Senior Citizen Alerts
Latest Statistics on Fires are Devastating for Older
Americans: Seniors Most Likely to Die
Fire
safety tips for senior citizens offered by ADT;
US Fire Administrations releases data
Jan. 13, 2010 – The statistics concerning senior
citizens and fire are staggering. The U.S. Fire Administration says
people over the age of 65 have a home fire death rate nearly twice the
national average. For those over 75, that risk nearly triples.
Read more...
Health & Medicine for Senior Citizens
New Hope for Improved Treatment of Small Cell Lung
Cancer Found in Study of Senior Citizens
TGen-Scottsdale Healthcare researchers make
breakthrough: MicroRNAs are key to identifying resistant to 'first-line'
chemotherapy
Jan. 13, 2010 - A new study of senior citizens with
small cell lung cancer – the rapidly spreading type of lung cancer – has
discovered a way to predict which patients with SCLC may be resistant to
first-line chemotherapy. This breakthrough is critical since patients
with SCLC often do not get a second chance at therapies to combat this
aggressive type of cancer.
Read
more, more about types of lung cancer...
Senior Citizen Alerts
FDA Approves New Drug for Moderate to Severe
Rheumatoid Arthritis
Actemra’s recommended use is limited to patients who
have failed other approved therapies because of serious safety concerns
| |
Read
more about Rheumatoid Arthritis below news report. |
|
Jan. 12, 2010 - The U.S. Food and Drug
Administration has approved Actemra (tocilizumab) to treat adults with
moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis who have not adequately
responded to or cannot tolerate other approved drug classes for
rheumatoid arthritis. The majority of America’s 1.3 million RA patients
are senior citizens with the average age for all RA victims being 66.8
years. Read
more...
Alzheimer's, Dementia & Mental Health
Seniors with Subjective Memory Loss (where did I put
keys?) at Increased Risk of Dementia
Significant percentage of people with early
subjective symptoms may experience further cognitive decline; few
without these symptoms decline
Jan. 12, 2010 - Forgot where you put your car keys?
Having trouble recalling your colleague's name? If so, this may be a
symptom of subjective cognitive impairment (SCI), the earliest sign of
cognitive decline. Studies have shown that SCI is experienced by between
one-quarter and one-half of the senior citizen population (over age 65).
A new study finds that healthy seniors reporting SCI are 4.5 times more
likely to progress to the more advanced memory-loss stages of mild
cognitive impairment (MCI) or dementia than those free of SCI.
Read
more...
Exercise & Fitness for Senior Citizens
Senior Citizen Exercise Appears to Prevent, Improve
Mild Cognitive Impairment
Moderate exercise in late life for men and woman was
associated with a 32% reduction in the odds of developing cognitive
impairment.
Jan. 11, 2010 - Moderate physical activity
performed in midlife or even as a senior citizen appears to be
associated with a reduced risk of mild cognitive impairment, whereas a
six-month high-intensity aerobic exercise program may improve cognitive
function in individuals who already have the condition, according to two
reports in the January issue of Archives of Neurology, one of the
JAMA/Archives journals.
Read
more...
Flu News for Senior Citizens
Heart Disease Patients Should Get H1N1 Flu Shot Says
American Heart Association
National Influenza Vaccination Week started Sunday;
pushed by HHS and CCD
Jan. 11, 2010 — The American Heart Association has
joined the national effort to get more Americans vaccinated against H1N1
flu during National Influenza Vaccination Week, Jan. 10-16.
Read more...
Senior Citizen Longevity & Statistics
Senior Citizens May Be Significantly Shortening
Lives by Too Much Time Watching TV
New study focused on television watching but
suggests any prolonged sedentary behavior, such as sitting at a desk or
in front of a computer, may pose a health risk, too
Jan. 11, 2010 - Self destruction, if not against
the law in most states, is certainly frowned upon everywhere. But, it
does not stop senior citizens from watching television over 200 hours a
month, which, according to a new study, increases their risk of death
from cardiovascular disease about 36 percent – and about 22 percent from
all causes.
Read more...
Alzheimer's, Dementia & Mental Health
Less Educated at Greater Risk of Dementia But Study
Finds Ways to Compensate
Researchers say evidence suggests mental exercises
help some more than others
Jan. 11, 2010 - If you don't have a college degree,
you're at greater risk of developing memory problems or even
Alzheimer's. Education plays a key role in lifelong memory performance
and risk for dementia, and it's well documented that those with a
college degree possess a cognitive advantage over their less educated
counterparts in middle and old age. But, a new study shows there is hope
for those less educated.
Read more...
Retirement News
Author
Reveals Why Investment Market Crisis Has Changed Retirement
Planning Forever
Krakower believes Americans need to adjust
their attitudes about retirement, and what it takes to have a
successful retirement plan
Jan. 11, 2010 - According to statistics,
record numbers of Americans think retirement is way out of their
reach, but at least one expert thinks people can still make it
happen if they approach their retirement planning in a different
way.
Read more, see video...
Medicare Drug Program News
Chubby Checker Making Senior Citizens Aware It’s
Easier to Get Help Paying for Medicare Drugs
The old twister joins Social Security in announcing
new “twist” in law making it easier to qualify for Extra Help with
Medicare prescription drug plan costs
Jan. 11, 2010 - The Social Security Administration
says there is a “new twist” that makes it easier for senior citizens to
qualify for extra help with Medicare prescription drug costs, and they
have the old twister – Chubby Checker – helping to spread the word.
Read more, see
video...
Senior Citizen Volunteers
Volunteer Work May Help the Elderly Avoid Becoming
Frail, Other Signs of Aging
Productive activities - specifically volunteering,
paid work and child care - prevent the onset of frailty in seniors
Jan. 8, 2010 – Another study is out that finds,
like many before it, that keeping the mind and body active appears to
slow many of the signs and consequences of aging for senior citizens.
And, like others, this one finds that volunteer work seems to produce
the best results.
Read
more...
Senior Citizen Opinions & Analysis
It’s Time To Coordinate Care for the Disabled and
Frail Elderly
An obscure provision of the Senate health bill
attempts to at least crack that barrier
By Howard Gleckman, Senior Research Associate at
the Urban Institute

Jan. 8, 2010 - Since the creation of Medicare and
Medicaid nearly 45 years ago, the government has operated on the bizarre
illusion that it can separate acute medical care from personal
assistance and long-term care. For real patients and their families,
this makes no sense. Someone who is sick often needs both medical
treatment and personal care. They should not have to worry about which
is which.
Read more...
Alzheimer's, Dementia & Mental Health
Cell
Phone Use May Protect You Against and Even Reverse Alzheimer's
Disease
Florida Alzheimer's Disease Research Center
study in mice indicates long-term exposure to cell phone signals
may even boost normal memory
| |
Mice
were exposed to cell phone signals from a
centrally-located antenna. Photo courtesy of University
of South Florida |
|
Jan. 7, 2010 - The millions of people who
spend hours every day on a cell phone may have a new excuse for
yakking. A surprising new study in mice provides the first
evidence that long-term exposure to electromagnetic waves
associated with cell phone use may actually protect against, and
even reverse, Alzheimer's disease.
Read
more...
Senior Citizen Politics
Comparison Online of House, Senate Health Reform Bills on Key
Issues for Senior Citizens
SCAN
Foundation provides user-friendly side-by-side summary of
provisions that support the continuum of care for Seniors
Jan. 7, 2010 - The SCAN Foundation has
released a policy brief summarizing the key provisions of the
House and Senate health care reform bills that support the
continuum of health and long-term care for seniors. The two
houses are Congress are working now to reach agreement on a
final bill.
Read
more...
Alzheimer's, Dementia & Mental Health
Diffusion Tensor Imaging Better at Detecting
Earliest Signs of Alzheimer’s in Healthy People
Could help doctors when trying to differentiate
between normal aging and diseases like Alzheimer's
| |
A
video reports on early work with diffusion tensor imaging at
Mayor Clinic last year. Read more below news report. |
|
Jan. 6, 2010 - A type of brain scan that has come
into use in recent years, called diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), appears
to be better at detecting whether a person with memory loss might have
brain changes of Alzheimer's disease, according to a new study published
in the January 6, 2010, online issue of Neurology, the medical
journal of the American Academy of Neurology.
Read
more, watch video...
Flu News for Senior Citizens
Senior Citizens Need to Get In Line for Widely
Available H1N1, Seasonal Flu Vaccinations
Many seniors confused about antiviral drugs being
used to treat flu; they are high priority if sick
Jan. 6, 2010 – This has been a confusing flu season
for senior citizens. Almost all older Americans know they should get the
seasonal flu shot each winter and that Medicare pays for it. This year,
however, the H1N1 flu struck and seniors were not on the high priority
list for vaccinations, because they seemed to have some immunity not
enjoyed by younger people. Now, however, there is plenty of H1N1 vaccine
out there and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says the
elderly should get the shot.
Read
more...
Opining of a Cranky Old Man
No Rear View Mirrors!
A sign of
the times that makes a columnist rethink his attitude on retirement
By Bill Kalmar, Retiree
Jan.
6, 2010 - Besides penning a column periodically for SeniorJournal.com, I
also write for a number of other newspapers and publications. One of
those columns for a paper distributed in Michigan and neighboring states
is entitled, “Retired…(and lovin’ it).” But here’s the dilemma: the more
I talk to people still in the workforce and hear their stories of
incompetent managers, ambiguous directions from supervisors, secret
meetings, December dismissals, and other mind numbing workplace
activities, I’m thinking that column title should be updated to read,
“Retired…(and really, truly lovin’ it).”
Read more...
Medicare News
Health Care Spending at Historical Low Rate but
Still Grows Faster that U.S. Economy
‘Health care spending as a percentage of GDP is
rising at an unsustainable rate’
Jan. 5, 2010 – Health spending in the U.S. grew 4.4
percent in 2008 – the slowest growth rate since the Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services started officially tracking expenditures in 1960 –
but a rate still much higher that the economic growth rate for the
national economy as measured by the Gross Domestic Product (GDP), which
was just 2.6 percent. Health spending grew to $2.3 trillion or $7,681
per person.
Read more...
Exercise & Fitness for Senior Citizens
Survey Finds Americans Resolved to Improve Health,
Senior Citizens Most Likely to Do It
American Heart Association introduces free social
media application to help keep exercise, diet commitment
Jan. 5, 2010 – The American Heart Association has
introduced a new online program to help the 58 percent of Americans who
have resolved to improve their health in 2010. The association survey
also shows senior citizens strongly prefer diet over exercise as the way
to improve their health, and that these seniors are much more likely to
keep their resolve than are younger people.
Read more,
watch video...
News for Baby Boomers
Overweight Boomer Men at Higher Risk of Heart
Attack, Stroke, Premature Death
|
Being heart
healthy and weighing too much are incompatible:
Overweight and obese middle-aged men are at higher risk of heart
attack and death even if they do not have the metabolic
syndrome.
Men with the
metabolic syndrome
are at increased risk of heart
attack, stroke and premature death, whether or not they are
overweight. |
Previous studies suggested that obese people without
metabolic syndrome were not at risk - this contradicts that
Jan. 4, 2010 – Any way you look at it, overweight
or obese middle-aged men are at a higher risk of heart attack, stroke
and premature death, according to research reported in Circulation:
Journal of the American Heart Association. This dreadful prognosis holds
true, too, even if they don’t have the metabolic syndrome.
Read
more...
Exercise & Fitness for Senior Citizens
Running Shoes More Damaging to Knees, Hips, Ankles
Than Running Barefoot
Greater stresses on joints than running barefoot or
walking in high-heeled shoes
Jan. 4, 2010 – Knee osteoarthritis (OA) is the
cause of more disability in senior citizens than any other disease, but
much of it may be the result of running shoes, says a new study.
Although running is good for the cardiovascular system, and has many
other health benefits, it also increases stresses on the joints of the
leg and there may be even more stress if the runner is wearing running
shoes. Read more,
link to anatomy of running shoe...
Health & Medicine for Senior Citizens
Harvard Scientists Move Closer to Correcting
Cellular Defects That Lead to Diabetes
Report says the G6PD protein, which produces essential antioxidant NAPDH, could prevent the death of pancreatic beta
cells, the root cause of diabetes
Jan.
4, 2010 - In a new research report, scientists say they are
coming closer to correcting the root cause of diabetes through the
identification of a protein (G6PD) and its antioxidant product (NAPDH)
that both prevent the death and promote the growth of cells which
produce and release insulin in the pancreas (beta cells).
Read
more...
Nutrition, Vitamins & Supplements for Seniors
Vitamin C Cures Fast Aging Mice from Cancer,
Diabetes, Heart Failure, High Cholesterol
Clearly indicates that healthy individuals do not
require a large amount of vitamin C in order to increase their lifespan,
scientist says
Jan.
4, 2010 – Vitamin C has been found to cure mice from abnormalities
caused by Werner syndrome (accelerated aging) gene, including cancer,
obesity, diabetes, heart failure and high cholesterol in new research
published in the FASEB Journal.
Read
more...
Caregivers & Elder Care News
Journal of American Medical Association to Publish
Series on Caring for the Aging Patient
Goal of this series will be to help improve
clinical practice and inform policy in care of older individuals
Jan. 2, 2010 - The prestigious Journal of the
American Medical Association has announced the launch of a series –
“"Care of the Aging Patient: From Evidence to Action" - to assist
physicians in caring for a patient demographic that is rapidly growing
in size. The first 12 articles will explore the course of aging, from
the first hints of frailty through events such as difficulty driving a
car to the progressive restriction of activities that results from a
steady decline.
Read
more...
Nutrition, Vitamins & Supplements for Seniors
Ginkgo Biloba Fails to Slow Cognitive Decline in
Study of Senior Citizens
Study previously found it was not effective in
reducing the incidence of Alzheimer dementia or dementia - see video
Jan. 2, 2010 – The idea that a simple herbal
supplement – Ginkgo biloba - could slow the rate of cognitive decline
has long attracted the attention of senior citizens. The final blow to
that possibility seems to have been struck by a study reported in the
December 23/30 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association
(JAMA).
Read more...see Video
Money, Insurance & Investments for Seniors
Free Legal Guide for the Seriously Ill Written by
American Bar’s Commission on Law and Aging
Guide for caretakers and those who are ill was
commissioned by the National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization
Dec.
29, 2009 – Knowing how to get personal financial and legal affairs in
order is a consideration every senior citizens should consider – before
the onset of a serious illness or injury, which can affect much more
than a person’s health. This information is often vitally important not
only to the affected individual, but to his or her loved ones as well.
Read more...
Medicare Drug News
Senior Citizens Struggle Under Worry, Danger, Cost
of Taking Multiple Medications
|
●
57% of seniors forget to take
medications
● 23%
neglected to fill a prescription on
time
● 40%
of seniors (taking 5 or more drugs regularly) are worried about their ability to afford their
medications
● 49%
of those enrolled in Medicare Part D would
like to know how to delay or avoid entering the Medicare Coverage Gap
(the “Donut Hole”)
|
New survey finds 25% of seniors take 10 to 19
pills daily, 60% on Medicare have taken some steps to avoid the donut
hole - Medco offers free help
Dec. 29, 2009 - America's seniors are being
overwhelmed by the number of prescription drugs they take on a daily
basis. According to a new national survey of more than 1,000 people ages
65 and older who use medications, more than half (51 percent) take at
least five different prescription drugs regularly and one in four take
between 10 and 19 pills each day.
Read
more...
Alzheimer's, Dementia & Mental Health
Alzheimer’s Disease May Protect Seniors From Cancer,
Cancer From AD
Researchers studied over 3,000 senior citizens: 478
developed dementia, 376 developed cancer
Dec. 24, 2009 - People who have Alzheimer’s disease
may be less likely to develop cancer, and people who have cancer may be
less likely to develop Alzheimer’s disease, according to a new study
published in the December 23, 2009, online issue of
Neurology, the medical journal of the American Academy of
Neurology.
Read more...
Alzheimer's, Dementia & Mental Health
Delaying Aging Process Best Guard Against
Alzheimer’s Disease
Looking at the way we age may have more impact on
treatment, prevention of AD than studying basic biology of the disease
Dec. 24, 2009 – Aging, something most senior
citizens try to resist, is the single greatest risk factor for
Alzheimer's disease. In a study released this month, researchers at the
Salk Institute for Biological Studies found that simply slowing the
aging process in mice prone to develop Alzheimer's disease prevented
their brains from turning into a neuronal wasteland.
Read
more...
Aging News & Information
Long-Running Study of Twins Helps Discover Factors
Causing Skin to Age
Up to 40 percent of aging-related changes are due
to non-genetic factors
Dec. 21, 2009 - Smoking, being heavier, not using
sunscreen and having had skin cancer appear to be associated with sun
damage and aging of skin on the face, according to report based on a
study of twins in the December issue of Archives of Dermatology, one of
the JAMA/Archives journals.
Read more...
Social Security News
Senior Citizens Notified Social Security Check Will
Come Week Earlier in 2010 by Mistake
Your check will come on same payment day in 2010 as
it has in 2009
Dec. 19, 2009 – Millions of senior citizens and
others on Social Security should be receiving a corrected notice from
SSA concerning when your payments will be made in 2010. It corrects an
earlier notice that told many recipients their check would arrive one
week earlier than it will.
Read
more...
Medicare Drug News
Medicare Patients Find Fight for Life Against Cancer
Unaffordable Due to Drugs Required
Extensive study finds cancer patients can fall in
drug program’s ‘donut hole’ almost immediately
By
Tucker Sutherland, editor & publisher,
SeniorJournal.com
Dec. 18, 2009 – Battling cancer in the U.S. is a
costly proposition, especially for the extremely expensive drugs
required to fight the disease, which causes many – even those on
Medicare - just to skip the treatment, according to an analysis of the
cost of obtaining these drugs in the U.S. and the U.K.
Read more...
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Other Senior News on the Internet |
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The not-so-sweet side of closing 'doughnut hole'
By Amy Goldstein,
Washington Post
December 28, 2009 - Six
years after Congress added a prescription drug benefit
to Medicare, Democrats in the House and Senate are
poised to make a central change that they and most older
Americans have wanted all along: getting rid of a quirk
that forces millions of elderly patients with especially
high expenses for medicine to pay for much of it on
their own.
Read more at Washington Post |
|
Medicare Drug News
Costly Cancer Medications: Not Easy to Access or
Afford in U.K. or U.S. - Even with Medicare
For 7 of 11 expensive cancer drugs, British
patients pay no out-of-pocket costs; U.S. patients, even with Medicare,
pay out $1,200 to $24,000 – uninsured pay even more
By Amy Sutton, Contributing Writer, Health Behavior News Service
Dec. 18, 2009 - Cancer patients in both the United
States and the United Kingdom face challenges in gaining access to
expensive cancer treatments, according to research published in the December
issue of The Milbank Quarterly.
Read
more...
Caregivers & Elder Care News
Older Americans to Get Help with Fight Against
Chronic Disease from Recovery Act Funds
$27 million will give at-risk elderly and their
caregivers the tools they need to make their own decisions
Dec. 17, 2009 - HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius has
announced the availability of $27 million to help senior citizens with
chronic conditions to improve their health and reduce their use of
costly medical care.
Read
more...
Dec. 16, 2009 - A diet rich in methionine, an amino
acid typically found in red meats, fish, beans, eggs, garlic, lentils,
onions, yogurt and seeds, can possibly increase the risk of developing
Alzheimer’s disease, according to a study by Temple researchers.
Read more...
Leptin levels in older adults may serve as one of
several biomarkers for healthy brain aging; may open new
preventive and therapeutic intervention
Dec. 15, 2009 – Senior citizens with higher levels
of leptin, a protein hormone produced by fat cells and involved in the
regulation of appetite, appear to be less likely to have Alzheimer
disease or dementia, according to a study in the December 16 issue of
the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA).
Read more...Watch Video