U of L researcher to examine how social instability affects patients with Alzheimer’s disease
For most people diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease, moving into a care facility becomes necessary at some point, say officials at the University of Lethbridge.
They say such a big change disrupts all aspects of a patient’s life, including their social life. Researchers at the U of L say these changes to their social network have been associated with increased cognitive decline and memory loss; however, the reasons for this association are not well understood.
Dr. Jackson Ham (BSc ’19, MSc ’21, PhD ’25), a postdoctoral fellow in Dr. Rob McDonald’s lab at the University of Lethbridge, has received $150,000 in funding from the Alzheimer Society of Canada to learn more about the association between cognitive decline and disruption to someone’s social network.
Using a mouse model, officials say Ham seeks to understand what’s happening to neurons inside the brain when the social group is stable and when it’s unstable, and how that affects mood and behaviour.


