408-854-1883 starts at $30 per hr home care

Affordable in home care | starts at $28 per hr

Pre-planning with Trust – Medicaid and Medi-Cal and how to pay for nursing costs

In California, Medi-Cal sometimes pays long-term nursing home and home care costs if you can’t afford the cost of a nursing home.

Long-term care like nursing homes, assisted living facilities, and home care are expensive, and private health insurance policies generally do not cover those services. Medicare coverage for long-term care is very limited, and few people have purchased private long-term care insurance policies. For California residents needing long-term care services, Medi-Cal is the most common source of funding. Medi-Cal pays for the nursing home expenses of approximately 65% of the residents in California nursing homes.
logo

Medi-Cal is California’s state Medicaid program. It is funded by both federal and state funds, and it provides health insurance to about 25% of California’s population. There are many different ways to become eligible for Medi-Cal, and there are specific eligibility rules for long-term care services like nursing homes, assisted living facilities, and home health care services. The California Department of Health Care Services (DHCS) administers long-term care programs in California.

Medi-Cal for Nursing Home Residents

Skilled nursing facilities are residential facilities that offer round-the-clock skilled nursing care in addition to other supportive services. These nursing homes are expensive, averaging approximately $7,000 per month in California in 2012. Most people cannot afford to pay their own nursing home expenses.

Medi-Cal will pay for a nursing home only when it is “medically necessary.” California defines medically necessary as “when it is reasonable and necessary to protect life, to prevent significant illness or significant disability, or to alleviate severe pain.” For Medi-Cal to pay for a nursing home stay, your treating physician must prescribe a nursing home for you because you either need the continual, round-the-clock availability of skilled nursing care or what’s called “intermediate care.” Skilled nursing care includes things like giving injections, inserting or replacing catheters, changing wound dressings, feeding through a gastric tube, and treating bed sores. Intermediate care means a protective and supportive environment with “observation on an ongoing intermittent basis to abate health deterioration.” To determine whether you need at least an intermediate “level of care” (LOC), Medi-Cal will do an LOC assessment that looks at your limitations in your activities of daily living (ADLs), cognitive function, and physical function and your need for help with medication and treatments.

If you need a health care aide or nurse only for one or two things a day, then Medi-Cal may find that a nursing home stay is not medically necessary, because you could get these services on an outpatient basis or by a home health provider. In essence, your doctor must find that your health is at risk if you do not have access to skilled nursing or intermediate care.

Qualifying for Medi-Cal

If you already qualify for Medi-Cal, then your Medicaid coverage includes nursing home care if you need it. Groups of people who automatically qualify for Medi-Cal include SSI recipients, participants in the CalWORKs (California’s Temporary Assistance to Needy Families) program, individuals enrolled in California’s refugee programs, and children in its foster care system.

Medi-Cal Income and Asset Limits

If you do not already qualify for Medi-Cal, you might be eligible if you have little income. Thanks to the Affordable Care Act (ACA), the income limit for Medi-Cal now works out to 138% of the Federal Poverty Level (FPL). That is about $16,100 for an individual and $32,900 for a family of four.

While the ACA has eliminated an asset test for many Medicaid applicants, if you are elderly or disabled, you will still need to have few assets to qualify for Medi-Cal: $2,000 for an individual and $3,000 for a couple. Some assets are not counted, such as a home if your spouse is living there or if you intend to return there, one vehicle, personal belongings, and small burial or life insurance policies.

You are permitted to “spend down” your assets to qualify for Medi-Cal by paying for certain kinds of debts or expenses. If you are trying to spend down your assets, get advice from a lawyer or legal aid office first. Be very careful about transferring any of your assets. Medi-Cal will look back 60 months from the date that you apply for Medicaid-paid long-term care and examine any asset transfers to see if they were legitimate. If you give property away for less than it is worth, then Medi-Cal will impose a waiting period before you can start getting your benefits.

Share of Cost Medi-Cal

If you are “over-income” for Medi-Cal but have high health care expenses like nursing home fees, then you might qualify for a program called Share of Cost (SOC) Medi-Cal. SOC Medi-Cal allows recipients to pay a certain portion of their income every month towards their medical expenses, and Medi-Cal pays all of the expenses incurred afterwards. The portion that the Medi-Cal recipient pays is called his or her share of cost.

SOC Medi-Cal is an important resource for individuals who might have higher incomes but who find that they cannot afford the cost of long-term care. However, Medi-Cal only lets long-term care residents keep a very small personal needs allowance ($35-$50/month) when they receive SOC Medi-Cal. Any non-exempt income above that personal needs allowance has to be paid to the long-term care facility before Medi-Cal will cover additional costs each month. In essence, Medi-Cal pays the difference between the monthly cost of the nursing home and the monthly income of the Medicaid recipient (minus $35).

Medi-Cal for Assisted Living Facility Residents

Assisted living facilities (ALFs) offer a wide range of supportive services like housekeeping, medication management, meal preparation, and assistance with dressing and bathing, but they do not offer skilled nursing care. In general, Medicaid pays for room and board only when they are offered in an institution that provides skilled care (like a nursing home), and it does not generally pay for room and board expenses in assisted living facilities. However, in California, to assist with the costs of assisted living facilities, the state has created a Medi-Cal program called the Assisted Living Waiver (ALW).

ALW is a Home and Community Based Services (HCBS) waiver program that offers care coordination services and can pay for expenses associated with some assisted living facilities and also with some home health services. Most recipients of ALW services still have to pay most of their income to the assisted living facility for room and board charges.

To be eligible for ALW, you must be eligible for Medi-Cal and require an intermediate level of care. You meet that level of care if, without the ALW services, you would need to live in a nursing home. However, because ALW is a Medicaid waiver program, it does not need to be equally available to everyone in the state who is eligible for it. At this time, California has opted to make the services available to some seniors and people with disabilities living in Sacramento, San Joaquin, Los Angeles, Sonoma, Fresno, San Bernardino, Contra Costa, Alameda, San Diego, Riverside, Kern, Orange, Santa Clara and San Mateo counties.

If you qualify for ALW, you must use one of the assisted living facilities that have been approved by the state to participate in the program. The state licenses and regulates assisted living facilities that wish to receive Medi-Cal payments. Those approved facilities are called Residential Care Facilities for the Elderly (RCFE). There are three different RCFE licenses, depending on the level of care that the facility offers. In a Level 1 RCFE, residents are largely independent and receive minimal assistance with their personal care. In a Level 2 RCFE, residents receive frequent assistance with personal activities of daily living. In a Level 3 RCFE, residents receive extensive assistance with personal activities of daily living, and they may occasionally require the services of a skilled nurse or other medical professional. RCFEs can have as few as six beds or as many as 100 beds.

SSI/SSP Payments for Assisted Living or Custodial Care

California’s SSI/SSP program also pays for some non-medical custodial long-term care. (Many people who are eligible for Medi-Cal are also eligible for SSI.) SSI is paid for by the federal government, but California pays an extra supplement to its residents called the “state supplementary payment” (SSP). The SSP amount is higher for those living in a “non-medical out of home care” situation (board and care, RCFE, or ALF). Someone who receives SSI/SSP in California and lives in a assisted living facility or RCFE receives $1,133 monthly, and the long-term care facility may charge no more than $961, leaving a small personal needs allowance for the recipient.

Medi-Cal for Home Health Care

California covers home health services as part of its state Medicaid plan. Medi-Cal covers home health services that are medically necessary, like skilled nursing care and medical equipment. For individuals who need ongoing, non-skilled care like assistance with bathing, cooking, and chores, California has the In-Home Supportive Services (IHSS) Program.

The IHSS program pays for home care services that aren’t necessarily medical in nature. The types of services covered by IHSS include housecleaning, meal preparation, laundry, grocery shopping, bathing, bowel and bladder care, accompaniment to medical appointments, and protective supervision for the mentally impaired. To be eligible for IHSS, you must be 65 or older, disabled, or blind, and you must be living in a home, not an institution. In addition, you must meet the financial eligibility criteria for Medi-Cal, and you must be unable to live at home safely without IHSS services.

When you apply for IHSS, your county will send a social worker to interview you about your needs and review your medical records. The county will use the results of the needs assessment to decide how many hours of in-home services it will pay for each month. In 2013, non-severely impaired applicants could receive up to 195 hours each month, and severely impaired applicants could receive up to 283 hours.

You apply for IHSS through the Department of Social Services, using this Application for Social Services form.


 Medicaid/Medi-Cal Pre-planning With Trusts

If you are worried about the high costs of long-term care and how it will affect your estate, this is the chapter for you. Seniors over the age of 65 have a 50% chance of needing a nursing home someday. The pressing question for most people is: “How can we afford to pay the nursing home without losing everything we own?” The second question is: “What can we do to plan ahead?”
The Problem: In the United States, care in a skilled nursing facility can run from $2,500 to $25,000 per month or more, depending on your location. The average
stay in a nursing home is approximately three years. In certain cases, such as dementia, a stay of three to twenty years is not uncommon.
In California, the average cost of care in a nursing home is approximately $5,500 per month, or $66,000 annually. Three years of care is $198,000. The greatest threat to your loved one’s hard-earned money is the high cost of nursing home care.
Planning ahead for such costs is prudent and wise.

There are only four choices for paying for skilled nursing home care:

1. Private Pay. You can privately pay the nursing home by writing them a check once a month.
2. Long-Term Care Insurance. It is great if you have long-term care insurance, but even if you do, it does not always cover all your costs and it often has time limits. Moreover, you have to buy it before you need it.
3. Medicare. Medicare, in conjunction with your supplement, may pay for up to 100 days of coverage, as long as you continue to improve. If your condition plateaus, or if your health starts deteriorating, Medicare can stop paying for your stay at the nursing home within a week.

4. The Medicaid/Medi-Cal Program.

Medicaid is a needs-based Federal entitlement program, implemented by the states, which provides funding for medical care for those who qualify.

The California version of Medicaid is called Medi-Cal.

The Medicaid Program will pay for your stay in a nursing home and will cover most drug costs for those who qualify.

The Solution: If preservation of assets for your family is your goal, the Medicaid program is the only cost-effective way to pay for nursing home care.

There are two important aspects of the Medicaid Program you must know in order to plan properly:

1. Qualifying for Medicaid/Medi-Cal

In order to qualify for Medicaid, you must meet a strict asset and income test. The numbers vary from state to state. However, in every state, there are assets that are exempt (not counted) when Medicaid determines whether you qualify. Also, Medicaid will look at the applicant’s financial records for the past three to five years to find any “uncompensated transfers” (gifts). If they find gifts, they can calculate a penalty period during which they will not pay for the nursing home. The rules of Medicaid are complex. You need to hire an advocate, such as a qualified Elder Law attorney, who knows the rules and how to formulate a working strategy.

2. The Medicaid Lien

If your loved one qualifies for Medicaid, is receiving benefits during a stay in a nursing home, and owns assets that were “exempt” for qualification purposes, such assets may be subject to a Medicaid recovery lien upon his or her death. However, with knowledge of Medicaid rules, your Elder Law Attorney should know how to legally defeat the Medicaid lien and protect the assets from recovery.

There are three stages to Medicaid planning

Stage One: Your estate Plan

A professionally crafted estate plan is essential for Medicaid planning and should include the following documents:

a. Revocable Living Trust

There are myriads of benefits to owning your property in a living trust, but such trusts are especially useful for purposes of Medicaid planning. A properly drafted living trust solves the problem of not being able to manage your assets if you become incapacitated. You can name a person who will act as trustee and manage the assets in the trust if you are unable to do so yourself. In order to be properly drafted, your trust must contain special language granting your trustee the powers necessary to implement Medicaid planning.

b. Financial Power of Attorney

Equally important is the financial Power of Attorney, which also requires special language so your agent can implement Medicaid planning along with the trustee of your living trust (typically the same person).

c. Irrevocable Trust

In the right circumstances, and in consultation with an Elder Law attorney, families with larger estates and trustworthy adult children may be able to utilize Irrevocable Trusts to achieve Medicaid eligibility.
d. Other Important Documents Every Estate Plan Should Have.

Every estate plan should also have a Pour Over Will, Advance Health Care Directive or Healthcare Power of Attorney (depending on the state), HIPAA Authorization, and a Living Will

If you have the above documents in place, they are properly drafted, and you keep them current by reviewing them with your attorney every few years, you are ready for Stage Two, if necessary. Suppose you have prepared the above documents and are now faced with a crisis situation where you need to apply for Medicaid.

Stage Two: Spend down and Application

You will need to consult with an attorney in your state regarding the spend down process and how to fill out the Medicaid application. “Spend down” does not mean spending all your money until you hit the qualification limits. What it does mean is that you implement a plan to reposition assets within the rules of Medicaid in a legal, ethical, and moral manner. The Medicaid rules allow you to spend down your money by paying for any necessary medical needs you may have (i.e., new glasses, hearing aids, etc.). You can also spend money to fix your home. Because the home is exempt, you are turning a non-exempt resource (cash) into an exempt resource, the home.

The opportunities for spending down in accordance with Medicaid rules are vast and vary from state to state. One very important purpose behind the rules is to ensure a “well-spouse” is not completely impoverished by spending down the “ill-spouse’s” assets.

For example, in California in 2008, the “well-spouse” is allowed to keep $104,400 in assets, and $2,610 in income. John Doe and Mary Doe are a married couple who has $250,000 in assets, and a $250,000 home. John Doe has developed Alzheimer’s disease and requires around-the-clock care in a skilled nursing facility. John has $1,200 per month in income and Mary has $700 per month in income.

In order to qualify John for Medicaid, his assets must be spent down to $2,000. Mary gets to keep $104,400 in cash assets, plus the house, because it is an exempt asset. Now comes the fun part.

John and Mary are “over-property” by $146,000. That amount must be “spent down” or “repositioned” in order for John to qualify for Medicaid. A good attorney will notice that John and Mary’s income only totals $1,900 per month. John can only keep $35 per month in income and Mary is entitled to $2,610 in income. Mary’s current income is only $1,865 per month.

Mary’s attorney can go to court and ask the court to increase the amount of assets Mary is allowed to keep from $104,400 to an amount that, if invested conservatively, will produce an income stream that will bring Mary up to the limit of $2,610 per month.

The question then becomes: How much money will it take to produce an income stream for Mary that will produce $745 more in income?

Often, the court will award the entire estate to Mary without her having to spend down a dime (except for attorney fees, of course) so she can support herself. This is just one example of a planning opportunity existing within the rules of Medicaid.

Your attorney can fill out your Medicaid application for you and present it to the Medicaid office with evidence attached detailing asset repositioning you have done, along with a copy of the Medicaid rules authorizing such repositioning. A good attorney will determine whether further revocable trust planning is necessary. For example, it is necessary to ensure that the person who is going on Medicaid does not receive an inheritance unless it is in the form of a Special Needs Trust, designed to supplement but not replace Medicaid benefits.

Stage Three: defeat of the Medicaid Lien

Your attorney will best be able to advise you about how to avoid the Medicaid lien. The issue is very state-specific. If you have done the above planning, defeating the lien should not be a difficult task.

Find an estate planner/lawyer to relieve your fear and uncertainties regarding disability, the high costs of long-term care, and death.

Email motherhealth@gmail.com to refer you to an estate planner/lawyer for seniors.

How Brains of Doers Differ From Those of Procrastinators

How Brains of Doers Differ From Those of Procrastinators

Summary: Researchers use neuroimaging technology to identify brain differences between those who procrastinate and those who are doers. The study reveals people with poor action control have a larger amygdala, and the connection between the dorsal ACC and amygdala is less pronounced.

Source: RUB.

Researchers at Ruhr-Universität Bochum have analysed why certain people tend to put tasks off rather than tackling them directly. Using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), they identified two brain areas whose volume and functional connectivity are linked to an individual’s ability to control their actions. The research team headed by Caroline Schlüter, Dr. Marlies Pinnow, Professor Onur Güntürkün, and Dr. Erhan Genç from the Department of Biopsychology published the results in the journal Psychological Science on 17 August 2018.

Two areas of the brain linked to action control

The biopsychologists examined 264 women and men in an MRI scanner. They assessed the volume of individual brain regions and the functional connectivity between them. In addition, all participants completed a survey measuring their own ability to execute action control.

Individuals with poor action control had a larger amygdala. Moreover, the functional connection between the amygdala and the so-called dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dorsal ACC) was less pronounced. “These two areas of the brain had already been linked with action control in former studies,” says Erhan Genç.

Assessing and selecting actions

The primary function of the amygdala is to assess different situations with regard to their respective outcomes and to warn us about potential negative consequences of particular actions. The dorsal ACC uses these information in order to select actions that are to be put into practice. Moreover, by suppressing competing actions and emotions, it ensures that the selected action can be successfully completed.

the brain

If the interplay between amygdala and dorsal ACC is impaired, action control can no longer be successfully executed, according to the theory put forward by the researchers. “Individuals with a higher amygdala volume may be more anxious about the negative consequences of an action – they tend to hesitate and put off things,” speculates Erhan Genç. “Due to a low functional connection between amygdala and dorsal ACC, this effect may be augmented, as interfering negative emotions and alternative actions might not be sufficiently regulated.”

Learnable or not?

Future studies will have to show if the degree of action control can be modified through specific training or brain stimulation. “Even though the differences regarding our ability to control our actions affect our private and professional success as well as our mental and physical health to a considerable degree, their neural foundations haven’t as yet been sufficiently studied,” says Caroline Schlüter, who addresses this issue in her PhD thesis.

About this neuroscience research article

Funding: Research was funded by German Research Foundation, Mercator Research Center Ruhr.


Abstract

The Structural and Functional Signature of Action Control

Individuals differ in their ability to initiate self- and emotional-control mechanisms. These differences have been explicitly described in Kuhl’s action-control theory. Although interindividual differences in action control make a major contribution to our everyday life, their neural foundation remains unknown.

Here, we measured action control in a sample of 264 healthy adults and related interindividual differences in action control to variations in brain structure and resting-state connectivity. Our results demonstrate a significant negative correlation between decision-related action orientation (AOD) and amygdala volume.

Further, we showed that the functional resting-state connectivity between the amygdala and the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex was significantly associated with AOD. Specifically, stronger functional connectivity was associated with higher AOD scores. These findings are the first to show that interindividual differences in action control, namely AOD, are based on the anatomical architecture and functional network of the amygdala.

Free round trip ticket to the Philippines for a senior care referral to Motherhealth

If you know a home bound senior alone at home in the greater bay area (North California) and bed bound who needs a caregiver to assist in daily living, massage, cooking and light housekeeping, text 408-854-1883 or email motherhealth@gmail.com

There is 5% profit sharing with caregivers and more with marketers who bring senior clients needing caregivers at home. We also provide caregivers and CNAs to senior facilities, rehabs and assisted living.

We treat seniors like family. There are many holistic ways to heal an aging body from massage, gourmet and healthy meals, hugs, and other holistic ways. We help monitor your health and assist you in medication reminders.

Receive a free round trip ticket to the Philippines when you refer a senior who needs a caregiver in their homes. Terms apply. Investors are welcome.

It is affordable to have a live-in caregiver compared to hourly. We train and monitor our caregivers and case managers/motherhealth trainers visit our clients regularly to personalize care.

It does not take a nurse to care for seniors at home but a loving heart. Non medical in home care caregivers are trained by Motherhealth to be proactive in health monitoring and to care for seniors like family.

logo

Now hiring caregivers in the greater bay area

← Back

Thank you for your response. ✨

Email motherhealth@gmail.com of your availability as senior companion, caregiver, cook, driver or home helper. 5% net profit sharing after 12months. State your preference for live in or hourly.

We are also looking for business partners or marketers to find seniors who need care.

We include massage from our assistance to daily living tasks. Our clients have lived more months with our care where we treat them like family.

We also partner with assisted living and senior facilities in providing CNAs and caregivers. We are now in Belmont and Southbay. 408-854-1883 for fast response.

Free ebook on senior care, free seminars and free training to caregivers.

To save on fingerprinting costs, all caregivers are advised to enroll as In Home Health Support Provider in the county where you live. It is completed with 6 online video training, 1 hour of orientation and a $12 fingerprint costs at a Livescan, UPS near you.

Investors are welcome.

logo

HCO # 434700121

Save your health and finances with health tips

View
Eggplant and apple cider vinegar for skin cancer
View
Philippines Coconut Wine -Tuba
View
Apple cider vinegar kills parasites, cleansing to the liver and prevents stroke
View
Foods to eat and avoid when you have Gout and leg pains
View
Signs of the preactive/ active phase of dying and medications for terminally ill
View
Home page / Archives
View
Can balsamic vinegar help with gout?
View
Nitric Oxide Dump Exercise with nose breathing to lower blood pressure and thin blood
View
DMSO, hydrogen peroxide and Vit C fight cancer cells
View
MEDICATIONS TO AVOID that worse PD (Parkinson’s disease)
View
Detox your lungs from air pollution and metal toxins and for early lung cancer
View
Baking soda , lemon and apple cider vinegar to repair kidney damage from sugar
View
Missing Link Discovered Between Immune Cells and Alzheimer’s Disease
View
Non pasteurized beers have more health benefits
View
Motherhealth Care Inc 501c6 wished to join Obama Foundation
View
Can Gout be cured permanently?
View
16 Tips On How To Treat HPV Naturally And Effectively At Home
View
Growth hormone rich foods
View
Top aging and health hacks in the last 365 days
View
Parasites and Diabetes
View
3
Weird Facts about Tall and Short People by Lisa Collier Cool
View
3
NAC, activated charcoal , sleep and parasites
View
2
Observational studies compare outcomes between patients who receive different interventions
View
2
Anti-infection essential oils and how to use them
View
2
Restore your vision naturally y Dr. Mercola
View
2
Heavy metals and epilepsy
View
2
Avoid chronic bronchitis with green apple, onions, garlic, vinegar and rest
View
2
Digestive enzymes help in healing fractures, preventing kidney stones and heart disease and more
View
2
Gout, Dementia, Chelation Therapy
View
2
Massage oil of fresh ginger and coconut oil relieves joint pain
View
2
Process-focus with roles aligned to training – Simplifying documents
View
2
Mullein herb for lung and breast health – COPD signs, symptoms and diagnosis
View
2
MSM powder benefits – Alzheimer is a sulfur deficiency
View
2
Iodine prevents cancer growth; up avocado and reduce caffeine intake to prevent Thyroid cancer
View
2
The sun can kill germs
View
2
Can high SGPT and SGOT lead to heart disease?
View
2
Inflammation to colitis to Alzheimer’s disease
View
2
Paul Ryan and Mitch McConnell implicated in Russia-Trump
View
2
Anabolic and catabolic process, hormones and exercise
View
2
Chlorine rich foods are cleansing (avocado, coconut, onions, parsnips)
View
2
Top Aging hacks 11-1-2017
View
2
Benefits of activated charcoal by Dr Axe
View
2
In Sympathetic Nervous System Why the digestion of food is slow? Where as in fight or flight we need more energy.?
View
2
Neck pain and MTHFR gene , folate , methionine
View
2
Acetylcholine/Choline Deficiency in Chronic Illness – eat soft boiled eggs
View
2
Starve cancer cells with low cal ketogenic diet
View
2
Leg cramps, heart muscles, magnesium and CQ10
View
2
Disease condition and odor symptom
View
1
Liver cleanse to help your vision and memory
View
1
Why do I have PCOS?
View
1
Should Donald Trump be IMPEACHED? Jared Kushner must resign
View
1
What’s a good analogy to explain the immune system?
View
1
Negative emotions, cortisol, immune system and neurological disorders
View
1
Safe herbs: milk thistle, kava kava, Echinacea, black cohosh and St. John’s wort
View
1
Nitric Oxide for strong blood vessels’ cells , up with exercise, melons, cucumber, Vit C, E, amino acid – L-arginine, L-citrulline
View
1
Hillary is the rightful President of the United States
View
1
Yerba buena for head aches, fever and other ailments
View
1
Dr Mercola on Knee Osteoarthritis
View
1
Clean up our lymps to reduce restless leg syndrome
View
1
Toxicology test for pregnant women
View
1
Leaky gut, leaky brain, eat your garlic and pickles by C Guthrie
View
1
When will Souvenaid become available in Canada and US to treat Alzheimer’s Disease?
View
1
Fruits and leaves of Figs as anti-cancer
View
1
Immune system, bone marrow, anti-cancer, shark oil
View
1
Surviving prostate cancer by Dr Mercola
View
1
Chronic antacid use adverse effects to your kidneys
View
1
Hunched posture in Dementia and Parkinsons
View
1
Thyme herb for toe fungus (guava and comfrey leaves and others)
View
1
Starve cancer cells with low cal ketogenic diet
View
1
Germanic New Medicine by Dr. Ryke Geerd Hamer
View
1
Slimy veggies, saluyot and okra fight cancer
View
1
Loss of Y Chromosome Could Increase Risk of Alzheimer’s Disease
View
1
Dementia = Low blood pressure + low potassium + diabetes + sleep cycle
View
1
What is Precision, predictive and Personalize Medicine vs patient-centered care
View
1
Browning or caramelized sugar is a carcinogen
View
1
Lung cancer in the Philippines
View
1
Eggplant and apple cider vinegar for skin cancer
View
1
How does Yakult help digestion?
View
1
Nicotinamide Riboside converting 60yr old to 20yr old cells in mice, an anti-aging miracle (metabolic and brain issues)
View
1
A balance of dopamine and serotonin for your brain function
View
1
About fingerprinting, IHSS and worker’s comp in California for home care
View
1
Parkinson and Copper Toxicity by Michael McEvoy
View
1
Fungus , raw carrots and prostate cancer
View
1
Aging, Immune system, Thymosin hormones, and Vitamin D supplementation
View
1
Ways Alcohol Hinders Fat Loss
View
1
Lemon grass or Tanglad to fight insomia
View
1
Growth hormone DHEA increases libido/anti-aging
View
1
Iron deficiency anaemia and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD)
View
1
Guava leaves and Esophageal cancer
View
1
Positive attitude helps your body and overall health
View
1
Health care perception and reality in the world
View
1
Top posts to prevent chronic illness
View
1
Poor bowel control, dementia, low potassium levels and the brain
View
1
Simple EKG Can Determine Whether Patient Has Depression or Bipolar Disorder
View
1
How the digestive tract communicates with the brain
View
1
Oxidative Stress, Inflammation, Thyroid and Anti-oxidant
View
1
Healing your kidneys – Dr Mercola
View
1
Nominate your best doctor in the bay area
View
1
Anti-aging steroids, pregnenolone, progesterone and DHEA
View
1
Calm worries and increase cognitive flexibility with exercise and nutrition
View
1
Top songs in the 1950s
View
1
Ultrasound kills bacteria , frequency and music killing cancer cells
View
1
Finding the presence of virus in your blood test
View
1
Cancer signs by Dr Mercola
View
1
Eat avocado at night as it contains magnesium and B vitamins
View
1
Lung cancer may not produce any noticeable symptoms until it is too late
View
1
Eat protein-rich food when drinking alcohol to protect your stomach
View
1
Save $5000 per year by taking care of your heart and liver
View
1
Tom Brady holistic healing and condemned processed foods as poison for the body
View
1
Are there any programmers with Alzheimer’s disease?
View
1
Rheumatoid Arthritis by Dr Mercola
View
1
Vagus nerve health = healing sounds, back bends,pickled veggies,massage
View
1
Philippines Coconut Wine -Tuba
View
1
False Emotion Appearing Real – FEAR

Motherhealth Care Inc 501c6 wished to join Obama Foundation

Inviting all to join me in affordable and personalized healthcare for seniors or older adults at Motherhealth Inc 501c6. Email motherhealth@gmail.com and mailing address is 1708 Hallmark Lane San Jose CA 95124.

We have plans to provide free booklet on Preventive Health Solutions and need printing cost assistance. A Los Gatos caregiver needs a donated car. Some caregivers are looking for affordable land in the bay area for manufactured homes.

We hope to serve seniors in the bay area and use our hands in bringing more life to their current health issues.

A bed bound senior with lung health issues had clear blood results last week. We have been giving him massage and warm bed bath with essential oils and gourmet health soups.

Blessings,

Connie Dello Buono

  • President
  • Motherhealth Care
  • motherhealth@gmail.com

logo

The Obama Foundation believes that when we lift up and support new leaders, everyone benefits. But it’s not just a belief; it’s what we seek to do every day.

So, we’re thrilled to announce that applications for the next class of Obama Foundation Fellows are now open.

Join our next class of Fellows

We’re looking for 20 rising stars from around the world who are working alongside their communities to solve important public problems in creative and powerful ways. The two-year, non-residential program offers hands-on training, leadership development, and a powerful network to equip Fellows to scale the impact of their work.

We’re searching for candidates who are civic innovators, discipline-diverse, at a tipping point in their work, not yet connected to the networks they need to advance their work, and motivated by the powerful desire to help others. You can learn more about what we look for when selecting Fellows here.

If you share these qualities, please apply to join the next class of Obama Fellows by September 18, 2018. Or, if you know someone who should apply, please let them know that the call for applications is now open.

We can’t wait to hear about the incredible work you’re doing.

The Obama Foundation Fellows Team

P.S. Need some inspiration? Read about the collaborative, community-driven work that our inaugural class of 2018 Fellows is accomplishing.

Donate today to support the Obama Foundation’s work:

Donate

Process-focus with roles aligned to training – Simplifying documents

When organizing documents in a larger company that is highly regulated, documents must be written based on process and not function.

Write from general to specific and only based on purpose or specific process. Create roles that are aligned to training and not constrained by changes in the corporate structure.

There must be one high-level SOP for each process and categorize documents belonging to one SOP as cross-functional or functional work instructions, templates/forms and enabling documents (manual or checklist).  You do not need to hire 10 project managers.  Each member of the process must have a process owner, SMEs and a technical writer.

Communicate results regularly/daily/weekly. Allow sufficient time to reformat and categorize or scope all existing documents to future state documents.

Some SMEs are reluctant to leave behind details which can be documented in enabling documents such as checklists, manuals and guides.

Each high-level process-focus SOP must have a hierarchy of documents pointing to it.

You may use SharePoint to collaborate and manage these documents before you store and formalize them using Veeva Vault.

The key is that management drives this process focus document simplification without over staffing or under staffing and in conjunction with other process improvements.

Dominant Men Make Decisions Faster

Dominant Men Make Decisions Faster

Summary: Regardless of social context, highly dominant males respond faster in situations where decisions need to be made, a new study reports.

Source: EPFL.

Hierarchies exist across all human and animal societies, organized by what behavioral scientists refer to as dominance. Dominant individuals tend to climb higher up the hierarchy ladder of their particular society, earning priority access to resources.

But dominance itself depends partly on the ability to make decisions faster than others. This allows the individual to act first in social situations, which might confer an evolutionary advantage. However, behavioral scientists do not know whether dominant individuals show this fast decision-making outside of social contexts.

Now, the labs of Carmen Sandi and Michael Herzog at EPFL have carried out a large behavioral study on men to examine this question. The study shows a clear correlation between higher social dominance and faster decision-making outside of a social competition context.

The study involved 240 male students at EPFL and the University of Lausanne (UNIL). The men were sorted into high or low dominance groups by a standard “dominance scoring” questionnaire that has been validated in many previous studies. Decision-making speed was measured with five experiments (“tasks”) testing the participants’ memory, recognition, ability to distinguish emotions, route-learning, and responsiveness.

The first task involved discriminating between emotions seen on various pictures of faces. Then they moved onto a memory and recognition task, where they were asked to remember and recognize a series of faces. The third experiment had the participants work on learning and remembering a route, and the fourth, a control experiment, had the participants hit the spacebar on a keyboard as soon as they saw a grey square appear on a screen. In this part of the study, neither group appeared to be faster than the other.

The scientists then carried out a fifth experiment to identify neural signals that might show differences in promptness to respond between high- and low- dominance participants. To do this, the researchers measured brain signals with a high-density electroencephalogram (EEG). The participants were asked to distinguish between happy and sad faces and then angry and neutral faces, while the EEG measured how their brains’ electrical signal changed in relation to how fast or slow they performed each task.

a man in a suit

This part of the study found that promptness to respond in high-dominance men than in low-dominance men was accompanied by a strikingly amplified brain signal around 240 milliseconds after seeing the faces. In addition, when the researchers analyzed the EEG images of the high-dominance participants, they identified a higher activity in areas of the brain associated with emotion and behavior, compared to low-dominance participants.

The study suggests that high-dominant men respond faster in situations where a choice is needed, regardless of social context. This promptness in decision-making can act as a “biomarker” for social disposition.

“In the future, it will be important to find out whether even stronger brain signals are observed in particularly dominant individuals, such as CEOs,” says Carmen Sandi. “It will also be relevant to understand whether these differences in promptness to respond and brain signals are also observed in women that differ in dominance and whether they are already present in children. Our findings may open a new research approach using EEG signatures as a measure for social dominance.”

ABOUT THIS NEUROSCIENCE RESEARCH ARTICLE

Funding: Swiss National Science Foundation (NCCR Synapsy), Oak Foundation, EU FP7 (MATRICS), EPFL, FCT Portugal funded this study.

Source: Nik Papageorgiou – EPFL
Publisher: Organized by NeuroscienceNews.com.
Image Source: NeuroscienceNews.com image in the public domain.
Original Research: Open access research for “Dominant men are faster in decision-making situations and exhibit a distinct neural signal for promptness” by Janir da Cruz, João Rodrigues, John C Thoresen, Vitaly Chicherov, Patrícia Figueiredo, Michael H Herzog, and Carmen Sandi in Cerebral Cortex Published August 15 2018.
doi:10.1093/cercor/bhy195

CITE THIS NEUROSCIENCENEWS.COM ARTICLE
EPFL”Dominant Men Make Decisions Faster.” NeuroscienceNews. NeuroscienceNews, 16 August 2018.
<http://neurosciencenews.com/decision-faster-men-9710/&gt;.

Abstract

Dominant men are faster in decision-making situations and exhibit a distinct neural signal for promptness

Social dominance, the main organizing principle of social hierarchies, facilitates priority access to resources by dominant individuals. Throughout taxa, individuals are more likely to become dominant if they act first in social situations and acting fast may provide evolutionary advantage; yet whether fast decision-making is a behavioral predisposition of dominant persons outside of social contexts is not known. Following characterization of participants for social dominance motivation, we found that, indeed, men high in social dominance respond faster–without loss of accuracy–than those low in dominance across a variety of decision-making tasks. Both groups did not differ in a simple reaction task. Then, we selected a decision-making task and applied high-density electroencephalography (EEG) to assess temporal dynamics of brain activation through event related potentials. We found that promptness to respond in the choice task in dominant individuals is related to a strikingly amplified brain signal at approximately 240 ms post-stimulus presentation. Source imaging analyses identified higher activity in the left insula and in the cingulate, right inferior temporal and right angular gyri in high than in low dominance participants. Our findings suggest that promptness to respond in choice situations, regardless of social context, is a biomarker for social disposition.

Alzheimer’s: Link Between Dementia and Eye Diseases Discovered

Alzheimer’s: Link Between Dementia and Eye Diseases Discovered

Summary: A new study reveals a considerable link between three common eye diseases and an increased risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease. Researchers believe their findings could help physicians better detect those at risk of developing dementia.

Source: University of Washington Health Sciences.

Alzheimer’s disease is difficult to diagnose as well as treat, but researchers now have a promising new screening tool using the window to the brain: the eye.

A study of 3,877 randomly selected patients found a significant link between three degenerative eye diseases – age-related macular degeneration, diabetic retinopathy and glaucoma – and Alzheimer’ disease.

The results offer physicians a new way to detect those at higher risk of this disorder, which causes memory loss and other symptoms of cognitive decline. .

The researchers, from the University of Washington School of Medicine, the Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Institute and the UW School of Nursing, reported their findings Aug. 8 inAlzheimer’s & Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer’s Association.

“We don’t mean people with these eye conditions will get Alzheimer’s disease,” said lead researcher Dr. Cecilia Lee, assistant professor of ophthalmology at the UW School of Medicine. “The main message from this study is that ophthalmologists should be more aware of the risks of developing dementia for people with these eye conditions and primary care doctors seeing patients with these eye conditions might be more careful on checking on possible dementia or memory loss.”

The participants in the study were age 65 and older and did not have Alzheimer’s disease at the time of enrollment. They were part of the Adult Changes in Thought database started in 1994 by Dr. Eric Larson, who is at Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute. Over the five-year study, 792 cases of Alzheimer’s disease were diagnosed by a committee of dementia experts. Patients with age-related macular degeneration, diabetic retinopathy, or glaucoma were at 40 % to 50% greater risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease compared to similar people without these eye conditions. Cataract diagnosis was not an Alzheimer’s disease risk factor.

“What we found was not subtle,” said Dr. Paul Crane, professor of medicine, Division of General Internal Medicine, at the UW School of Medicine. “This study solidifies that there are mechanistic things we can learn from the brain by looking at the eye.”

More than 46 million older adults are affected by dementia worldwide and 131.5 million cases are expected by 2050, the researchers said. Alzheimer’ disease is the most common dementia,and discovering risk factors may lead to early detection and preventive measures, they said in their paper.

a blue eye

Lee said anything happening in the eye may relate to what’s happening in the brain, an extension of the central nervous system. The possible connections need more study. She said a better understanding of neurodegeneration in the eye and the brain could bring more success in diagnosing Alzheimer’s early and developing better treatments.

The researchers said several factors suggest the effects they uncovered were specific to ophthalmic conditions and not merely age-related phenomenon.

Larson said for years Alzheimer’s researchers were focused on amyloid buildup in brain tissue, but that hasn’t brought much benefit to patients.

“This paper is pointing to a new area of opportunity,” he said.

ABOUT THIS NEUROSCIENCE RESEARCH ARTICLE

Funding: The study was funded by National Institutes of Health, NIH/National Institute of Aging, NIH/National Eye Institute, Research to Prevent Blindness, UpToDate.

Source: Bobbi Nodell – University of Washington Health Sciences
Publisher: Organized by NeuroscienceNews.com.
Image Source: NeuroscienceNews.com image is in the public domain.
Original Research: Open access research for “Associations between recent and established ophthalmic conditions and risk of Alzheimer’s disease” by Cecilia S. Lee, Eric B. Larson, Laura E. Gibbons, Aaron Y. Lee, Susan M. McCurry, James D. Bowen, Wayne C. McCormick, and Paul K. Crane in Alzheimer’s & Dementia. Published August 8 2018.
doi:10.1016/j.jalz.2018.06.2856

CITE THIS NEUROSCIENCENEWS.COM ARTICLE
University of Washington Health Sciences”New Insight on Alzheimer’s: Link Between Dementia and Eye Diseases Discovered.” NeuroscienceNews. NeuroscienceNews, 8 August 2018.
<http://neurosciencenews.com/alzheimers-eye-disease-9672/&gt;.

Abstract

Associations between recent and established ophthalmic conditions and risk of Alzheimer’s disease

Introduction
Identifying ophthalmic diseases associated with increased risk of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) may enable better screening and understanding of those at risk of AD.

Methods
Diagnoses of glaucoma, age-related macular degeneration (AMD), and diabetic retinopathy (DR) were based on International Classification of Diseases, 9th revision, codes for 3877 participants from the Adult Changes in Thought study. The adjusted hazard ratio for developing probable or possible AD for recent (within 5 years) and established (>5 years) diagnoses were assessed.

Results
Over 31,142 person-years of follow-up, 792 AD cases occurred. The recent and established hazard ratio were 1.46 (P = .01) and 0.87 (P = .19) for glaucoma, 1.20 (P = .12) and 1.50 (P < .001) for AMD, and 1.50 (P = .045) and 1.50 (P = .03) for DR.

Discussion
Increased AD risk was found for recent glaucoma diagnoses, established AMD diagnoses, and both recent and established DR. People with certain ophthalmic conditions may have increased AD risk.

Angry People May Not Be as Smart as They Think

Angry People May Not Be as Smart as They Think

Summary: Researchers report those with trait anger, those who get angry as a disposition, are more likely to overestimate their intelligence level. Interestingly, researchers say, trait anger is linked to grandiose narcissism.

Source: University of Western Australia.

People who are quick to lose their temper are more likely to overestimate their own intelligence, a new study from The University of Western Australia and the University of Warsaw in Poland has found.

The investigation examined the role of trait-anger (people who get angry as a disposition) in the overestimation of cognitive ability in undergraduates from Warsaw, Poland.

The participants were asked to answer questions assessing their trait-anger, stability, narcissism, and how they would rate their intelligence on a 25-point scale, before taking an objective intelligence test.

UWA Senior Lecturer Gilles Gignac, co-author of the paper with Professor Marcin Zajenkowski from the University of Warsaw, said the study found an interesting relationship between those with a clear tendency to become annoyed at things, big and small, and their perception of their own intelligence.

“Trait anger, in some cases, may be a consequence of less emotional stability, such as anxiety,” Professor Gignac said.

“However, for others, there is no anxiety fuelling the frustration, nastiness, and angry outbursts. Instead, for them, it looks like it may be narcissism. Consequently, when you ask this type of trait-angry person to rate their own intelligence, they tend to overestimate it.”

The results of the newly published study answer important questions about the dynamics between trait-anger, emotional stability, and narcissism. By understanding more about how trait-anger functions, it will allow clinicians and members of the general public to deal with it better.

The study also leads into some important speculations that could be examined in future research.

angry man

“A narcissist, especially what we call the grandiose narcissist, has, as a defining characteristic, an inflated positive self-image,” Professor Gignac said.

“So, it’s not surprising to see a link between narcissism and the overestimation of one’s intelligence.

“The interesting element is that trait-anger appears to be involved in this process. It may be speculated that, for many grandiose narcissists, trait-anger develops over time, as they begin to gain some awareness of the difference between how important and good they think they are versus the reality of what they can do and what they have accomplished.”

ABOUT THIS NEUROSCIENCE RESEARCH ARTICLE

Source: Jess Reid – University of Western Australia
Publisher: Organized by NeuroscienceNews.com.
Image Source: NeuroscienceNews.com image is in the public domain.
Original Research: Abstract for “Why do angry people overestimate their intelligence? Neuroticism as a suppressor of the association between Trait-Anger and subjectively assessed intelligence” by Marcin Zajenkowski, and Gilles E.Gignac in Intelligence Published July 21 2018.
doi:10.1016/j.intell.2018.07.003

CITE THIS NEUROSCIENCENEWS.COM ARTICLE
University of Western Australia”Angry People May Not Be as Smart as They Think.” NeuroscienceNews. NeuroscienceNews, 13 August 2018.
<http://neurosciencenews.com/anger-intelligence-narcissists-9695/&gt;.

Abstract

Why do angry people overestimate their intelligence? Neuroticism as a suppressor of the association between Trait-Anger and subjectively assessed intelligence

Trait-Anger and Neuroticism are substantially inter-correlated positively. However, there is some theoretical and empirical research that supports the notion that Trait-Anger and Neuroticism are influenced by several processes differentially. For instance, Trait-Anger is linked to optimistic bias, increased sense of control, approach motivation and high Narcissism. In contrast, Neuroticism correlates with pessimism, low sense of control, withdrawal motivation and low Narcissism. Building on these previous findings, we hypothesized that Trait-Anger and Neuroticism would be positively and negatively, respectively, associated with subjectively assessed intelligence (SAI). Furthermore, we expected that these two traits would act as mutual suppressors in predicting SAI. The results of two studies (ns = 303 and 225) supported our hypotheses. Trait-Anger was positively and Neuroticism negatively related to SAI, even after controlling for objective intelligence. These results are consistent with previous research which suggests that SAI is more substantially associated with personality than objective intelligence. Additionally, in study 2, we found that Narcissism mediated (partially) the relationship between Trait-Anger and SAI. In the discussion, we suggest that there might be two faces of Trait-Anger: one related to anxiety and one to overconfidence. Finally, a potential role of intelligence positive illusions in Trait-Anger is proposed.

Lead and holistic detox ways

What are the Adverse Health Effects that Lead Exposure Can Have on Adults?

The toxic nature of lead is well documented. Lead affects all organs and functions of the body to varying degrees. The frequency and severity of symptoms among exposed individuals depends upon the amount of exposure. The list below shows many of the key lead-induced health effects.

  • Neurological Effects
    • Peripheral neuropathy
    • Fatigue / Irritability
    • Impaired concentration
    • Hearing loss
    • Wrist / Foot drop
    • Seizures
    • Encephalopathy
  • Gastrointestinal Effects
    • Nausea
    • Dyspepsia
    • Constipation
    • Colic
    • Lead line on gingival tissue
  • Reproductive Effects
    • Miscarriages/Stillbirths
    • Reduced sperm count & motility
    • Abnormal sperm
  • Heme Synthesis
    • Anemia
    • Erythrocyte protoporphyrin elevation
  • Renal Effects
    • Chronic nephropathy with proximal tubular damage
    • Hypertension
  • Other
    • Arthralgia
    • Myalgia

What Lead Levels are Considered Elevated in Adults?

  • At levels above 80 µg/dL, serious, permanent health damage may occur (extremely dangerous).
  • Between 40 and 80 µg/dL, serious health damage may be occuring, even if there are no symptoms (seriously elevated).
  • Between 25 and 40 µg/dL, regular exposure is occuring. There is some evidence of potential physiologic problems (elevated).
  • Between 10 and 25 µg/dL, lead is building up in the body and some exposure is occuring.

The typical level for U.S. adults is less than 10 µg/dL (mean = 3 µg/dL)

 


Heavy metals (including lead, cadmium, mercury, and the metalloid arsenic) are persistent in the environment and have documented potential for serious health consequences. Heavy metal toxicity may damage:

  • central nervous system
  • cardiovascular system
  • gastrointestinal system
  • lungs
  • kidneys
  • liver
  • endocrine glands
  • bones

Fortunately, integrative interventions like selenium and garlic have been shown to decrease the buildup and increase the excretion of toxic heavy metals.

Risk Factors for Toxic Metal Exposure

Lead:

  • Lead-containing plumbing
  • Lead-based paints (in buildings built before 1978 and is the predominant source for children)
  • Foods grown in lead-rich soil

Mercury:

  • Eating fish or shellfish contaminated with methylmercury (includes shark, swordfish, king mackerel, tile fish, bass, walleye, pickerel)
  • Breathing contaminated workplace air or skin contact during use in the workplace
  • Release of mercury vapor from dental amalgam fillings

Cadmium

  • Tobacco smoke
  • Eating foods containing cadmium (levels are highest in grains, legumes, and leafy vegetables, fish and shellfish)
  • Contact with cadmium from household products (electric batteries and solar panels)

Signs and Symptoms

These can be similar to other health conditions and may not be immediately recognized as due to heavy metal toxicity:

  • Nausea
  • Vomiting
  • Diarrhea
  • Abdominal pain
  • Central nervous system dysfunction
  • Heart problems
  • Anemia

Diagnosis

  • Blood testing
  • Urine testing
  • Hair and nail analysis

Conventional Therapies

  • Chelation therapy, which enhances the elimination of metals (both toxic and essential) from the body, including:
    • DMPS, an oral medication for arsenic, cadmium, and mercury toxicity
    • Succimer (DMSA), an oral medication for mild-to-moderate lead, arsenic and mercury toxicity
    • Calcium-disodium EDTA for lead encephalopathy and lead poisoning

Novel and Emerging Therapies

  • Toxicogenomics, the study of gene expression changes by toxin exposure
  • New chelation therapies, including polygamma-glutamic acid-coated superparamagnetic nanoparticles that have a high specificity for metal toxins

Dietary and Lifestyle Changes

  • Avoid or replace mercury amalgam dental fillings with mercury-free composite material
  • Maintain nutrient sufficiency, as adequate intake of essential trace minerals may reduce toxic metal uptake
  • Limit consumption of high-mercury fish to no more than 1 serving/week

Integrative Interventions

  • Selenium: Selenium is an inhibitor of mercury accumulation and increases excretion of mercury and arsenic
  • Vitamin C: A free-radical scavenger that has been shown to reduce lead levels in humans
  • Folate: Higher blood folate levels in pregnant women were associated with lower blood mercury and cadmium levels
  • Garlic: Garlic lowered lead levels in the blood of industrial workers as effectively as the chelator d-penicillamine
  • Alpha-Lipoic Acid and Glutathione: In preclinical studies, these compounds reduced the adverse changes in blood parameters due to lead, cadmium, and copper

Fungal brain

Fungal (mold) infections to the brain were once relatively rare. Now they are becoming increasingly more common for many reasons including: 1) increases in the number of HIV/ AIDS patients, 2) increases in the number of patients with certain cancers like leukemia or lymphoma, 3) increases in patients on immunosuppressive therapy for organ or bone marrow transplants, and 4) increased numbers of patients on long term antibiotic therapy which can encourage mold overgrowth. The most common fungi to cause brain infections include filament-forming fungi like Aspergillus, Mucor and Rhizopus and yeast-type fungi such as Candida and Cryptococcus. Less common causes of fungal brain infections include Trichosporon, Blastomyces, Histoplasma, Coccidioides, Paracoccidioides and Penicillium marneffei.

The most common form of fungal brain infections are meningitis, although these infections cause also present as localized brain infections called abscesses.

Meningitis typically presents with fever, headache, eye problems, difficulty concentrating and seizures. Brain abscesses can present with a local brain defect- such as a localized seizure. Even with hospital treatment, fungal meningitis and abscesses cam have a high mortality rate of over 20%.

Fungal brain infections may be hard to detect at their early and highly treatable stages. Testing the blood for galactomannan or for mold cultures may detect some fungal brain infections. Lumbar puncture and brain imaging may also be useful in some cases.


Related search
mold types
Stachybotrys
Stachybotrys
Stachybotrys chartarum
Stachybotrys chartarum
Cladosporium
Cladosporium
Chaetomium
Chaetomium
Penicillium
Penicillium
Alternaria
Alternaria
Ulocladium
Systemic fungal infections are serious and sometimes life-threatening conditions, especially in immunocompromised patients such as those with cancer, AIDS, and other chronic illnesses. … Dr. James Konopka investigates Candida albicans, which can cause lethal systemic infections.Oct 23, 2012

People also ask

Web results

Long Island man beats fungal meningitis; Cancer specialist solves a …

Oct 23, 2012 – Systemic fungal infections are serious and sometimes life-threatening conditions, especially in immunocompromised patients such as those with cancer, AIDS, and other chronic illnesses. … Dr. James Konopka investigates Candida albicans, which can cause lethal systemic infections.

Aspergilloma of the brain: an overview. – NCBI

by T Nadkarni – ‎2005 – ‎Cited by 98 – ‎Related articles

Fungal infections of the central nervous system (CNS) are almost always a clinical surprise. Their presentation is subtle, often without any diagnostic characteristics, and they are frequently mistaken for tuberculous meningitis, pyogenic abscess, or brain tumor.

Treatment of invasive fungal infections in cancer patients—updated …

by S Mousset – ‎2014 – ‎Cited by 89 – ‎Related articles

Sep 12, 2013 – In cancer patients, invasive fungal disease (IFD) remains an …. were documented in many body sites including brain parenchyma [56].

Cancer Patients and Fungal Infections| Fungal Diseases | CDC

Jan 25, 2017 – Stem cell transplant patients or those who have a blood (hematologic) cancer such as leukemia, lymphoma, or myeloma may have different risks for fungal infections. Please see Stem Cell Transplant Patients and Fungal Infections for more information.

Fungus and Cancer – The hidden link – Cancer Fighting Strategies

Learn about the link between fungus and cancer, how infections like candida may cause cancer, and how you can eliminate these infections to support a cancer …

Fungal Infections of the Nervous System – Verywell

https://www.verywellhealth.com › … › Neurological Symptoms & Diagnosis

Jul 22, 2017 – What Happens When Fungus Affects the Brain … steroid treatment, organ transplants,cancers, trauma, malnutrition, and AIDS, among others.

Fungal Brain Infections More Common – Doug Kaufmann

Nov 19, 2012 – cancer-button, diabetes-button, prostate-button, digestive-button … Fungal (mold) infections to the brain were once relatively rare. Now they are …

Fungal Infection Mistaken For Cancer? – Doug Kaufmann

Apr 10, 2017 – As far back as the 1950’s, young medical students at Johns Hopkins Medical School were trained to think “fungus” every time solid tumor …

Invasive Fungal Sinusitis Symptoms and Treatment | UPMC – UPMC.com

Read more about invasive fungal sinusitis symptoms and treatment options available at UPMC, a world leader in neurosurgery. … Back to brain tumor conditions …

Is Cancer a Fungus? A New Theory – Dr. Sircus

Dec 17, 2013 – This article offers crucial information about the relationships between cancer and infectious threats that every cancer patient and their family

Oral cancer and fungus in the kitchen

Lead in lipstick and health issues

Lead is a highly toxic metal that was used for many years in products found in and around our homes. Lead may cause a range of health effects, from behavioral problems and learning disabilities, to seizures and death. Children 6 years old and under are most at risk, because their bodies are growing quickly.

Research suggests that the primary sources of lead exposure for most children are:

  • deteriorating lead-based paint
  • lead contaminated dust
  • lead contaminated residential soil

EPA is playing a major role in addressing these residential lead hazards. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), in 1978 there were 13.5 million children in the United States with elevated blood lead levels (i.e., 10µg/dl). By 2002, that number had dropped to 310,000 kids. While we still have a significant challenge, EPA is very proud of how federal, state, tribal, and private sector partners have coordinated efforts with the public to better protect our children.

Since the 1980’s, EPA and its federal partners have phased out lead in gasoline, reduced lead in drinking water, reduced lead in industrial air pollution, and banned or limited lead used in consumer products, including residential paint. States and municipalities have set up programs to identify and treat lead poisoned children and to rehabilitate deteriorated housing. Parents, too, have greatly helped to reduce lead exposures to their children by cleaning and maintaining homes, having their children’s blood lead levels checked, and promoting proper nutrition. The Agency’s Lead Awareness Program continues to work to protect human health and the environment against the dangers of lead by developing regulations, conducting research, and designing educational outreach efforts and materials.

Checking your family and home for lead – To reduce your child’s exposure to lead, get your child checked, have your home tested (especially if your home has paint in poor condition and was built before 1978), and fix any hazards you may have.

Your Family

  • Children’s blood lead levels tend to increase rapidly from 6 to 12 months of age, and tend to peak at 18 to 24 months of age.
  • Consult your doctor for advice on testing your children. A simple blood test can detect high levels of lead. Blood tests are important for:
    • Children at ages 1 and 2.
    • Children and other family members who have been exposed to high levels of lead.
    • Children who should be tested under your state or local health screening plan.
  • Your doctor can explain what the test results mean and if more testing will be needed.

Your Home – You can get your home checked in one of two ways, or both:

  • A paint inspection tells you the lead content of every different type of painted surface in your home. It won’t tell you whether the paint is a hazard or how you should deal with it.
  • A risk assessment tells you if there are any sources of serious lead exposure (such as peeling paint and lead dust). It also tells you what actions to take to address these hazards.

Have qualified professionals do the work – There are standards in place for certifying lead-based paint professionals to ensure the work is done safely, reliably, and effectively. Trained professionals use a range of methods when checking your home, including:

  • Visual inspection of paint condition and location.
  • A portable x-ray fluorescence (XRF) machine.
  • Lab tests of paint samples.
  • Surface dust tests.

Have a trained professional at Environmental Analytics test your home for lead. Call 520.290.6653 for more information.

Note: Home test kits for lead are available, but studies suggest that they are not always accurate. Consumers should not rely on these tests before doing renovations or to assure safety.

* The information provided above is referenced from: http://www.epa.gov/lead