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Last updated on May 28, 2012 at 18:09 EDT

Fantasy Author Funds Alzheimer Research

March 14, 2008
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Bestselling author Terry Pratchett yesterday announced a pounds 500,000 donation to help find a cure for Alzheimer’s – the disease he was diagnosed with three months ago – and condemned the “shameful” lack of funding to help fight it.

The writer behind the Discworld fantasy books spoke out against the patchy provision for thousands of sufferers of the incurable brain disease, saying he wanted to “kick a politician in the teeth”.

Pratchett shocked his fans when he announced in December that, at the age of 59, he had been diagnosed with a rare form of early onset Alzheimer’s after doctors originally believed he had suffered a mini stroke.

The author, who has sold more than 55 million books around the world, delivered the news online in typical Pratchett style, calling the incurable brain disease “an embuggerance”.

But he told an annual conference on Alzheimer’s that having the disease was like stripping “away your living self a bit at a time”.

Alzheimer’s affects 700,000 people in the UK but only pounds 11 is spent for each person every year on research, compared to pounds 289 for each cancer patient.

Pratchett said: “There’s nearly as many of us as there are cancer sufferers, and it looks as if the number of people with the disease will double within a generation…It’s a shock and a shame, then, to find out that money for research is three per cent of that which goes to find cancer cures. Perhaps that is why, for example, that I know three people who have successfully survived brain tumours but no one who has beaten Alzheimer’s”.

The author hit out at a shortage of Alzheimer’s specialists and said he was paying for his own drugs because he was “too young to have Alzheimer’s for free”.

He took “more supplements than the Sunday papers”, and compared remedies with other sufferers, the author said.

Pratchett told the Alzheimer’s Research Trust conference in Bristol: “Part of me lives in a world of New Age remedies and science, and some of the science is a little like voodoo.

“But science was never an exact science, and personally I’d eat the arse out of a dead mole if it offered a fighting chance.”

(c) 2008 Birmingham Post; Birmingham (UK). Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning. All rights Reserved.