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Author Archives: anthony

Doctors Don’t Talk About End of Life Care

The January 11 online edition of Cancer reveals that there is general lack of communication between physicians and terminally ill patients regarding end of life care. As reported in Health Day, a national sample of almost 4,100 physicians who treat cancer patients was taken. Physicians were given a hypothetical example...

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Vitamin B Shows Promise for Alzheimer’s

Researchers at MIT found during clinical trials that a three-nutrient cocktail of B vitamins, phosopholipids and antioxidants was found to promote the growth of certain brain synapse connections that typically erode during the early stages of Alzheimer’s. The nutrients develop the fatty molecules that form brain cells and synapses. Over...

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Study Suggests Assisted Living Affordable Only to Wealthy

David Stevenson, an assistant professor of health policy at Harvard Medical School in Boston has been studying assisted living facilities and has found, not surprisingly that assisted living facilities are most often located in areas with higher levels of income, education and home values. The findings indicate that people with...

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Obesity Poses Same If Not Greater Risks Than Smoking

Researchers at Columbia University and The City College of New York published a study in the February issue of the American Journal of Preventive Medicine that showed that the quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) lost to obesity are equal to, or greater than, those lost because of smoking. From 1993 to...

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Alcoholism in the Elderly a Growing Problem

Elderly people with drinking problems consume significantly more alcohol than their younger counterparts according to a study presented at the Gerontological Society of America. Younger alcoholics typically consume between 25 and 35 drinks per week, according to a report from Ohio State University. Older adults binge drink an average of...

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GOA – Nursing Home Deficiencies Understated

Here is something scary. The Government Accountability Office has issued a report that finds that general weaknesses in the nursing home survey process contribute to the understatement of deficiencies at nursing homes. Shortcomings of current surveys includes too many tasks, problems with guidance on identifying deficiencies, workforce shortages, surveyor inexperience,...

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Capture Your Loved Ones Story During The Holidays

As you gather with older relatives this season, you will probably find moments when you discover things about them and wish that you could capture the stories to share with others. We all have great intentions. Then time slips by and perhaps a loved one passes on and their stories...

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Think Hospital Care is Local? Think Again.

Read this interesting story at CNN about a woman who wanted to have her baby delivered vaginally after having a previous child by C-section. Her hospital refused. So she moved. And delivered (safely and vaginally) at another hospital. I am not going to debate the medicine and science behind VBAC’s...

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20% of Healthcare Workers Suffer from Low Morale

A recent Career Builder survey reveals that 20% of healthcare workers have low morale; 38% lack motivation; and 25% have no loyalty. Why is that important to providers, consumers, boomers and seniors? Take a look.

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