A Guided Tour of Your Body
- Written by Chuck Guilford
This New York Times feature claims to offer everything you need to know to care for your aging body. Check it out.
Helping People Get Back Home after Needing to Enter a Nursing Home
Just because a person has a set-back and ends up in a nursing home doesn't mean the person has to stay in the nursing home for the rest of his or her life. According to an article in the New York Times about some work done by Medicaid in 29 states, there are ways, after recovery from the health incident that put the person into a nursing home, for him or her to get back a home and regain some independence. Needed services can be hired and brought there.
Same Finding Again and Again
Yet another study, summarized in this article by Reuters, indicates that adults who exercise moderately are less likely to die than those who don't. A sedentary life style---more so than risk factors associated with age or cardiovascular disease---significantly increased a person's chance of death. Also of note was that recent exercise was important because most people in the study had similar amounts of exercise through their adult lives. Recommended exercise is 30 minutes of an activity such as brisk walking, 5 days per week.
Sleep Apnea Increases Risk of Death
Sleep apnea raises the risk of chronic illness and premature death by as much as 40% for middle-aged and older men, according to an article by a HealthDay reporter who summarizes the findings of a recent study. Even moderate sleep apnea was found to increase the risk of premature death by 17%. The study also showed that decreased levels of oxygen during sleep apnea are the cause of the health problems---such as high blood pressure, heart disease, and stroke---and of premature death. Given the alarming findings of the decade-long study, the researchers stressed the need for physicians to pay attention to their patients' sleep patterns. A common condition, sleep apnea affects one in four men and one in ten women; symptoms include loud snoring, interrupted breathing, and interrupted sleep.
(See also results of a community-based study in western Australia, also summarized by HealthDay. During 14 years of follow-up, the people with moderate to severe sleep apnea were 33% more likely to have died by the end of that period. By mid 2010, results of a larger study by a Boston researcher were reported in an article in the L.A. Times: Moderate to severe sleep apnea increased "the risk of coronary heart disease or death by 68% in men under the age of 70." The researcher reported that "The take-away from our study is that obstructive sleep apnea is a serious condition that warrants medical treatment" and that "Many patients don't experience symptoms of obstructive sleep apnea, such as daytime sleepiness, or if they do, they don't mention it during routine medical exams. It's important for anyone who suspects they have obstructive sleep apnea to discuss it with their primary care physician.")