Rev. Jesse Jackson, 76, reveals he has Parkinson’s disease
byDan Corey
Prominent civil rights activist the Rev. Jesse Jackson has been diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease, he announced Friday.
“My family and I began to notice changes about
three years ago,” Jackson, 76, said in a statement. “After a battery of
tests, my physicians identified the issue as Parkinson's disease, a
disease that bested my father.”
A neurological disorder with no known cure,
Parkinson’s is commonly associated with tremors, stiffness and
difficulty with walking and balancing.
The
Rev. Jesse Jackson (L) and Rev. Michael Pfleger carry crosses as they
march against gun violence on Michigan Avenue on December 31, 2016, in
Chicago. Scott Olson / Getty Images
Northwestern Medicine in Chicago said in a
statement that Jackson was diagnosed with the disease in 2015 and has
been treated as an outpatient in the years since.
Congressman Danny Davis, D-Chicago, told NBC Chicago that those who have been close to Jackson recently "have noticed some of the signs."
Jackson also said that “recognition of the
effects of this disease on me has been painful” and that he has “been
slow to grasp the gravity of it.”
Jackson was born in Greenville, South
Carolina, and later became known for participating in civil rights
demonstrations alongside the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. He later ran
unsuccessfully for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1984 and
1988. Related: Gut Bacteria May Affect Parkinson’s, Study Finds
In 1999, Jackson was credited with
successfully negotiating the release of three U.S. soldiers who were
held in Yugoslavia, and was awarded with the Presidential Medal of
Freedom for those efforts from President Bill Clinton in 2000.
“I know Jesse Jackson will keep hope alive as
he battles Parkinson’s disease and continues his tireless commitment to
justice and civil rights,” Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., said on Twitter. “Praying for him and his family.”
In an Instagram video,
the Rev. Al Sharpton said he spent the last few days with Jackson and
others in New York and reflected on his impact on American politics and
civil rights movement.
“As I watched him, I thought about the
greatness of this man,” Sharpton, an MSNBC host, said in the video. “How
he continued Martin Luther King’s movement for justice, how he cemented
it in the North and made the King movement truly national … He changed
the nation, he served in ways he never got credit. No one in our
lifetime served longer and stronger. We pray for him, because he’s given
his life for us.”
Rev.
Jesse Jackson reacts after projections show that Sen. Barack Obama will
be elected to serve as the next president during a gathering in Grant
Park on November 4, 2008, in Chicago. Joe Raedle / Getty Images
Jackson described his Parkinson’s diagnosis as
“a signal that I must make lifestyle changes and dedicate myself to
physical therapy in hopes of slowing the disease's progression.”
“It is an opportunity for me to use my voice
to help in finding a cure for a disease that afflicts 7 to 10 million
worldwide,” he said in a statement. “Some 60,000 Americans are diagnosed
with Parkinson’s every year.”
Although Parkinson’s is considered to be the
most complex disease in medicine, it is also very treatable, Dr. Michael
Okun, the national medical director for the Parkinson’s Foundation and
chair of the University of Florida's neurology department, told NBC
News.
“It’s pretty common for 76-year-old men to
have Parkinson’s disease,” Okun said. “As the population ages, we’re
going to see more and more people, particularly men, diagnosed with
Parkinson’s.” Related: How Patients Are Using Cycling to Slow Down Parkinson's
Jackson’s plan to combat Parkinson’s is likely
to help slow the progression of his symptoms, but won’t cure the
disease, NBC News medical correspondent Dr. John Torres said.
Jackson already has the two major risk factors for Parkinson’s disease, Torres said.
“Basically he’s got an advanced age, and he’s
got a family history of Parkinson’s, so that’s going to make his outlook
worse,” Torres said. “What’s going to make it better is more physical
activity, family and social support and appropriate medication to slow
the symptoms. But eventually the disease going to catch up with him.”
Parkinson’s patients typically live for six to 22 more years after their initial diagnosis.
Most recently, Jackson spoke out against President Donald Trump’s proposed wall
at the U.S.-Mexico border, comparing Latinos and Mexicans who would
help build it to “blacks building slave ships.” He also urged Hispanics
and communities of color to unite under shared values.
Jackson also spoke about the shooting death of
18-year-old Michael Brown of Ferguson, Missouri, in 2014, generating a
national conversation about race relations with law enforcement.
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