March 2026 marks a significant moment in dementia care policy with two major initiatives: the Alzheimer's Association's Brain Health Roundtable and the reintroduction of the AADAPT Act in the Senate. These complementary efforts address both the strategic coordination of brain health research and the critical shortage of dementia care workforce.
The Alzheimer's Association launched the Brain Health Roundtable in March 2026, establishing a cross-sector coalition dedicated to prioritizing brain health as a national health objective. This initiative brings together stakeholders from healthcare, research, policy, and industry to create a unified approach to brain health promotion and dementia prevention.
The Brain Health Roundtable focuses on several core areas:
- Public Education: Developing standardized messaging about brain health across the lifespan
- Research Coordination: Aligning funding priorities across federal agencies and private foundations
- Healthcare Integration: Promoting brain health screening and preventive measures in clinical settings
- Policy Advocacy: Creating a unified voice for brain health prioritization in federal legislation
The Roundtable includes representation from:
- Major research institutions and universities
- Healthcare systems and provider organizations
- Patient advocacy groups
- Pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies
- Federal health agencies (NIH, CDC, CMS)
- State health departments
The Brain Health Roundtable aims to:
- Increase public awareness of modifiable risk factors for cognitive decline
- Accelerate the translation of research findings into clinical practice
- Reduce the stigma associated with cognitive impairment
- Create economic models demonstrating the cost-effectiveness of brain health interventions
¶ Background and Reintroduction
The AADAPT Act (Alzheimer's and Dementia Assistance and Caregiver Training Act) was reintroduced in the Senate in March 2026, building on previous legislative efforts to address the dementia care workforce crisis. The bill recognizes that the growing burden of Alzheimer's disease and related dementias requires a substantial expansion of trained healthcare professionals and caregivers.
The AADAPT Act includes several critical components:
- Workforce Training Grants: Funding for healthcare institutions to develop dementia care training programs
- Caregiver Support Services: Expanded resources for family caregivers including respite care and training
- Telehealth Expansion: Increased access to dementia specialists through remote consultation services
- Rural Healthcare Initiatives: Targeted programs to address workforce shortages in underserved areas
- Research Funding: Dedicated funding for dementia care research and best practices development
The 2026 reintroduction builds on lessons learned from previous versions and incorporates feedback from stakeholder groups. Key enhancements include:
- Increased funding authorization levels
- Simplified application processes for grant programs
- Enhanced data collection requirements to track workforce outcomes
- Interagency coordination requirements with HHS and VA
If enacted, the AADAPT Act would:
- Train an estimated 50,000 new dementia care professionals over 5 years
- Expand caregiver training programs reaching 200,000 family caregivers
- Establish 100 new dementia care specialist positions in rural areas
- Create a national data repository on dementia care workforce needs
The Brain Health Roundtable and AADAPT Act complement each other in addressing the dementia care ecosystem:
| Aspect |
Brain Health Roundtable |
AADAPT Act |
| Primary Focus |
Prevention and brain health promotion |
Care and workforce development |
| Timeline |
Ongoing coalition work |
Legislative process |
| Scope |
National coordination |
Direct service delivery |
| Stakeholders |
Cross-sector coalition |
Healthcare institutions, caregivers |
The combined impact of these initiatives includes:
- Prevention to Care Continuum: From brain health maintenance through advanced dementia care
- Research to Practice Pipeline: Accelerated translation of prevention research into workforce training
- Unified Policy Voice: Coordinated advocacy for both research and care funding
- Alzheimer's Association Brain Health Initiative
- AADAPT Act Legislative Text
- Dementia Care Workforce Report (2025)
- Brain Health Research Priorities
This page will be updated as legislative developments occur.