 75 who died from Alzheimer’s rose by 33% from 2000 to 2019. For individuals 75 to 84, the demise price rose by 51%. The demise price rose by 78% for individuals 85 and older.
In 2022, 11 million individuals acted as a household caregiver for somebody with Alzheimer’s or one other type of dementia, in response to the report, accounting for 18 billion hours of unpaid care. The report valued these hours at a minimum of $339.5 billion.
Dementia caregivers reported greater charges of melancholy than caregivers for different circumstances. Thirty to 40% of dementia caregivers reported melancholy, whereas 20% of those that look after schizophrenia reported melancholy. Nineteen p.c of those that care for somebody who has had a stroke reported melancholy.
Amongst unpaid dementia caregivers, 59% reported emotional stress, whereas 38% reported bodily stress from caregiving. When in comparison with different caregivers and non-caregivers, in addition they reported greater charges of continual circumstances together with however not restricted to stroke, coronary heart illness, diabetes and most cancers.
Alzheimer’s Affiliation stated about two-thirds of Alzheimer’s caregivers are girls. Greater than half of caregivers are caring for a guardian or in-law with Alzheimer’s.
In Wisconsin in 2021, 53.4% of caregivers reported continual well being circumstances; 22.4% reported melancholy and 10.5% reported being in poor bodily well being.
Relating to direct caregivers — together with nurse aides, nursing assistants, dwelling well being aides and private care aides — Alzheimer’s Affiliation stated Wisconsin is looking forward to a scarcity, in step with nationwide considerations. These caregivers might be discovered working in locations reminiscent of non-public houses, community-based settings and expert nursing houses.
From 2020 to 2030, Alzheimer’s Affiliation estimated the U.S. will want about 1.2 million new direct caregivers.
Amongst present major care physicians, 55% stated there are usually not sufficient dementia care specialists to fulfill calls for regionally.
“The scarcity of dementia care specialists is a barrier to a well timed and correct analysis, and a scarcity of analysis means a delay in remedies, care supply and supportive companies,” the Alzheimer’s Affiliation stated in a press launch.
In Wisconsin, there are 83 geriatricians, major care docs who’re specialised in treating older adults. To fulfill demand by 2050, that would wish to extend by 228.9%.
In 2020, Wisconsin had 77,810 well being and particular person care aides. To fulfill demand, that quantity must rise by 18.6% in 2030.
Learn the complete report beneath:
Alzheimer’s Info and Figures 2023 by Aly Prouty on Scribd
Wisconsin
Preview: Wisconsin Looks For Eighth-Straight Win Over Minnesota
Preview: Wisconsin Looks For Eighth-Straight Win Over Minnesota
Minnesota (8-7, 0-4 Big Ten) vs. Wisconsin (12-3, 2-2 Big Ten)
Date/Time – Friday, January 10, 6 p.m.
Arena – Kohl Center (16,838)
Watch – Peacock (Chris Vosters and Stephen Bardo)
Radio – Badgers Radio Network (Matt Lepay and Brian Butch), Sirius 106 or 195, stream online on iHeartRadio.
Series – Wisconsin leads 108-104 (Wisconsin leads 68-34 in Madison)
Last Meeting – Wisconsin won, 61-59, on January 23, 2024, in Minneapolis
Follow Online: The Badgers’ Den
Twitter: @Badger_Blitz
Betting line: Wisconsin -13
Projected Starting Five (Wisconsin)
Player to Watch: Tonje is shooting 46.0 percent from the floor. He is second in the Big Ten shooting 93.5 percent at the FT line and is second on UW at 37.7 percent on three-point field goals.
Projected Starting Five (Minnesota)
Player to watch: Isaac Asuma continues to shine as a freshman for the Gophers. Against Ohio State, the rookie added 18 points, which bettered his previous best of 11 he set against Wake Forest in November. He played 40 minutes and was 7-of-11 with three treys, all career bests.
Series Notes
Wisconsin and Minnesota will be playing for the 213th time on Friday, making the Gophers the most-played opponent in UW history.
The Badgers have won seven straight games against Minnesota, 16 of the last 18 meetings, and are 36-9 since 1999.
Wisconsin is 12-2 overall against Minnesota under head coach Greg Gard.
A total of 16 points decided the past five Badgers-Gophers contests.
UW’s roster features 5 players from Minnesota: senior Steven Crowl (Eagan), sophomore Nolan Winter (Lakeville), redshirt freshman Jack Janicki and true freshmen Daniel Freitag (Bloomington) and Jack Robison (Lakeville). Winter’s father, Trevor, played basketball on Minnesota’s 1997 Final Four team, and his mother, Heidi, played volleyball at Minnesota.
In five career starts vs. Minnesota, Crowl is averaging 15.2 ppg and 5.2 rpg, shooting 31-49 FG (63.3 percent).
Wisconsin Notes
Wisconsin ranks 12th in the nation in offensive efficiency per KenPom. UW’s mark of 121.1 would rank as the school’s fourth-highest mark in the KenPom era (1997).
Three different Badgers have scored 25+ points in a game this season, and the Badgers have four 30-point efforts already: John Tonje (41 vs. ARIZ, 33 vs. Pitt), John Blackwell (32 vs. Iowa, 30 vs. UTRGV), and Max Klesmit (26 pts vs. Montana St).
The Badgers lead the NCAA shooting 85.5 percent (272-for-318) from the free throw line. At this rate, UW is on pace to shatter Villanova’s NCAA record of 83.0 percent and the Big Ten record – which UW set at 81.8 percent in 2010-11.
UW is holding opponents to 30.5 percent from 3-point range this season. Only five of UW’s 15 opponents have hit 35 percent or better from deep.
Winter averaged 2.4 points per game last season. His points per game increase of 8.8 points per game is the fourth-largest increase in the Big Ten, trailing Penn State’s Trey Kaufman-Renn (+11.4), Northwestern’s Nick Martinelli (+10.6), and Ohio State’s Devin Royal (+9.9).
Minnesota Notes
Minnesota has 10 seniors on its team this year, tied for the most in the Big Ten with USC. The Gophers have an average team age of 22.3. The breakdown of the season is 10 seniors, one junior, three sophomores and two freshmen. Eleven of the 16 players began their college careers at another school.
Minnesota’s scoring defense ranks fourth in the Big Ten. Minnesota has allowed 66.7 points per game (1,000 total) in its 15 games into the season, which trails only UCLA, Maryland, and Northwestern.
Minnesota holds the Big Ten lead in blocks averaging 5.4 and that ranks 20th nationally. They also rank third in assist/turnover ratio (1.62).
Dawson Garcia was the first player since Jordan Murphy in 2017-18 to lead the Gophers in both points (17.6) and rebounds (6.7) during the 2023-24 season. He leads the Gophers in both categories this season.
Prediction
Minnesota had a chance to build its first momentum in Big Ten play on Monday. Having a good Ohio State team on the ropes, the Gophers shot 45.7 percent from the field and 12-for-29 from three-point range. The problem was free throws, a glaring issue since the start of the season. Minnesota went 12-for-27 from the line, including three of four in the final minute of regulation. The result was a double overtime loss, another gut punch, and a fifth straight loss to a Power-Four team.
The Gophers should be better. Garcia is putting up career numbers in his final season of college basketball, shooting a career-best 49.4 percent from the floor and is a three-point threat (35.6). Head coach Ben Johnson has a group that guards aggressively and force over 11 turnovers a game. Minnesota average 68.8 points per game (316th in Division-1) but that’s partially due to its methodical pace, ranking 360th nationally in adjusted tempo.
Can the Gophers slow Wisconsin? UW ranks 11th in adjusted offensive efficiency. The best offensive unit the Gophers have played to this point is Purdue, which is ranked one spot behind UW. Minnesota held Purdue to 28 points in the first half, but saw the Boilermakers drop 53 on them in the second half eight days ago. Purdue shot 50 percent from the field, 44 percent from the perimeter, and averaged 1.421 points per possession.
I expect a similar result, a close game early that Wisconsin blows open in the second half.
Worgull’s Prediction: Wisconsin by 17
Record: 12-3 (11-4 ATS)
Points off Prediction: 130 (8.7 per game)
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Wisconsin
Balanced scoring key for Badgers heading into matchup with Minnesota
MADISON, Wis. (WMTV) – Wisconsin men’s basketball is set to take on Minnesota at the Kohl Center for another rendition of the border battle on Thursday night. The Badgers have owned the series recently– 8-2 over the last 10 game against the Gophers.
Wisconsin is coming off their first true road win of the year. This was actually their first win on the road since late January of last season. The 75-63 win over Rutgers was their fourth straights.
The Badgers are sixth in the conference in scoring, averaging 83.3 points per game. The Gophers are dead last in scoring, averaging only 68.8 per contest.
The Badgers scoring is quite balanced this year. In their 15 games so far, four different players have lead in scoring and it is come from both guards and big men. The players said the balance makes the Badgers a difficult matchup.
“Yeah, it’s fun cause that gives other team’s like it’s hard to scout us when you know who don’t know when can go off on any given night,” said senior guard Kamari McGee. “That’s a nice threat to have to have as a team you know not being able to have that many guys that can go off like that, cause some night It might be all of them going off and that’s when we really be clicking. But you know it’s really good to have guys that you can fall back on like that.”
Wisconsin looks to go over .500 in conference play, while Minnesota looks for their first conference win of the season. Tipoff is at 6:00.
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Wisconsin
John Blackwell Hitting His Stride as Wisconsin's Starting Point Guard
MADISON, Wis. – Kamari McGee is as close to being an expert at point guard as the University of Wisconsin has on its roster.
The fourth-year senior excelled at the position at Racine (Wis.) St Catherine’s High School and won a state championship in 2020, thrived as a true freshman when he earned freshman all-conference honors at Green Bay, and been a steady contributor as the reserve at Wisconsin. He knows what works at the position.
That’s why McGee continues to be in awe of sophomore John Blackwell’s impact as the Badgers’ primary facilitator, ball handler, and igniter in his first season at the position.
“I’ve been seeing it game by game,” said McGee, answering the question sitting next to Blackwell after the sophomore scored a career-high 32 points in a win over Iowa. “He wasn’t used to playing the point guard for us specifically. He was coming off the bench (last year), getting into that role of just being a scorer, but each game he’s gotten better each time.
“People may say he’s not a point guard. Honestly, in today’s game, there aren’t really any point guards. He’s just a good playmaker and a great scorer for us.”
Fresh off back-to-back 20+ point games to get Wisconsin (12-3, 2-2 Big Ten) back to even in the Big Ten conference, Blackwell is starting to emerge as one of the Big Ten’s most complete guards. His 15.8 points per game is 13th in the league. He’s averaging 6.5 rebounds in conference play and has
“He’s just really complete,” head coach Greg Gard said of Blackwell. “He has a nose for the ball and got some toughness to him. He is a complete player. He does everything and he understands that. He understood that day one as a freshman last year. That’s what allowed him to get on the court so early. He understood the importance of little things.”
Blackwell put on a master class on Friday, scoring from all three levels against Iowa’s leaky defense. He was 5-for-6 from two-point range by either showing touch with mid-range pull-up jumpers or putting his shoulder down to get at and finish at the rim.
He was 3-for-21 from the perimeter over his previous seven games but confidently hit 6 of 10 from behind the arc. He made all four free attempts and tied his career-high with five assists against two turnovers, having no problem against a man-to-man or zone defense.
It was more workmanlike Monday at Rutgers but still efficient with an 8-for-15 night (7-for-11 on twos) and 4-for-4 from the line. Entering Friday’s game against Minnesota (8-7, 0-4), Blackwell is shooting 50 percent from the floor.
“I have confidence in my coaches and my teammates,” Blackwell said. “They trust me. They know how good I am, and I know how good I’ve worked.”
The implantation of Name, Image, and Likeness deals and the freedom of movement with the transfer porter have removed most of the guarantees in roster building. So, Gard didn’t have much time to wallow when Chucky Hepburn, his three-year starter at point guard, left for a reported $750,000 deal with Louisville.
The Badgers added Camren Hunter from the portal, but the Central Arkansas transfer didn’t play last season and was slowed by picking up the system and battled illness throughout November. UW inked highly ranked point guard Daniel Freitag but showed in the preseason he wasn’t ready for the role.
The staff also considered starting McGee, but Gard wanted to keep the senior as an energy boost off the bench (it’s worked with McGee shooting 55.2 percent from three with a 3.8 assist-to-turnover ratio).
Wanting a point guard who could push the ball in transition while still having an eye for scoring, Gard and his staff looked toward Blackwell, whose 45.5 3-point percentage was the best of any freshman in program history with at least 60 attempts. Despite playing just 18.5 minutes per game, Blackwell led the team in scoring four times.
While showing flashes in intrasquad scrimmages, Blackwell reportedly took over with the ball in his hands in the second half of UW’s closed scrimmage with Northern Iowa. He pushed tempo, created opportunities for himself and others, and the offense hummed.
“It was a tell-tell sign for us,” Gard said. “We had thought about it as a staff, talked about it, experimented a little bit. We had to stop dipping our toe in the water and really jump in with that and making a full commitment to him having the ball as much as we could.”
One of Blackwell’s first conversations after being informed of his role was with McGee, who has mentored him at every step.
“Killer was just in my ear,” Blackwell said. “Showing me all the support, telling me all the plays from the point guard spot, the ways I can score and still facilitate, and these guys trusting me with the ball in my hands, so credit to them.”
Of course, there have been bumps in the road. Blackwell had five assists to nine turnovers in losses to Michigan and Marquette. In the road loss at Illinois, Blackwell was limited to 22 minutes and fouled out. More frustrating for Gard was Blackwell had zero assists and felt that offense was stagnating for long stretches.
The film review was blunt and straightforward: be aggressive, make things happen with the ball in his hands, and be a confident facilitator.
Over the last four games, Blackwell has responded with 18 assists and only seven turnovers. In his words, he’s helped Wisconsin play “the right basketball” by moving the ball, having high assist numbers, and playing collectively as a unit.
“He’s got a lot on his plate,” Gard said. “It’s easy to try to take a break at times because maybe he needs one. I need to do a better job of getting him in and getting him out. His numbers of assists, even in practice, have jumped. That tells me he’s more comfortable.”
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