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Climate change: What I m watching, reading – Air Quality Matters
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Overcome Vaccine Hesitancy Among PLWH by Acknowledging the History of AZT
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Dispatches From the War: The Pharmaceutical/Medical Troops Occupy Planet Earth
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We often talk about the ways climate change affects the Earth (think: polar bears teetering on shrinking ice caps) but forget to consider its impact on our own health. Recently, an urgent report from several federal agencies emphasized this connection, including both straightforward consequences (such as that warmer oceans mean more frequent and intense hurricanes) and indirect hazards like how extreme weather events knock out medical services, making it harder to treat people.
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Our health risks are changing because of climate shifts,” says John Balbus, M.D., M.P.H., a senior adviser for public health at the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences.
This article was published on Thursday, December 17, 2020 in Kaiser Health News.
By
When her husband was diagnosed with early-stage Alzheimer s disease in 2015, Elizabeth Pan was devastated by the lack of options to slow his inevitable decline. But she was encouraged when she discovered the work of a UCLA neurologist, Dr. Dale Bredesen, who offered a comprehensive lifestyle management program to halt or even reverse cognitive decline in patients like her husband.
After decades of research, Bredesen had concluded that more than 36 drivers of Alzheimer s cumulatively contribute to the loss of mental acuity. They range from chronic conditions like heart disease and diabetes to vitamin and hormonal deficiencies, undiagnosed infections and even long-term exposures to toxic substances. Bredesen s impressive academic credentials lent legitimacy to his approach.