medicaid-lawyer melbourne clearwater kissimmee florida
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Melbourne Medicaid Planning

Melbourne Medicaid Planning Protect your assets and provide for your family with this complete guide by Marshal McDonald If you remember Aesop’s fable of the ant and the grasshopper, you remember that the ant labors away diligently while the grasshopper frolic’s in the grass. “Why are you working so hard?” asks the grasshopper. “We have…

aging melbourne fl
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Debunking Aging Myths – Estate Planning Attorneys of Melbourne

Social media’s 70-up ‘grandfluencers’ debunking aging myths by LEANNE ITALIE NEW YORK (AP) — Joan MacDonald’s health was in shambles at age 71. She was overweight and on numerous medications with high cholesterol, rising blood pressure and kidney trouble. Her daughter, a fitness coach, warned that she’d wind up an invalid if she didn’t turn…

social security florida MEDICAID
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Happy 79th Anniversary Social Security!

Source Here A Message from Acting Commissioner Colvin As we reflect on the 79th anniversary of Social Security, let’s remember Franklin D. Roosevelt’s famous words upon signing the Social Security Act into law on August 14, 1935: “Today, a hope of many years’ standing is in large part fulfilled… We have tried to frame a…

estate planning melbourne kissimmee clearwater fl
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Pandemic may have increased older adults’ fall risk

SOURCE HERE Focus on increasing physical activity and mobility, improving conditioning, and breaking the “vicious cycle” of falls and fear of falling is needed, experts say. Reports and Proceedings MICHIGAN MEDICINE – UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN The COVID-19 pandemic may have increased older adults’ risk of falling and injuring themselves, due to changes in physical activity, conditioning…

What Seniors Can Expect as Their New Normal in a Post-Vaccine World

Imagine this scenario, perhaps a year or two in the future: An effective COVID-19 vaccine is routinely available and the world is moving forward. Life, however, will likely never be the same — particularly for people over 60. That is the conclusion of geriatric medical doctors, aging experts, futurists and industry specialists. Experts say that…

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Repetitive negative thinking linked to dementia risk

Persistently engaging in negative thinking patterns may raise the risk of Alzheimer’s disease, finds a new UCL-led study. In the study of people aged over 55, published in Alzheimer’s & Dementia, researchers found ‘repetitive negative thinking’ (RNT) is linked to subsequent cognitive decline as well as the deposition of harmful brain proteins linked to Alzheimer’s. The…