Answer ALS shows what becomes possible when people come together to share data in service of something bigger than themselves—and why that mindset matters far beyond ALS research.
That spirit is reflected in the journey of former New Orleans Saints player Steve Gleason, who was diagnosed with ALS in 2011 just months before he and his wife were expecting their first child. Rather than allowing the diagnosis to define his future, Gleason founded Team Gleason to support people living with ALS through assistive technology, equipment, and care services. In 2013, he challenged the scientific community to push beyond conventional thinking, declaring, “The status quo is not acceptable.” That call helped spark the founding of Answer ALS, a nonprofit organization dedicated to understanding ALS at unprecedented depth.
Today, that collaboration continues through Neuromine, the world’s largest ALS research hub, built in collaboration with Microsoft and powered by Microsoft Azure. Neuromine brings together anonymized biological and clinical data from more than 2,500 individuals who have chosen to share their information to accelerate progress.
Why this matters for nonprofits: when organizations prioritize collaboration, trust, and responsible data sharing, they unlock insights that no single institution could achieve alone. This story is a powerful reminder that technology—used thoughtfully—can help nonprofits move faster, work smarter, and drive impact at scale.
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