Vitamins & Supplements for Seniors
Large
Study Claims to Pinpoint Lower and Upper Safe Limits of Vitamin D
Supplement widely used by senior citizens but
safety limits have been unclear until this study on when risk of death
increases
April 30, 2013 – Vitamin D is widely used by senior
citizens - older women in particular - to maintain bone density and
prevent fractures but the recommendations on how much to take has been
confusing. A report today says the safe range of vitamin D levels with
respect to coronary morbidity lies between 20 to 36 ng/mL.
Read more...
Health & Medicine for Senior Citizens
Too Many Stroke Victims Fail to Use EMS for Fastest
Trip to Treatment
Ethnic minorities, rural residents least likely to
call 911 at onset of a stroke as recommended by American Heart
Association
April 30, 2013 — Time is critical to stroke victims
but more than a third don’t get to the hospital by ambulance, even
though that’s the fastest way to get help, according to new research in
Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes, an American
Heart Association journal.
Read more...
Social Security News
How Does Social Security Determine Your Benefits?
Q&A Answers This and More
SSA information specialists tells how to estimate
your retirement benefit; explains factors affecting a widow’s benefits;
how to apply for disability
April 25, 2013 – Ever wondered how Social Security
determines your retirement benefit? Or, wanted to get an idea before you
retire of what your benefit will be? These are some basic questions of
the program that are answered by Oscar Garcia, Public Affairs Specialist
with SSA in this week’s Q&A. For those younger Americans seeking
disability under Social Security, he also has answers at the end of this
article.
Read more...
Senior Citizen Politics
Report Finds Financial Advisors Using Over 50
Titles to Suggest Expertise in Senior Citizen Matters
|
"With such a bewildering array of
titles and acronyms, it is no wonder that older Americans are
confused and misled" |
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's Office for
Older Americans calls for
action by regulators to assist senior citizens who are ‘often confused
and mislead’
April 24, 2013 – A report highlighting the
well-known problem of so-called “senior designation” credentials of
questionable value used by many financial advisers to market their
services to older Americans was released last week. It also calls for
specific action by federal and state regulators to protect seniors.
Read
more...
Medicare News
Obama Administration Offering Seniors a Reward of Almost $10 Million for Exposing Medicare Fraud
Also funding expansion of Senior Medicare Patrol to
spread the word on fraud, waste and abuse - elderly are on
'frontlines of this fight,' 'critical partners' in protecting taxpayer
dollars
April
24, 2013 – The Obama Administration made it clear today that it is out
to stop Medicare fraud. The proposal of a new rule today indicates they
want to increase rewards paid to Medicare beneficiaries and other
individuals whose tips about suspected fraud lead to the successful
recovery of funds to as high as $9.9 million from the current limit of
$1,000.
Read more...
Health & Medicine for Senior Citizens
Fast Acting Virus Kills Melanoma Cancer Cells Before
Immune System Can Stop It
Melanoma killer has been highly efficient attacking
human cancer cells in animals, lab tests, while ignoring healthy ones
April 23, 2013 - Researchers from Yale University School of Medicine
have demonstrated that vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) is highly
competent at finding, infecting, and killing human melanoma cells, both
in vitro and in animal models, while having little propensity to infect
non-cancerous cells.
Read more...
Health & Medicine for Senior Citizens
Alternative Therapies May Help Lower Blood Pressure But Don’t Match
Traditional Methods
New scientific statement from American Heart Association
looks at yoga, slow breathing, meditation, hand-grip exercise and more -
Over half of those 60+ have hypertension
April
23, 2013 – Don’t kid yourself about effective ways to reduce your
life-threatening high blood pressure – some alternative methods can help,
especially if they involve physical exercise, but they shouldn’t replace the
proven methods long promoted by the American Heart Association.
Read
more...
Senior Citizen Alerts
Seniors Get Hung Up In Health Care Scams That Are
Increasing Across Nation
Law enforcement agencies report fraudsters seem to
be preying on the senior citizen’s confusion over changes in the health
care system
By Jenny Gold, KHN Staff Writer - Produced in
collaboration with
NPR
April 22, 2013 - One recent morning, 86-year-old
Evelyne Lois Such was sitting at her kitchen table in Denver when the
phone rang. She didn’t recognize the phone number or the deep voice on
the other end of the line. “He asked if I was a senior, and I said yes,
and he said we are sending out all new Medicare cards and I want to make
sure I have all of your statistics correct,” Such recounts.
Read more...
Health & Medicine for Senior Citizens
Ovarian Cancer Detected Using Neighboring Cells,
Raises Hope for Early Detection Method
Partial wave spectroscopic (PWS) microscopy has shown
promising results in early detection of colon, pancreatic and lung
cancers
April 22, 2013 – No reliable early detection method
for ovarian cancer currently exists but there is new hope with a
discovery that has the potential as a minimally invasive early detection
method using cells collected by a swab, exactly like a Pap smear.
Read
more...
Alzheimer's, Dementia & Mental Health
Dementia Risk in 20-Year Decline Among Senior
Citizens as Cardiovascular Disease Decreases
Reduction of dementia risk important but number of
people with dementia will rise with the increase in life expectancy and
growing number over age 75
April 20, 2013 – A new Swedish study appears to
confirm that dementia is declining among older people: those 75 years
old and older. The report in the journal Neurology shows the risk
of the elderly developing dementia may have declined for over 20 years,
in direct conflict with most assumptions. The reason appears to be the
decrease in cardiovascular disease.
Read more...
Exercise & Fitness for Senior Citizens
Knee Brace Proven to Significantly Reduce Pain of
Kneecap Osteoarthritis
Enormous potential for treating common joint
condition effectively; providing a simple and cheap alternative to
painkillers
April 19, 2013 - A lightweight knee brace can
dramatically improve the function and reduce the pain associated with
osteoarthritis the affects the kneecap, says a study released today by
researchers at The University of Manchester that was funded by
Arthritis Research UK.
Read more...
Alzheimer's, Dementia & Mental Health
New Lab Rat May Be Star of Future Alzheimer’s
Research; Confirms Beta-Amyloid as Cause
New research funded by National Institutes of Health
confirms Alzheimer’s brains have abnormal levels of beta-amyloid protein
that form amyloid plaques
April 19, 2013 – Recent announcements from the
National Institutes of Health about Alzheimer’s research almost sounded
routine. On a second look, however, the confirmation that increases in
the molecule beta-amyloid in the brain causes the disease, and that a
new genetically engineered lab rat has been created with the full array
of brain changes found in the disease.
Read more...
Senior Citizen Politics
First Public Hearing Underway on Chained CPI
Proposed to Slow Future COLA for Senior Citizens
Republican chair of House Ways and Means subcommittee
on Social Security issued news release blasting Treasury secretary; in
opening says reducing COLA only would be called ‘benefit cut’ in
Washington
April 18, 2013 – The first congressional hearing on
the budget cuts to Social Security proposed by President Obama is
underway. Rep. Sam Johnson (R-Tx), chair of the Social Security panel of
the House Ways and Means Committee, released his opening statement and
the prepared testimony of witnesses. The Texas Republican also released
a news release this morning accusing Treasury Secretary Jack Lew of
making “conflicting statements” about the Chained CPI before the full
committee.
Read
more...
Health & Medicine for Senior Citizens
Reminding
Doctors to Test Older People for Osteoporosis Reduced Fractures, Health
Care Costs
Just a simple personal reminder letter to family doctors
and patients about evaluating fracture patients for osteoporosis
significantly improved care at very low cost
April 18, 2013 - Osteoporosis is a condition that is
common, costly and undertreated. Low trauma fractures in older people are a
"red flag" for osteoporosis, but those at risk often are not treated for the
condition. Rates of osteoporosis testing and treatment are typically less
than 20 percent in the first year after a fracture.
Read more...
Health & Medicine for Senior Citizens
You May Have Survived Cancer But Cardiovascular Risk
May Now Be Higher Than You Think
Cancer shares many of cardiovascular risk factors
such as smoking, low physical activity and obesity; cancer treatment
many not help heart either
April 16, 2013 – A study of survivors of breast,
prostate, colorectal and gynecologic cancers finds many of these people
end up dying of cardiovascular disease.
Read more...
Health & Medicine for Senior Citizens
Almost
Half of Deaths from Prostate Cancer Can Be Predicted by PSA Before Men
Reach Age 50
Earlier 2010 study in BMJ showed PSA level at age 60
is strongly predictive of the risk of death from prostate cancer by age
85
|
"As it
turns out, the best way to determine risk is a single PSA before
the age of 50." |
April 17, 2013 - Prostate specific antigen (PSA)
screening is widely used for the early detection of prostate cancer, but
remains highly controversial, as it became widespread long before
evidence to prove its value. There is now evidence that PSA screening
can reduce prostate cancer mortality in men who would not otherwise be
screened. However, this can come at considerable harm.
Read
more...
Health & Medicine for Senior Citizens
Questions
About Colon Screening Coverage Still Vex Consumers; Difference for
Medicare, Others
People in group, individual health plans don't pay for
polyp removal during a screening colonoscopy; feds say it is an integral
part of screening and should be covered without cost sharing - Medicare may
still require co-pay. Some remain vexed and confused about testing that
begins at age 50 for second leading
cancer killer
By Michelle
Andrews, Insuring Your Health, KHN
April 16, 2013 - No one looks forward to screening
tests for colon and rectal cancers. But under the Affordable Care Act,
patients are at least supposed to save on out of-pocket costs for them.
Coverage is not always clear, however, and despite the federal government's
clarifications, some consumers remain vexed and confused.
Read more...
Senior Citizen Politics
Five Ways the President's Budget Would Change
Medicare; Reduce Spending $371 Billion in Decade
Wealthier beneficiaries to pay more for coverage and
future retirees to pay higher copays for outpatient services such as
doctor's visits and home health care
By Mary Agnes Carey, KHN Staff Writer
April 15, 2013 - President Barack Obama's fiscal
2014 budget includes a variety of what he says are "manageable" changes
for Medicare's 54 million beneficiaries as well as for the hospitals,
nursing homes and other health care providers that serve them.
Read more...
Senior Citizen Politics
Ways and Means Draws Bead on Medicare Cuts, Chained
CPI to Limit COLA for Social Security
HHS Secretary Sebelius in witness chair today on
total budget for HHS, CMS with Social Security proposal the target this
Thursday
April
12, 2013 – The Republican-led House Ways and
Means Committee has grabbed the lead in questioning President Obama’s
2014 budget proposals for the Department of Health and Human Services,
which includes the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. HHS
Secretary Kathleen Sebelius will testify there today and next Thursday
the hearing topic will be on entitlement reform proposals, with emphasis
on the controversial Chained Consumer Price Index, which will be used to
lower cost-of-living adjustments for seniors and others in future years.
Read more...
Senior Citizen Politics
Obama Says Budget Proposal Offers ‘Manageable’
Curbs on Medicare Cost, Social Security Benefits
Most
media reports say focus of White House is to strike a ‘Grand Bargain’
with Republicans who want to change Medicare into a voucher-style
system; Medicare proposal has one revenue item - higher premiums
for couples making more than $170,000 a year
April 11, 2013 - The White House says its budget is
a good start toward controlling government entitlement programs by
offering proposals to curb the growth of Social Security, Medicare and
other federal benefit programs. The budget blueprint, released
Wednesday, includes what the president called "manageable" curbs on
Medicare spending growth, but GOP congressional leaders were dismissive,
while some Democrats and virtually all senior citizen advocacy groups
were unsettled.
Read more...
Senior Citizen Politics
How
Chained Consumer Price Index Proposed by Obama Works to Curb Social
Security Benefits
Bureau of Labor Statistics provides a Q&A about
inflation calculation that will slow cost-of-living adjustments for
senior citizens
April 11, 2013 – The term “COLA” is a part of the
Social Security program that has been highly cherished by senior
citizens. It stands for “cost-of-living adjustment,” and was the
government’s way of being trying to keep retired older Americans from
seeing their Social Security benefits eaten away by inflation. Now, the
Obama administration has come up with a new way to calculate inflation
that will reduce COLA in the future. It is called the chained consumer
price index and below is a Q&A on this method provided by the Bureau of
Labor Statistics.
Read
more...
Senior Citizen Politics
Reporters Dig Into Obama Budget and Find Other
Proposals that May Impact Seniors
More spending on Medicaid, mental health; replacing
current formula for Medicare pay to doctors
April 11, 2013 – Senior citizens have – rightly so
– primarily focused on the cuts to Social Security and Medicare in the
2014 budget proposal from the White House that was presented yesterday.
Media sources have found other parts of the budget that may also impact
many seniors - funding boosts for mental health and food and drug
safety, as well as the elimination of the SGR formula to set Medicare
physician payment rates. It also delays funding cuts to hospitals that
treat the uninsured.
Read
more...
Senior Citizen Politics
Congress Could Lose Older Voters by Cutting
Social Security, Medicare, Vets Benefits: AARP Poll
Senior advocates seem solid in opposition to cuts
expected to appear Wednesday in President Obama’s budget; Congressional
call-in on Wednesday
April 8, 2013 – Groups that advocate for senior
citizens and senior issues appear to be solid in their opposition to
budget moves advocated by Republicans and now supported by the White
House that will cut income from Social Security and reduce spending by
Medicare. A survey released today by AARP says 84% of American voters
age 50 and older oppose the chained CPI proposal for reducing Social
Security benefits for years ahead.
Read
more...
Insurance & Investments for Seniors
Seniors Urged to Consider Free Tax Software from
Free File Alliance as Deadline Nears
Taxpayers with earnings of $57,000 or less can
visit IRS.gov for free software for preparing, filing tax return
April 8, 2013 – With Americans experiencing the
shortest tax season on record, the
Free File Alliance, a
nonprofit coalition of industry-leading tax software companies partnered
with the IRS, today reminded taxpayers that free, brand-name tax
software is available at
the IRS website.
Read more...
Social Security Q&A
Think of Social Security as Life Insurance Policy
You Didn't Know You Had
Social Security specialists points out many survivors
could be eligible for benefits; also promotes Retirement Estimator
April
5, 2013 – A surprising number of people may be eligible to receive
Social Security survivors benefits, according to Oscar Garcia, Public
Affair Specialist with the Social Security Administration. He says, in
answer to a question, “Think of your Social Security taxes as a life
insurance policy you never knew you had.” He also has some assurances
about the agency's Retirement Estimator.
Read more...
Senior Citizen Politics
Budget Axe Ready to Strike Social Security, Medicare
as President Makes Appeal to GOP
Reports say Obama in agreement on plan reducing
Social Security COLA for seniors, cutting $400 billion from Medicare
over 10 years
By Tucker Sutherland, Editor
SeniorJournal.com
April
5, 2013 – For more than a week there has been a steady stream of rumors,
speculation and news leaks indicating White House and Republican
negotiators are near agreement on significant changes to Medicare and
Social Security aimed at reducing the government’s cost. Reports from
major newspapers this morning say the Obama budget will be out next week
and it will have cuts to Social Security and Medicare in hopes of
winning Republican support.
Read more...
Alzheimer's, Dementia & Mental Health
U.S. Dementia Care Costs at $215 Billion in 2010; To
Pass Heart Disease, Cancer: NIH Study
BRAIN initiative announced by Obama this week will
use a new generation of tools to learn secrets to Alzheimer’s
disease and other neurological disorders
April 4, 2013 - The costs of caring for people with
dementia in the United States in 2010 were between $159 billion to $215
billion, and those costs could rise dramatically with the increase in
the numbers of older people in coming decades, according to estimates
from a study of people age 71 and older. And, the study indicates the
costs of care comparable to, if not greater than, those for heart
disease and cancer.
Read
more...
Health & Medicine for Senior Citizens
Targeting Cholesterol Buildup In Eye May Slow
Age-Related Vision Loss from AMD for Seniors
Cholesterol build-up in arteries and veins is a
natural consequence of aging; cholesterol known to accumulate in the eye
in deposits called drusen
April 3, 2013 - Targeting cholesterol metabolism in
the eye might help prevent a severe form of age-related macular
degeneration (AMD), one of the most common causes of blindness in older
Americans, according to indications in a study in mice, which was
supported by the National Institutes of Health.
Read
more...
Alzheimer's, Dementia & Mental Health
Senior Citizens with Memory Concerns, Vietnam
Veterans Needed for Major Alzheimer’s Studies
Study of memory conducted at 54 sites in U.S. and
five in Canada
April 3, 2013 – Senior citizens – those ages 65 to
90 – are needed as volunteers for a study in the early detection of
Alzheimer’s disease. And, Vietnam War veterans are asked to help with a
study of connections between traumatic brain injury, post-traumatic
stress disorder, and signs of Alzheimer’s disease in Vietnam veterans as
they age.
Read more...
Opining of a Cranky Old Man
The End Is Near! Louie Anderson’s Jump into Pool Has
to Hit Bottom for TV Entertainment
What could be more exciting than watching a bunch of
has-beens dive into water!
By Bill Kalmar, Retiree
April 2, 2013 - Whatever happened to quality in
television entertainment programming! Many of us, I think, have either
seen or heard about some of the mind numbing programs that pass for
entertainment on television. The Kardashians, Honey Boo Boo, Wife Swap,
Toddlers and Tiaras, Jersey Shore, any of The House Wives Of…, and of
course The Bachelor rise, I mean sink, to the bottom of the list for
sure! Read
more...
Nutrition, Vitamins & Supplements for Seniors
Senior Citizens Live
Years Longer by
Consuming
Omega-3 Fatty Acids in Fish
Risk of dying from heart disease significantly
lowered: Seniors with highest blood levels of the fatty acids lived 2.2
years longer
April 2, 2013 – Older adults age 65
and up who have higher blood levels of omega-3 fatty acids, which are
found almost exclusively in fatty fish and seafood, may be able to lower
their overall mortality risk by as much as 27% and their mortality risk
from heart disease by about 35%, according to a new study from Harvard
School of Public Health (HSPH) and the University of Washington.
Read more...
Medicare News
Medicare Advantage Plans Win Major Concession from
Obama Administration
Payments to insurers was forecast in February to be
cut for 2014, but it goes up in revision released Monday
April 2, 2013 – The final rate announcement for
Medicare was to be announced yesterday but was a little delayed as the
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid carefully worded the news release
revealing a 3.3 percent increase for insurance companies offering
Medicare Advantage plans, rather than the 2.2 percent reduction forecast
in a February announcement.
Read more...
Aging News & Information
How Much Height We Lose as We Age is Key Indicator
of Health, Mental Issues
High school grads shrink less that illiterate;
strong relationship between height loss and cognitive health found;
health habits as adults influence how much we shrink
April 1, 2013 – A large study of older adults,
which claims to be the first to examine height loss as we age, finds
that choices we make throughout life impact how much we shrink as senior
citizens. For example, High school grads shrink nearly 2 cm less than
the illiterate.
Read more...
Health & Medicine for Senior Citizens
Men with Lynch Syndrome Genetic Condition at Greater Risk of Prostate, Other Cancers
New study adds prostate to list of several cancers
associated with one of the most common inherited genetic conditions
April 1, 2013 - Men with an inherited genetic condition called Lynch
syndrome face a higher lifetime risk of developing prostate cancer and
appear to develop the disease at an earlier age, according to a new
study led by researchers at the University of Michigan Comprehensive
Cancer Center.
Read
more...
Health & Medicine for Senior Citizens
EDTA Chelation Therapy Reduces Cardiovascular Events
in Heart Attack Victims Age 50 and Over
NIH says 18% reduction was ‘modest;’ Seniors with
diabetes appeared to receive particular benefit from this chelation
therapy that is supposed to clear plaques from the blood
March 27, 2013 - Chelation therapy, an unproven
alternative medicine in the treatment for heart disease, “modestly”
reduced cardiovascular events for seniors aged 50 and older who had
suffered a prior heart attack, according a news release from the
National Institutes of Health, which supported the research.
Read more...
Medicaid News
Arkansas Medicaid Plan, Born Of Necessity, Shakes
Things Up in Reluctant Republican States
By Karl Eisenhower, Capsules –
the KHN Blog
March 26, 2013 - Since the Supreme Court made the Medicaid
expansion under the federal health law optional last year,
states’ decisions have largely split along party lines. States run by Democrats have
been opting in; states run by Republicans have mostly been saying no or
holding back.. Read
more...
Social Security Q&A
Social Security Warns Senior Citizens to Be Sure
They Are on the Official Social Security Website
Countless consumers victimized each year by
misleading advertisers who use "Social Security" or "Medicare" to entice
the public to use their services
March 25, 2013 - Thinking you are doing business
with Social Security can be a costly mistake when you have been mislead
to a website posing as the official government site, says Oscar Garcia,
Public Affair Specialist with the Social Security Administration. He
also advises prompt notification of a beneficiaries death to another
question in this Social Security Q&A.
Read more...
Alzheimer's, Dementia & Mental Health
Parkinson’s Drug Helps Seniors in Their Seventies
With Decision-Making
Discover brain activity of senior citizens is
different than in young adults who are better at making decisions
March 25, 2013 - New research finds changes in the
patterns of brain activity of senior citizens in their seventies offers
new insight into why the elderly are worse at decision-making than young
people and they also discover a Parkinson’s Disease drug can help reverse
age-related impairments in decision-making in older people.
Read more...
Health & Medicine for Senior Citizens
Depression, Anxiety a Deadly Combination
for Older People with Heart
Disease
Two new studies look at anxiety and depression among
older heart disease patients and find these patients need closer monitoring
March
20, 2013 — Heart disease patients who have
anxiety have twice the risk
of dying from any cause compared to those without anxiety. It they
suffer both anxiety and depression they have a triple risk of dying.
Then, a second study finds heart failure patients with moderate or
severe depression have four times the risk of dying.
Read more...
Health & Medicine for Senior Citizens
Actinic Keratosis – Dry Scaly Skin Spots Common for
Seniors – Can Lead to Cancer
For up to 10 percent of people, AKs – off-color skin
blemishes often referred to as “sun spots” - will progress to squamous
cell carcinoma.
By Dr.
Ellen Marmur
March 19, 2013 - We all know someone who fits the
bill: fair-skinned, covered in “sun spots” after having spent their
younger days soaking up the sun, getting a nice bronze tan (or sunburn)
while unwittingly bathing themselves in the sun’s harmful UV rays. While
education around skin cancer has increased dramatically, it doesn’t help
the generations of sun-worshippers for whom the damage has already been
done. I know, because I am an ex sun worshipper who has survived skin
cancer. For these people, proactive skin care and screening is
essential.
Read more...
Other News Sources
China Moves to Let
Elderly Sue Adult Kids for Neglect
BEIJING - From July 1 onward, parents in China can sue
their kids who don't visit often enough, under a broadened law mandating
children take better care of the aged. With China's elderly population
forecast to more than double to 487 million in the next 40 years, the
government needs to try to limit the cost of caring for seniors. More at
Arizona Daily Star
Health & Medicine for Senior Citizens
Older Women Seem to Do Fine with Biennial Mammogram,
Regardless of Breast Density
Younger women - 40 to 49 - with high density should
stick with annual exams says new study considering harm and benefits of
various screening frequencies and considering age, breast density and
more
March 15, 2013 – It appears to be okay for older
women – those ages 50 to 74 – to have mammograms every two years because
a new study finds regardless of breast density or hormone therapy it
does not increase the risk of presenting with advanced breast cancer and
does substantially reduce the cumulative risk of a false-positive
mammography result and biopsy recommendation. Women aged 40 to 49 years
with extremely dense breasts, however, should consider annual screening.
Read more...
Alzheimer's, Dementia & Mental Health
Grief From Loss of Partner May Cause Memory Problems
but Not About the Lost Loved One
Also works when the grieved imagine future events: no
problem if it involves lost partner
March 18, 2013 – Most senior citizens are not
surprised when a friend suffering from complicated grief after the death
of their partner has difficulty recalling specific events from the past
or imagining specific events in the future. A new study finds, however,
those faults are not present when these events involve the partner they
lost. Read
more...
Health & Medicine for Senior Citizens
CDC Calls for Action Now to Halt Spread of Deadly
CRE Bacteria in Hospitals, Nursing Homes
Antibiotic-resistant CRE bacteria kills up to half of
patients who get bloodstream infections from them – seniors at highest
risk due to frequent hospital visits, lack of endurance
March
15, 2013 – Senior citizens and the caregivers who watch over them need
to pay close attention to a new threat from a family of bacteria that
has become increasingly resistant to last-resort antibiotics during the
past decade, and more hospitalized patients are getting lethal
infections that, in some cases, are impossible to cure.
Read
more...
Medicare News
Medicare a Hot Button as Budget Proposals from
Political Parties Smash Head-On
GOP’S Ryan presents ‘austere budget proposal that
looks a lot like one they approved last year that Democrats quickly
dismissed. Republicans revived plans to overhaul Medicare, slash the
social safety net for the poor and bolster defense — all while lowering
corporate and individual tax rates to no more than 25%’
March 13, 2013 – The political parties are running
out their budget proposals and the general consensus is they are “miles
apart.” The House GOP plan, which was unveiled yesterday, would repeal
the health law's subsidized insurance exchanges and Medicaid expansion
and turn Medicare into a premium-support system. The Senate Democrats'
plan, scheduled for release today, would lower domestic spending in part
by saving $275 billion through changes to Medicare and Medicaid that are
smaller than those proposed by Republicans.
Read
more...
Health & Medicine for Senior Citizens
Bitter Melon
Juice Prevents Pancreatic Cancer In Mouse Models
Mice fed bitter melon juice were 60 percent less likely
to develop pancreatic cancer
By Garth
Sundem, In The Lab
March
12, 2013 - A University of Colorado Cancer study
published this week
in the journal Carcinogenesis shows that bitter melon juice restricts
the ability of pancreatic cancer cells to metabolize glucose, thus cutting
the cells’ energy source and eventually killing them.
Read more...