JUNE 2026 INFORMATIONAL ARTICLES
June is Alzheimer’s & Brain Awareness Month:
Why Memory Concerns Should Not Be Ignored
June is Alzheimer’s & Brain Awareness Month, a time to raise awareness about Alzheimer’s disease,
dementia, memory concerns, and the importance of brain health. For people with Medicare and their families,
this topic is especially important because early conversations can help families plan, reduce confusion, and
connect with medical and community support sooner.
What is Alzheimer’s disease?
Alzheimer’s disease is the most common cause of dementia. Dementia is not a single disease; it is a general
term for changes in memory, thinking, language, behavior, and daily function that interfere with everyday life.
Some memory changes can happen with normal aging, but confusion that disrupts daily routines, getting lost
in familiar places, repeating questions, or struggling with bills, medications, or appointments should be
discussed with a health care provider.
Why early conversations matter
Families sometimes delay talking about memory changes because the subject is uncomfortable. But early
evaluation can help rule out other causes of confusion, such as medication side effects, sleep problems,
depression, vitamin deficiencies, infections, or other health issues.
Early recognition can also give families more time to discuss safety, driving, medication management, legal
planning, caregiving roles, and long-term support.
Brain health habits to discuss with your doctor
No lifestyle change guarantees prevention of Alzheimer’s disease, but many brain-health habits also support
heart health and overall wellness.
Keep blood pressure, diabetes, cholesterol, and heart health risk factors under control.
Stay physically active within your doctor’s guidance.
Stay socially connected and mentally engaged.
Address hearing, vision, sleep, depression, and medication concerns.
Review fall risk and home safety if balance or judgment changes are present.
How this connects to Medicare
Medicare’s yearly Wellness visit is designed to develop or update a personalized prevention plan based on
current health and risk factors. It is not the same as a full physical exam, but it can be an appropriate time to
discuss memory concerns, mood, fall risk, medications, and needed screenings.
People enrolled in Medicare Advantage Plans may have additional plan-specific care programs, provider
networks, or care coordination resources. Coverage details can vary, so it is important to check the plan’s
rules and provider network.
Suggested questions to ask
Is this memory change part of normal aging, or does it need evaluation?
Could medications, sleep, depression, infection, hearing, or vision problems be contributing?
Should we schedule a cognitive evaluation or specialist referral?
What caregiver support, safety planning, or community resources should we consider?
If you or a loved one has questions about how Medicare coverage works alongside doctor visits, specialist
referrals, or plan networks, our local Medicare Health Plan guidance can help you understand the plan side of
the conversation.
Compliance-friendly note
This article is for general educational purposes only and is not medical advice. People should talk with their doctor or other
health care provider about symptoms, screening, diagnosis, and treatment. Coverage, costs, provider networks, and benefits
can vary by plan and by service.
Why Memory Concerns Should Not Be Ignored
June is Alzheimer’s & Brain Awareness Month, a time to raise awareness about Alzheimer’s disease,
dementia, memory concerns, and the importance of brain health. For people with Medicare and their families,
this topic is especially important because early conversations can help families plan, reduce confusion, and
connect with medical and community support sooner.
What is Alzheimer’s disease?
Alzheimer’s disease is the most common cause of dementia. Dementia is not a single disease; it is a general
term for changes in memory, thinking, language, behavior, and daily function that interfere with everyday life.
Some memory changes can happen with normal aging, but confusion that disrupts daily routines, getting lost
in familiar places, repeating questions, or struggling with bills, medications, or appointments should be
discussed with a health care provider.
Why early conversations matter
Families sometimes delay talking about memory changes because the subject is uncomfortable. But early
evaluation can help rule out other causes of confusion, such as medication side effects, sleep problems,
depression, vitamin deficiencies, infections, or other health issues.
Early recognition can also give families more time to discuss safety, driving, medication management, legal
planning, caregiving roles, and long-term support.
Brain health habits to discuss with your doctor
No lifestyle change guarantees prevention of Alzheimer’s disease, but many brain-health habits also support
heart health and overall wellness.
Keep blood pressure, diabetes, cholesterol, and heart health risk factors under control.
Stay physically active within your doctor’s guidance.
Stay socially connected and mentally engaged.
Address hearing, vision, sleep, depression, and medication concerns.
Review fall risk and home safety if balance or judgment changes are present.
How this connects to Medicare
Medicare’s yearly Wellness visit is designed to develop or update a personalized prevention plan based on
current health and risk factors. It is not the same as a full physical exam, but it can be an appropriate time to
discuss memory concerns, mood, fall risk, medications, and needed screenings.
People enrolled in Medicare Advantage Plans may have additional plan-specific care programs, provider
networks, or care coordination resources. Coverage details can vary, so it is important to check the plan’s
rules and provider network.
Suggested questions to ask
Is this memory change part of normal aging, or does it need evaluation?
Could medications, sleep, depression, infection, hearing, or vision problems be contributing?
Should we schedule a cognitive evaluation or specialist referral?
What caregiver support, safety planning, or community resources should we consider?
If you or a loved one has questions about how Medicare coverage works alongside doctor visits, specialist
referrals, or plan networks, our local Medicare Health Plan guidance can help you understand the plan side of
the conversation.
Compliance-friendly note
This article is for general educational purposes only and is not medical advice. People should talk with their doctor or other
health care provider about symptoms, screening, diagnosis, and treatment. Coverage, costs, provider networks, and benefits
can vary by plan and by service.
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Medicare Advantage Plans, Medicare Part D and Medigap Supplemental Insurance
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Medicare Advantage Plans, Medicare Part D and Medigap Supplemental Insurance
We are licensed in the following states as an Insurance Marketing Group:
*Nevada #210603 *Arizona License #2147056 *Utah License #234923 *Idaho 773252 *California #4053866 *Oregon 2147056,*Washington State 919217 *Texas #1873256 *New Mexico 2147056
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"We do not offer every plan in your area. Currently we represent 11 organizations which offer 68 products in your area.
Please contact www.Medicare.gov, to get information on all of your options"
A licensed insurance sales agent may mail, call or e-mail as a result of completing any informational forms on this website to discuss Medicare Advantage (Part C) plans, Medicare Part D Prescription Drug Plans or Medicare Supplement Insurance.
Please Note:
Clicking on any of the links provided will take you from our Medicare Information website to a non-Medicare information or to a different website.
Medicare has neither reviewed nor endorsed this information
"We do not offer every plan in your area. Currently we represent 11 organizations which offer 68 products in your area.
Please contact www.Medicare.gov, to get information on all of your options"
A licensed insurance sales agent may mail, call or e-mail as a result of completing any informational forms on this website to discuss Medicare Advantage (Part C) plans, Medicare Part D Prescription Drug Plans or Medicare Supplement Insurance.
Please Note:
Clicking on any of the links provided will take you from our Medicare Information website to a non-Medicare information or to a different website.