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Posts by admin
3/29/2015 - Add Uncertainty to Your Financial Plans
by admin on March 29, 2015 11:12 pm
Human beings don’t like uncertainty, especially when we’re contemplating our financial futures. It’s not enough for us to think that we’ll have enough money to send our kids to college, or to retire. We want to know exactly how much money we’ll need to achieve those goals — and precisely how we’re going to get… Read more 3/29/2015 - Add Uncertainty to Your Financial Plans
3/28/2015 - At Aging Conference, Old Is The New Black
by admin on March 28, 2015 5:39 pm
For the first in a series of regular discussions about aging, NPR’s Scott Simon speaks with NPR’s Ina Jaffe from the Aging in America Conference in Chicago. Read the full article at National Public Radio (NPR).
3/26/2015 - Grim News on Health Costs in Retirement
by admin on March 26, 2015 7:15 pm
If you need a reminder that Medicare covers only a portion of retiree medical expenses, check out this report. Released Wednesday by HealthView Services, a Danvers, Mass., company that provides retirement health-care cost data and tools to financial advisers, it finds that a 66-year-old couple retiring this year with average Social Security benefits can expect… Read more 3/26/2015 - Grim News on Health Costs in Retirement
3/25/2015 - Senate Special Committee on Aging: Finding an Alzheimer's Cure
by admin on March 26, 2015 7:10 pm
B. Smith, restaurateur and author, testified before the Senate Special Committee on Aging on the importance of finding a cure for Alzheimer’s disease by 2025. See video at ABC News.
3/25/2015 - Stanford research: People from different cultures express sympathy differently
by admin on March 26, 2015 6:44 pm
Stanford psychologist and Center on Longevity faculty affiliate Jeanne Tsai found that Americans tend to focus on the positive in expressions of sympathy while Germans focus on the negative. The research showed that how much people wanted to avoid negative emotion influenced their expressions of sympathy more than how negative they actually felt. Read the… Read more 3/25/2015 - Stanford research: People from different cultures express sympathy differently
3/25/2015 - How Exercise May Aid Cancer Treatment
by admin on March 25, 2015 11:23 pm
In a new study involving mice, aerobic exercise slowed the growth of breast cancer tumors and made the cancer more sensitive to chemotherapy. The results raise the possibility that exercise may change the biology of some malignant tumors, potentially making them easier to treat. Read the full article at The New York Times.
3/24/2015 - The Medicaid bill that doesn’t go away when you die
by admin on March 25, 2015 10:12 pm
Medicaid is thought of as free health insurance for the poor, but federal law requires that recipients pay for the costs of long-term care. And when patients die, Medicaid charges the expenses to the leftover assets in their estates, sometimes passing the burden on to heirs. Special correspondent Sally Schilling reports on how California is… Read more 3/24/2015 - The Medicaid bill that doesn’t go away when you die
3/24/2015 - Many Doctors Who Diagnose Alzheimer's Fail To Tell The Patient
by admin on March 24, 2015 8:33 pm
Doctors are much more likely to level with patients who have cancer than patients who have Alzheimer’s, according to a report released this week by the Alzheimer’s Association. Read the full article National Public Radio (NPR).
3/23/2015 - People 'Grow to Trust' as They Get Older
by admin on March 23, 2015 5:28 pm
Contrary to some stereotypes, getting older doesn’t necessarily make people cynical and suspicious. Instead, trust tends to increase as people age, a development that can be good for well-being. Read the full article at Futurity.
3/23/2015 - Global collaboration leads to discovery of insulin-resistance mutation
by admin on March 23, 2015 3:43 pm
An international team led by Stanford researchers has discovered a gene associated with insulin resistance, a condition in which the body doesn’t use insulin properly. Read the full article at Stanford Medicine.
