Stigma a major issue for Canadians living with dementia, says Alzheimer Society
TORONTO — When Roger Marple was diagnosed with early-onset Alzheimer’s disease just over two years ago at age 57 — and after the initial shock had worn off — he made up his mind to live the best life he could for as long as possible.
But what he wasn’t prepared for was the societal attitudes towards people with dementia, which he describes as unthinking at best and downright cruel at worst.
About a week after his diagnosis, Marple was in a long line-up in a grocery check-out in his hometown of Medicine Hat, Alta., when the cashier asked a customer she was serving if he had found everything he needed, as the man seemed to have forgotten something.
“So with a real loud voice, he says, ‘Oh, I’m having an Alzheimer’s moment,’ while mimicking what looked to me like someone having an epileptic seizure,” recalls Marple, now 60.


