Skip to content
  1. Home/
  2. Alzheimer’s

Alzheimer’s

3 groundbreaking ways researchers are rethinking Alzheimer’s disease

Diagnostic tests. Clinical trials. A vaccine. For Alzheimer’s Awareness Month, we sat down with scientists at Janssen Research & Development to learn how their work has the potential to alter the future of how we detect and treat the disease.

The Johnson & Johnson under 40 to watch list: 6 young trailblazing scientists

These up-and-coming stars in oncology, immunology, anti-aging, vaccines and other areas of research are helping to change healthcare as we know it. And they’re just at the beginning of their brilliant careers.

5 female biotech superstars who want to change the future of healthcare

On Women’s Equality Day, we’re celebrating Johnson & Johnson, JLABS entrepreneurs who are working on innovations—like a simple way to detect Alzheimer’s before it manifests—that have the potential to improve the healthcare industry.

The mind matters: This Johnson & Johnson researcher is on a mission to change how we treat mental illness

Husseini Manji, M.D., is working toward a world in which diseases like depression and schizophrenia are diagnosed quickly and handled without stigma. His team’s discoveries in the lab may just get us there.

How surprising new research is tapping the powers of the immune system

Your immune system does so much more than simply fight off colds. For National Autoimmune Disease Awareness Month, we spoke to scientists who are harnessing this vital defense system to fight diseases in ways you likely never imagined.

3 Entrepreneurs, 3 Big Ideas: Cutting-Edge Cancer, Alzheimer’s and Diabetes Research

They share one thing in common: a goal of transforming the way illnesses are treated in the most forward-thinking way possible. Meet three innovators whose ideas could someday change the future of healthcare.

How the CHARIOT: Pro clinical trial could teach us to better detect Alzheimer’s

The clinical trial that could teach us to better detect Alzheimer’s before it’s too late