Skip to main contentSkip to main content
You have permission to edit this collection.
Edit
Lake Geneva News
15°
  • Log In
  • Subscribe
  • user icon Guest
  • Logout
Read Today's E-edition
  • News
    • Local
    • State & Regional
    • Crime
    • Politics
    • National
    • Business
    • World
    • Multimedia
    • Markets & Stocks
    • News Tip
  • Obituaries
    • Share a story
    • Recent Obituaries
    • Find an Obituary
    • Archives
  • Opinion
    • Submit a letter
    • Letters
    • Editorial
    • Guest/Columnists
  • Sports
    • High School
    • College
    • Professional
  • Resorter
    • Event Calendar
    • Music
    • Movies
    • Television
  • Lifestyles
    • Welcome Home
    • Food & Cooking
    • Health & Fitness
    • Contests
    • Puzzmo
  • Feast and Field
    • Partners
  • Brand Ave. Studios
  • Print Edition
    • E-edition
    • Welcome Home
    • Special Sections
  • Buy & Sell
    • Place an Ad
    • Jobs
    • Marketplace
    • Wisconsin Public Notices
    • Shop Local
  • Customer Service
    • Manage Subscription
    • Activate Digital Subscription
    • Newsletters
    • Subscribe
    • Contact us
    • Help Center
  • Gift Subscriptions
  • Mobile Apps
  • Weather: Live Radar
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram
© 2026 Lee Enterprises
Terms of Service | Privacy Policy
Lake Geneva News
News+
Where your story lives
Subscribe
Read Today's E-edition
Lake Geneva News
News+
Where your story lives
Subscribe
  • Log In
  • user icon
    Welcome, Guest
    • My Subscription
      Help Center
    • My Account
    • Dashboard
    • Profile
    • Saved items
    • Logout
  • E-edition
  • News
  • Obituaries
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Resorter
  • Puzzmo
  • Lifestyles
  • Public Notices
  • Jobs
  • 15° Partly Cloudy
Share This
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • WhatsApp
  • SMS
  • Email
Photos from a Special Report | Fading away: Wisconsin's dementia crisis
Share this
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • WhatsApp
  • SMS
  • Email
  • Print
  • Save

Photos from a Special Report | Fading away: Wisconsin's dementia crisis

From the Special report | Fading away: Wisconsin's dementia crisis series
  • Nov 10, 2019
  • Nov 10, 2019 Updated Jan 9, 2023

The expected increase of people with dementia, coupled with a caregiver shortage hitting rural areas especially hard, presents a growing challenge in Wisconsin. Here are images from a Special Report | Fading Away: Wisconsin's dementia crisis. Check back Monday and Tuesday for more stories in this series.

Martin Schreiber with Sun Prairie mayor

Martin Schreiber with Sun Prairie mayor

Former Wisconsin Gov. Martin Schreiber, right, talks with Paul Esser, mayor of Sun Prairie, before a talk by Schreiber in October at the Colonial Club in Sun Prairie. Schreiber wrote the book "My Two Elaines," about his wife having Alzheimer's disease.

AMBER ARNOLD, STATE JOURNAL

Mary and Don praying

Mary and Don praying

Mary and Don Moran, who attend a non-denominational church, pray before eating lunch at their apartment in Cottage Grove. They met decades ago in Dallas, where she grew up and he was working as a phone company lobbyist. He played chess with her friend's husband and asked her out. "It was kismet; fate brought us together," Mary said.

AMBER ARNOLD, STATE JOURNAL

Mary and Don preparing to leave apartment

Mary and Don preparing to leave apartment

Mary and Don Moran, who have been married 44 years, get ready to leave their apartment in Cottage Grove this month to visit an assisted-living facility. Don planned to stay at the facility after Mary had surgery for breast cancer. Caring for Don, who has dementia, is difficult, Mary said. "Before cancer, it was just a little stressful," she said. "Now it's scaring me to death."

AMBER ARNOLD, STATE JOURNAL

Mary loading Don's walker

Mary loading Don's walker

Mary Moran, 75, loads her husband Don's walker into their car outside of their apartment in Cottage Grove. Two of their daughters live nearby and help out when can, but they work full-time and have children. Mary does most of the caregiving for Don, 85, who has dementia.

AMBER ARNOLD, STATE JOURNAL

Mary and Don at pumpkin painting

Mary and Don at pumpkin painting

Mary and Don Moran attend a pumpkin-painting outing in October as part of the Spry Society, a program of the Alzheimer's Association. Mary also joins Don, who has dementia, at the association's memory cafes. "They're forgiving places to be," Mary said. "If you can't remember something, well, they can't either."

AMBER ARNOLD, STATE JOURNAL

Don's "boys' club"

Don's "boys' club"

Don Moran, center, has dementia. At his wife Mary's urging, he started a "boys' club" at his senior apartment complex, inviting other men to meet for coffee once a week. He told the group why he was participating in an article about dementia. "It is to take away from people pointing and laughing at those of us who have lost their memory a little bit," he said.

AMBER ARNOLD, STATE JOURNAL

Peter Ziegler

Peter Ziegler

Ziegler 

AMBER ARNOLD, STATE JOURNAL

Bill sorting Jacqui's meds

Bill sorting Jacqui's meds

Bill Cadotte prepares medication for his wife Jacqui, who has dementia. If he doesn't watch, she sometimes hides her pills, he said. She has started taking CBD oil, which Bill thinks is helping, but her dementia continues to get worse. He doesn't know how long she'll be able to stay in their home.

AMBER ARNOLD, STATE JOURNAL

Cindy Dunbar

Cindy Dunbar

Dunbar 

AMBER ARNOLD, STATE JOURNAL

Bill and Jacqui outside of their home

Bill and Jacqui outside of their home

Bill and Jacqui Cadotte live near the Chippewa Flowage on the Lac Courte Oreilles reservation. They married in 1970 and raised three children on the reservation, where Bill continues to work as purchasing manager for the tribe. Jacqui was diagnosed with dementia three years ago.

AMBER ARNOLD, STATE JOURNAL

Randy and Wonaquance

Randy and Wonaquance

Randy and Wonaquance Cadotte said it's hard to see their mother, Jacqui, decline from dementia. But "I understand that and accept that," Randy said. "What I have a hard time accepting is putting that added stress onto my father."

AMBER ARNOLD, STATE JOURNAL

Jennifer and Jacqui

Jennifer and Jacqui

Jennifer Cadotte helps her aunt, Jacqui Cadotte, who has dementia, prepare to put on her shoes. Jennifer started working as Jacqui's paid caregiver on weekdays last year after other caregivers hired by Jacqui's husband, Bill, didn't work out. Jennifer, who previously ran youth programming at the local community college, said she wouldn't work as a caregiver for anyone else. "This is more out of love than anything else," she said. "It's too hard."

AMBER ARNOLD, STATE JOURNAL

Tammy with Frances in Eagle River

Tammy with Frances in Eagle River

Tammy Walport, who works for Loving Touch Home Care in Rhinelander, visits Frances Bombka, 98, who has dementia, at Bombka's home in Eagle River. There's a shortage of caregivers for dementia, especially in rural Wisconsin. Caring for Bombka around the clock every day takes five of Loving Touch's 20 workers, only three of whom live in or near Eagle River, general manager Paul McKenzie said. "I'm pulling people from other areas," he said.

AMBER ARNOLD, STATE JOURNAL

Frances doing exercises

Frances doing exercises

Frances Bombka exercises in her Eagle River home as Tammy Walport, who works for Loving Touch Home Care in Rhinelander, looks on. Walport, who lives in Rhinelander, about 25 miles away, cares for Bombka three days a week.

AMBER ARNOLD, STATE JOURNAL

Doreen on phone with Lyle

Doreen on phone with Lyle

Doreen Conner said her husband, Lyle, has become more gentle since he developed Alzheimer's disease. But it can be a struggle to care for him and do tasks such as grocery shopping, she said. "It's a long, hard day for me when I have to do that," she said.

AMBER ARNOLD, STATE JOURNAL

Doreen and Lyle holding hands

Doreen and Lyle holding hands

Doreen Conner cares for her husband, Lyle, who has dementia. They live in Prentice, in northern Wisconsin, and have been married 67 years. As Lyle's dementia has gotten worse, Doreen has started leaving him in their locked car when she goes grocery shopping. But with winter approaching, "I'm not going to let him sit in the car," she said. "I'm going to have to get somebody to come (to their home) and sit with him."

AMBER ARNOLD, STATE JOURNAL

Lori Kiefer

Lori Kiefer

Lori Kiefer cares for children and older adults at Friendship Village, an intergenerational day care in Phillips, in northern Wisconsin.

AMBER ARNOLD, STATE JOURNAL

Cyclotron

Cyclotron

The cyclotron in the basement of the Wisconsin Institutes of Medical Research near UW Hospital produces radioactive atoms for use in PET scans, said Jon Engle, who works in the lab.

AMBER ARNOLD, STATE JOURNAL

Sara Tirner doing yoga with others

Sara Tirner doing yoga with others

Sara Tirner of Madison, whose mother died from Alzheimer's disease two years ago, participates in a yoga class at Tantra Yoga and Wellness in Downtown Madison. She has undergone 11 brain scans in dementia studies at UW-Madison. "Because of my yoga, I'm very relaxed being in MRIs and PET scans," Tirner said.

JOHN HART, STATE JOURNAL

Tirner doing yoga

Tirner doing yoga

Sara Tirner, shown doing yoga at Tantra Yoga and Wellness in Madison, became a yoga instructor herself after working in banking for many years. Before her mother died from Alzheimer's disease two years ago, Tirner moved in with her and her father, in Two Rivers, to care for them.

JOHN HART, STATE JOURNAL

Karen and Barb before PET scan

Karen and Barb before PET scan

Karen Ingmundson, left, talks with PET technologist Barb Mueller before getting a PET scan. Ingmundson doesn't have Alzheimer's disease or a family history of it, but she has participated in several studies to help increase scientific understanding of the disease.

STEVE APPS, STATE JOURNAL
In this Series

Special report | Fading away: Wisconsin's dementia crisis

  • Nov 24, 2019
    Families, policy makers struggle to address dementia and caregiving
  • Updated Jan 9, 2023
    Video: Couple cope with man's dementia diagnosis
  • Nov 24, 2019
    Former Gov. Martin Schreiber shares wisdom of caring for wife with Alzheimer's
  • 9 updates
  • Previous

Locations

  • Madison

Related to this collection

With no cure for Alzheimer's, exercise can benefit brain

With no cure for Alzheimer's, exercise can benefit brain

Some of the research supporting exercise to ward off dementia comes from the UW-Madison lab of Ozioma Okonkwo, a clinical psychologist.

Special report | Fading away: Wisconsin's dementia crisis

Special report | Fading away: Wisconsin's dementia crisis

An expected doubling of residents with dementia, coupled with a caregiver shortage hitting rural areas especially hard, presents a growing cha…

Lake Geneva News
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram

Sites & Partners

  • Submission Forms
  • Place an Ad
  • Calendar
  • Rack Locations
  • Search
  • Weather

Services

  • E-edition
  • Email Newsletters
  • Customer Service
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Work Here
  • Dealer Returns
© Copyright 2026 Lake Geneva News, 315 Broad St. Lake Geneva, WI 53147
Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Advertising Terms of Use | Do Not Sell My Info | Cookie Preferences
Powered by BLOX Content Management System from bloxdigital.com.
  • Notifications
  • Settings
You don't have any notifications.

Get up-to-the-minute news sent straight to your device.

Topics

Breaking News

News Alerts

You are logged in
 Switch accounts
Secure transaction. Cancel anytime. Have an account? Log In

Sign Up

Account processing issue - the email address may already exist

User information
This is the name that will be displayed next to your photo for comments, blog posts, and more. Choose wisely!
Your email address will be used to confirm your account. We won't share it with anyone else.
Create a password that only you will remember. If you forget it, you'll be able to recover it using your email address.
Confirm your password.
Have an account? Log In

You're all set!

Thank you .

Your account has been registered, and you are now logged in.

Check your email for details.

OK

Log In

Invalid password or account does not exist

Forgot your password?
Email me a log in link
Admin login Subscribe
Need an account? Sign Up

Reset Password

Submitting this form below will send a message to your email with a link to change your password.

Forgot Password

An email message containing instructions on how to reset your password has been sent to the email address listed on your account.

Email me a log in link

Promotional Offers

No promotional rates found.

Purchase Gift Purchase Access

An error occurred

Secure & Encrypted

What's your email address?
What's your name?
Who is this gift for?
Who is this gift from?
Delivery date
What's your billing location?
What's your delivery address?
Subtotal:
Total:
How would you like to pay?
Add New Card

Secure transaction. Secure transaction. Cancel anytime.

You're all set!

Thank you.

Your gift purchase was successful! Your purchase was successful, and you are now logged in.

A receipt was sent to your email.

OK

An error occurred

This offer is currently unavailable.