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HRES 1402 119th Congress · House

House Resolution Backing Alzheimer’s and Brain Awareness Month

Advocate

Official title: Supporting the goals and ideals of Alzheimer's and Brain Awareness Month.

H.Res. 1402 is a nonbinding House resolution that supports the goals and ideals of Alzheimer’s and Brain Awareness Month. It highlights the scale of Alzheimer’s disease, the burden on families and caregivers, and the importance of early detection, research, care, and support services. The resolution does not create a new federal program or spend money; it is mainly a statement encouraging Americans to learn about dementia and support affected people.

  • Recognizes June as Alzheimer’s and Brain Awareness Month.
  • States that nearly 7,000,000 Americans are living with Alzheimer’s disease.
  • Cites an estimated $409,000,000,000 in direct societal costs in 2026.
  • Encourages education, research advocacy, and support for caregivers and families.
  • Notes over 13,000,000 Americans provide unpaid care for people with dementia.
Public Relevance 5 / 100
Niche Narrow / procedural Broad

For most Americans, this resolution has no direct financial or eligibility effect because it does not create a program, benefit, or requirement. Its practical impact is that it could help sustain attention on Alzheimer’s disease, caregiver stress, early diagnosis, and the need for research and support services, especially during June’s awareness month. If you or a family member is affected by dementia, the main value is symbolic and informational rather than a new federal service or payment.

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FOR
  • Families and unpaid caregivers They benefit from public attention to the emotional and financial strain of caregiving, including the resolution’s recognition that over 13 million Americans provide unpaid care and that caregiving stress is often rated high or very high.
  • Public health and dementia advocates They would argue that awareness resolutions help reduce stigma, encourage earlier diagnosis, and promote support for research and care, especially when the bill highlights underdetection and disparities in Black, Latino, and Asian American communities.
  • Alzheimer’s researchers and clinicians They may see value in a congressional statement that reinforces the importance of research, healthy lifestyle interventions, and early detection, which the resolution says can improve outcomes and quality of life.
AGAINST
  • Fiscal conservatives They may see the resolution as symbolic rather than substantive and argue Congress should focus time on legislation that funds treatment, caregiving, or research instead of issuing another awareness resolution.
  • Legislative watchdogs They could object that commemorative measures use floor and committee attention without changing policy, even though this resolution does not impose costs or mandates.
  • Some advocates for affected families They might support the message but criticize it for not directly addressing the $409 billion cost burden, caregiver stress, or access to diagnosis and services with concrete federal action.
  • “June is Alzheimer’s and Brain Awareness Month”

    This makes June an official awareness period in the House’s view, encouraging public education campaigns and attention to dementia-related issues during that month.

  • “supports the goals and ideals of Alzheimer’s and Brain Awareness Month”

    The House is expressing agreement with the awareness campaign’s purpose, but this does not create any enforceable rights, benefits, or duties.

  • “raise awareness… advocate for… research, care, and support services”

    The resolution frames the main policy need as better public understanding and stronger support systems, pointing readers toward future funding or program legislation rather than immediate action here.

  • “offer their support to individuals living with Alzheimer’s… their families, and their caregivers”

    This underscores the human and family impact of the disease and encourages social and community support, especially for unpaid caregivers.

  • “older Black Americans face nearly 2 times higher risk”

    The text highlights a concrete disparity, signaling that awareness and future policy efforts should pay attention to unequal risk and underdiagnosis across communities.

This is a simple House resolution, so it is not a law and would not go to the President. With 35 cosponsors and a bipartisan lineup from both parties, it is the kind of commemorative measure that is often agreed to in the House if leadership brings it up, especially since it only expresses support for Alzheimer’s and Brain Awareness Month. It has been referred to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce and has not yet advanced beyond introduction.

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Bill
HRES 1402
Congress
119th Congress
Official title
Supporting the goals and ideals of Alzheimer's and Brain Awareness Month.
Policy area
Healthcare
Latest action
Referred to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce. (June 30, 2026)
Last updated
July 1, 2026

June 30, 2026

Referred to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce.

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