Future of dementia research up for a vote in Texas Senate
AUSTIN (Nexstar) — Texas Senators will convene in the high chamber on Wednesday morning to debate and vote on the creation of the Dementia Prevention and Research Institute of Texas (DPRIT), an initiative that will infuse $3 billion of state money over the next 10 years to find a cure for one of the most cruel diseases impacting Texans.
The initiative has bipartisan support in the Senate and is a top priority for Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick. Sen. Joan Huffman, R-Houston, is carrying the bill and points out the elderly population in the United States is expected to double to 70 million by 2030.
'Senate Bill 5 is a game-changer — it's about innovation, collaboration, and a fierce commitment to the health of our state,' Huffman said in a news release. 'I'm proud to champion this effort to give Texas the tools to lead the charge against this devastating disease.'
If approved by the Senate and House, Texas voters would have to approve the creation of DPRIT at the polls.
DPRIT is modeled after the Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas, which lawmakers passed and voters later approved in 2007. Huffman even said during a Senate Finance Committee hearing she copied the revised bill that was used to create CPRIT.
Secretary of State Jane Nelson was a lawmaker in 2007 and carried the bill that created CPRIT. She spoke in a public hearing last week about her work 18 years ago.
'It was one of, if not the most important piece of legislation I ever created,' Nelson told the Senate Finance Committee. 'Even though we had universal agreement that we needed to step up the fight against cancer it was one of the toughest bills that I carried.'
The bill faced questions about the funding mechanism and whether research was a core function of the state government. Voters and lawmakers eventually approved the initiative and have dedicated $6 billion of state money to CPRIT since then.
Nelson said it was a great investment and made Texas one of the leaders in cancer research in the world. She believes the state should repeat history when it comes to dementia. She shared her personal story about the cognitive disease. Her mother was diagnosed with dementia.
'It's the cruelest disease, and then we lost her,' Nelson said. She said it is especially hard for families to watch their loved ones slowly lose themselves.
The National Institutes of Health reported in 2024 that Alzheimer's and related dementia research has advanced in recent years but stressed more needs to be funded to keep finding new answers to a cure and prevention.
'This progress helps move us closer to developing effective prevention and treatment options that benefit all Americans,' the NIH report reads.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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