Beth McMullen Headshot

Beth McMullen

Vice President, Advocacy

The 2026 AIM Advocacy Forum just wrapped here in Washington, and the energy in those Capitol Hill hallways is something I want to bring back to you.

▶ Watch Episode 5: The Movement Came to Washington, Bring It Home 

More than 1,000 advocates from all 50 states walked into more than 500 congressional meetings this week. They told their stories, in their own words, to the people who represent them — and they did what only constituents can do.

It’s working. Right there in those meetings, advocates were hearing it from members and staff directly: new support is coming. Members are paying attention. The ASAP Act is moving.

That momentum doesn’t stop when the Forum ends. The members of Congress who took meetings this week heard from their constituents in person. Now they need to keep hearing from us — from home, from their districts, from the people they represent.

The ASAP Act would give Medicare the authority to cover the FDA-cleared Alzheimer’s blood test, so families can know what they’re facing earlier, when today’s treatments work best. That’s what every one of those 500 meetings was about. And it’s what every call from home is about, too.

Let’s keep the momentum going. Contact your members of Congress and tell them to support the ASAP Act.

Beth McMullen Headshot

Beth McMullen

Vice President, Advocacy

Beth McMullen brings over 25 years of political, policy and grassroots advocacy experience to her role as the vice president of advocacy for the Alzheimer’s Association and the Alzheimer’s Impact...

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