Growing up in rural South Alabama, the nearest doctor was about 20 miles away in a little town called Frisco City. His name was Dr B. L. Hanks, and he received his medical degree from Harvard Medical School. I’m told he made house calls in his younger years, but when I knew him he could barely walk. He would shuffle into the examination room, lean against the wall and run his hand through a head full of unruly white hair and ask what was wrong, while all the while looking at non-verbal signals which were just as important as anything I said. Continue reading
Category Archives: Healthcare@Risk™
#262 – TEASING APART THE ALZHEIMER’S PUZZLE – ALLEN TAYLOR
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The brain deterioration caused by Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) is one of the largest challenges facing medical science today. Postmortem analyses of the brains of people who had died of AD have found two substances not found in normal brains, amyloid-beta plaques and tau tangles. Continue reading
#261 – DOES EXERCISE MAKE YOU SMARTER AND STRONGER? – ALLEN TAYLOR
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There is an overwhelming mountain of evidence to support the proposition that exercise is good for you. You can build strength and endurance with strenuous exercise. Depending on what you want the exercise to do for you, one form of exercise may be better than another.
For example, if your goal is to have the body of a Greek god or Mr. Universe contest winner, you will probably need to hit the gym for a couple of hours at least three times a week, working with the free weights, bar bells, and Nautilus machines. Continue reading
#260 – HERE’S THE REAL ARTICLE ON ASPIRIN AND CANCER – ALLEN TAYLOR
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When aspirin (acetylsalicylic acid) was first recognized by the medical profession over a hundred years ago, it was thought to be something of a miracle drug. It had the effect of lessening or even eliminating pain from headaches, reducing fever and inflammation, as well as lessening the pain of injuries to muscles. Continue reading
#257 – CURING THE INCURABLE – ALLEN TAYLOR
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Many diseases, including very serious ones, are caused or made more likely by mutations in a person’s DNA. For most of such diseases, multiple mutations must be present for the corresponding disease to manifest. However, there are serious diseases that are due to a mutation in a single gene. These diseases are the low hanging fruit of stem cell therapy. In such cases, the correction of a single mutation could prevent a life of suffering and early death. The first two pieces of low hanging fruit have just been harvested. Continue reading