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October 27, 2025 44 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:11):
You are about to listen to the Doctor Dahlia Show,
sase stimulating medical talk radio. Any medical advice doctor Dhalia
Wax gives on her show should not be substituted for
an actual visit to your medical provider. And now here's
doctor Dahlia.

Speaker 2 (00:35):
All right, we are back on the Doctadelli Show one
eight seven seven Doctor Dolly one eight seven seven d
oc d A l I. So the well has run dry.
The well has run dry. This is what is on
the USDA Food and Nutritious Nutrition Service website as forty

(00:55):
two million people are about to face their snap benefits
not being continued as a result of this ridiculous shutdown,
which has been the continuing resolution has been proved time
and time again, bipartisanly. Republicans and Democrats have signed it before.
It just now Democrats are saying we're gonna hold off.

(01:16):
This is leverage and it's it's frightening. So when you
go to the website, this is what it says at
the top of the website, beautiful website. The us Food
Nutrition Service talks about you know, the nutrition programs and
how to sign on and how to report fraud, et cetera.
But at the top in a big maroon sort of banner.

(01:39):
It says, exclamation point to alert you. Senate Democrats have
now voted twelve times to not fund the food Stamp
program also known as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program. Bottom line,
they say the well has run dry at this time.
They say there will be no better mission of first,

(02:01):
we are approaching an inflection point for Senate Democrats. They
can continue to hold out for healthcare or illegal aliens
and gender oh my gosh, and gender mutilation procedures, or
reopen them, or reopen the governments. Some mothers, babies, and
the most vulnerable among us can receive critical nutrition assistance.

(02:23):
They are right to alert people that November FIRS funds
are running dry and that it's the Democrats that are not,
you know, allowing their other Democrats to vote for this.
There's this cancel culture and coercion and big bullying going on.
Whereas three Senate Democrats I like to hack with us,

(02:43):
We're gonna John Fetterman, Cather cortest Master, and I apologize
for not remembering the other third. They had third at
the top of my head. But that is an interesting
comment that they have on their official site, they can
continue to hold out for health care for illegal aliens,
gender mutilization, mutilation procedures, or reopen the government. And you know,

(03:08):
that's it's I get that politics have gotten so bad
and people are believing such misinformation out there that you
only have a few moments to be able to you know,
get your message across. And so you know, thinks you

(03:30):
would have never seen, you know, in the eighties or
in the sixties, that's sort of talk you know, you know,
coming out from the government. But it's all now about
sound bites. It's all about you you know, getting to
the crux of it in as few words as possible.

(03:51):
And if that's what is holding this up, it's sad.
I mean, Europe has now banned England has now said no,
we're not going to be doing gender transitioning on minors.
If they're already enrolled in a clinical study, will allow it,

(04:15):
you know, if they're seventeen and in the process of
becoming an adult soon. But no, we're not doing this
anymore on kids. And is this really what the Democrats
are holding up the you know, the the supplemental Interation's
program and all the other government spending. I mean, I
think the Republicans were smart to say, look, this is

(04:35):
the exact same bill that they voted on before. These
are the optics. Here it is. We could show you
and here's the bill. There's nothing you see. You know,
Democrats can say, oh, Republicans are trying to do this,
they're trying to do this.

Speaker 3 (04:49):
No.

Speaker 2 (04:49):
Instead, the messaging that the Democrats are doing is they
are hurting our healthcare. How are Republicans hurting your healthcare
when you're not signing a continuing resolution that allows supplemental nutrition.
And by the way, this is another issue. I have
forty two million and eight of the United States needs

(05:13):
government help to eat. I mean, we're supposed to be
one of the richest, most vibrant countries on the planet,
and we have forty two million Americans that need SNAP benefits.
That's something that we need to address. Now. I get it,

(05:37):
many people qualify, so might as well. You know, they're
still able to work, they're still able to eat. This
is to supplement That's why it had better be for nutrition.
None of this soda, pop or candy or junk food.
That's why I really like Wick where you can actually
get the food, you could get the fish, you could
get the dairy, you could get the whole grains. That's

(05:59):
the way I think we should be, you know, addressing
the food the nutrition issue to make sure that they're
getting nutrition.

Speaker 3 (06:06):
None of this.

Speaker 2 (06:07):
You know, Oh, I could get some lucky charms, you
know now with my snap benefits. But I don't, and
I don't think the average person wants to see individuals
not be able to continue to feed their families. And
this is the this is what we're we're now, you know,
we're now vulnerable to And so November first, you know,

(06:32):
who's going to budge first? Everybody's like, well, who's going
to budget? Well, it's not really a budge on the
Republican side because it's the same CR. I mean, you know,
for Republicans to say, okay, we are now going to
stop everything and talk about Obamacare, which was a mess
that Democrats are made to begin with, and we are
now going to figure out how to deal with the

(06:53):
subsidy crisis of Obama. That's not a CR issue. And
I don't want to say Republicans should hold out or
Democrats should to hold out. Just sign the bill and
while we need are five more Democrats to do that,
and and and the longer this goes, the harder it
is for them to save fates. That's that's and that's

(07:14):
why I told you us constituents and voters have to say, look,
we got your back, we still love you, we're fans.
Just sign the gosh darn cr like you've done before,
and let's get our benefits back. I understand what you're doing,
you know. I I see you're trying to help, you know,
with the whole Obamacare issue, which was a cluster out
of seven. And we probably need trump Care at this point,

(07:35):
if it could be designed, what's much better than ACA.
But nobody's gonna want to budge because the longer this goes,
then it looks like they caved and they're weak. Well,
this is ridiculous, and it's gonna take the voters to say,
come on, man, five more Democrats vote for the stupid
CR one eight seven seven doct belly.

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Speaker 2 (10:19):
All right, we are back up, Doctor Dhalisha. Thank you
all for tuning in. One eight seven seven Doctor Dolli
one eight seven seven d O C D A l I.
Big thanks to Talk Media Network for making the show happen.
Big thanks to Daniel, our producer, and big thanks to
you all for tuning in. We really do appreciate it.
Don't forget to follow us on Twitter or exit Doctor Dahlia, Facebook,
The Doctor Dahlia's Show, and on YouTube, click like and subscribe.

(10:44):
So you know, every time this time of year, people
are looking at what they have to pay for their
health insurance and they ask themselves or they ask me,
should I go without my health insurance is going to
be so damn expensive, especially for those that don't qualify
for subsidies on Obamacare. That should I just am I

(11:06):
going to be spending less if I don't get health insurance?
That's scary. As much as I want to say, oh
you'll spend less, who knows you get to a car accident,
God forbid, and you don't have medpay on your car insurance.
You get diagnosed with a tumor or a pedicitis, or
a gallbladder attack or perforated ulcer or brain aneurysm, who

(11:30):
knows what your cost could be. And the reason why
the insurance companies exist is they promise to cover you,
but you got to buy it when you're healthy, and
they are banking on you not getting unhealthy, you staying
healthy and you just paying premiums and you are going well.
I don't want to get sick, but I also don't

(11:51):
want to keep pain. So I was given a quote
and our health insurance now, luckily, the deductible is down
to twenty five hundred dollars. I remember when that used
to be a high deducible plan in the early two thousands.
So from a ten thousand dollars twelve thousand dollars deductible.
We are able to get our deductible down to twenty
five hundred dollars for a family with three, because one

(12:13):
of my sons is still under twenty six so can
still be on our health insurance, although it would help
if you know he wasn't. We would be able to
get our UH insurance down to twenty three hundred dollars
a month if we want to make our If this
is a PPO not a nature mom, because I like

(12:35):
the PPOs, because I travel a lot and I need
to be able to you'll see a doctor out of
out of state. If we wanted to lower the deductible
for twenty five hundred dollars even down more, we're looking
at twenty eight hundred dollars a month, So on average,
twenty five hundred dollars a month or roughly thirty thousand
dollars a year for our health insurance. It's a lot

(12:59):
of money money. It's a lot of money for health insurance.
So when people ask, well, wait a second here, am
I really going to have thirty thousand dollars in medical
bills for a family of three? What should I do well.
You know, if you're healthy, thank God, and you know
that that's that's tricky. And I don't want to say

(13:20):
to nod. I always say to get insurance because you
just never know. And and you know, the average person
that has something major happened to them, we're always shocked.
And they always said I was healthy until now. So
I always want you protected. But for those people that say, look,
I don't have thirty grand, Okay, I can't be insuring
myself for thirty grand. This is not not going to happen. Well,

(13:42):
you know, if you are going to choose the cash rate,
the cash these are you know, these are the things
you have to think about. Okay. Number one is you
can get doctors and hospitals to work with you. It
was a lot easier before Obamacare, when you knew the
doctor and then it was a doctor run clinic. Now,

(14:04):
if you notice you pay your bills to someplace at
Texas or Virginia or New York, it's it's some remote
billing company. And when they add to the fund to
go account number please yeah, and you don't even sometimes
get a person. So being able to negotiate your rates
down or your balance down is getting harder, but it

(14:27):
is possible. A lot of hospitals they have people you
could talk to and say, look, can I do a
payment plan? And oftentimes they will in order for you
to pay up front, lower your rate, lower what your
pay and so there is room to negotiate for cash.
But to negotiate with pharmaceutical companies, they're very expensive, you know, chemotherapy.

(14:54):
Don't count on that. Now, some drugs you can get
coupons from the pharmace suitical companies and you can get
you know, waivers and discounts, but they do that because
you're gonna eventually pay for the drug. And if you're
trying to, you know, live on the drug for free,

(15:15):
understand that might not happen. So yeah, you might be
able to get a sample here or there. But yeah,
another thing that you need to also be aware of.
If if you told me looked at Dahlia that thirty
thousand dollars I'm gonna save and I'm gonna put in
a bank account and I'm gonna let it grow interest,
or I'll put in a mutual fund. So if God

(15:36):
forbid I need medical care, that thirty thousand dollars will
be there. Now, how many of you would really do that. No,
the average person doesn't have that extra thirty thousand to
just sit and you used to. You used to have
to put money away for your medical expenses, but the
average person doesn't. Also, let's say, god forbid, you come

(15:59):
down with the really bad pneumonia or respiratory distress in December,
you know, so let's say it's too much, even though
we're talking about our January. So maybe to make them
more realistic, this is for your january premiums. Let's say,
you know, pay what if you, at the end of
January go into respiratory distress. Did you already save up
that thirty grand or did you just save up that
twenty five hundred and did you actually save it, especially

(16:24):
since you're paying off your credit card from Christmas? So
you know. The thing I worry about is when I
see patients buy these cheaper plans or these you know,
metashairs and metishair is cool, but they tell me it's
a lot out of pocket to go to the er
or urgent care. I'm like, well, the money you saved
each month not buying Obamacare or traditional health insurance is

(16:47):
that in the bank. Did you put that aside and
kept squirreling that away so you could use it. The
average persons is no. So I mean you need to
have some you know, pretty good discipline where that money
has to go put be put away. If you end
up not needed it for medical care, then you know,
later god willing, you get insurance, you get a job

(17:08):
of pay for your medical insurance, then great, then you
can go ahead and use it and now you have retirement.
But the problem is is with the way things are,
with cost of living, et cetera, there is no way
to bank on you having that money in the bank.
And so you know, I've had patience, Go doc, you
know what, this is my medical history. What do you

(17:28):
think you think I'm gonna live past a year? Do
you think I'm gonna need to be hospitalized this year?
I need to make a decision. And these are valid questions.
I wouldn't laugh. I mean these are I don't blame them.
You know who knows your health better than your doctor.
Now again, I haven't been their doctor for you know years,
I haven't seen them. I'm not taken care of them

(17:51):
on a regular basis. So if you've been using telemedicine
and not necessarily going in and getting physicals and getting
your your colonoscopies and your mammograms and your you know,
skin biopsies. Who knows, and so not to you know,
be pessimistic. But the things you need to think about
going into this January is one, are you going to
get a bad respiratory infection? We have COVID, we have flu,

(18:14):
you know, are you going to have trouble breathing?

Speaker 6 (18:16):
Well?

Speaker 2 (18:16):
How's your heart? What's your family history like? Do you
have cardiac risk factors? Do you have high blood pressure?
Do you have diabetes? Do you have high cholesterol? Have
you had a heart issue before? Is there a family
history of heart disease? Are you a male over forty five?
Female over fifty five? Are you of short stature? Are
you stressed? You smoke heavy alcohol, poor exercise? If you

(18:37):
have any of those cardiac risk factors, there could be
a chance that you have a cardiac issue. Oh do
you think you're going to have a heart racing episode
because of your caffeine? Are you going to have blood
in your stool where that needs to be checked out
to make sure you don't have an ulcer? Are you

(18:58):
prone to getting stomach bugs? Where you're vomiting and having diarrhea.
Have you had all your moles checked to make sure
one is at melanoma? Now, how's your eyesight? Are you
starting to nose that your eyes aren't like they used to? Okay,
what of lifestyle do you have? I mean, are you

(19:19):
gonna get poked in the eye? You know? Are you
more likely to you know, fall off a mountain that
you're scaling? Are you you know what? What? What are
some of the things you do? Are you prone to falls?
If you are prone to falls, that's a problem. Now
you could say no, doctor dayah, I got great balance,
I'm good, Well, I hope, so that's good. But do

(19:40):
you have a new adopted dog. We've just adopted a dog,
and that dog is about one years old, and she
knows how to go peep outside, but it's a little
nippy and cold, so she prefers to peep inside the house.
And I turn a corner of the kitchen, or I
turn a under the bathroom and there is a nice

(20:02):
peepee puddle. I could fall break my neck, break a hip,
you know. Do you have pets? Those are things to
think about. Pets can cause a lot of medical issues
for you. Do you have arthritis and pretty bad arthritis
in your hips and knees and shoulders where you might
actually need a replacement soon. These are things you got

(20:25):
to think about. And it sucks that health insurance is
so expensive, and it sucks even more than going to
the doctor and getting medical things done. Is that expensive?
I'm with you, you know, I miss the days where
it was like, what twenty five bucks fifty bucks you
could pay cash. But you know, these are things you
need to think about before you make a decision of

(20:47):
not having insurance and going cash one eight seven seven
douts folly one way.

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Speaker 2 (22:14):
All right, you're back on the dogedly issue. Thank you
all for tuning in. One eight seven seven Doctor Dolly
one eight seven seven d O C D A L I.
So Trump running for a third term is back in
the news, and you know, it's uh, it's interesting. Uh uh.

(22:35):
The Trump knows how to mess with the media. Trump's
got a lot of work to do. He's got a
lot to get done. And so if the media, rather
than you know, I don't know, mad about the ice,
removing illegal immigrants and tariffs and all that, spend a

(22:57):
few news cycles talking about how he may want to
run for a third term, that gives him time to
get other stuff done. And so he played around with
the media today because people keep asking him running for
a third term, and he uh, uh, I guess. A

(23:17):
reporter asked him about former chief strategist Steve Bannon's claim
that a secret plan may negate the twenty second Amendment
term limit, and so a reporter said, would you and
Trump's seventy nine years old run? He said, I would
love to do it. I have my best numbers. Ever,
it's very terrible. I have my best numbers. This is
why he was a border for US one in Riot

(23:38):
to Tokyo. And according to Real Clear Politics and New
York Post, his approval brain is at forty five point
one percent. Flirting with this candidacy is something that I
think he's doing to mess with the uh, mess with
the the reporters. But I do believe he feels like, Wow,

(23:59):
if he got this much done in nine months, you know,
imagine if he has another term. And I gotta tell you,
most Republicans I know would be like, oh my gosh,
if we just got Trump for one more term. I mean,
people don't want him to go. And a big thing
that I'm even hearing from reporters is well, what are

(24:21):
you going to do to ensure that it doesn't get
reversed again. You know when you are, you know when
you are are you know if when you're out of office,
what do you do to make sure these things last?
And so well, I am sure that he wishes he

(24:42):
could write also, you know, I mean he's seventy nine,
he would be eighty three. This guy's got energy. But
I guess somebody asked, well, he could be Vance's vice president.
You could have a Trump Vance ticket. We it's save
on a lot of the Repulsters. But just switch Vans

(25:05):
and Trump. Well, the twenty second Amendment has the two
term limit on presidency, written as such, no person shall
be elected elected to the office of the President more
than twice, and no person who has held the office
of president or acted as president for more than two

(25:27):
years of a term to which some other person was
elected president shall be elected to the office of the
president more than once. So meaning, you know, like with
FDR passed and Truman took over, or Lynda B. Johnson
and JFK taking over, although that happened in JFK's third

(25:48):
year of actually end of his third year going into
the sixty four election. So if you let's say, inherit
the presidency, you know, with three more years you can't
run a second time. But if you inherit it under
the two years, you could technically hold. We are trivial.

(26:10):
Question that a lot of people get asked is how
long can somebody technically be president for? And the answer
is ten years if they get if they inherit it
or get or succeed somebody, you know, for some reason
or another, and then they they end up being able
to have two elections. So they say this article shall

(26:35):
be inoperative unless it shall have been ratified as an
amendment to the Constitution by the legislators of three fourths
of several states within seven years from the date of
submission of the States by this Congress. So that means
it had This was the section one. In section two,
it's pretty straightforward. He would not be able to he

(26:56):
would not be able to technically be elected again. However,
there are two years wiggle room. If somebody gets elected,
leaves and under two years gives it to him. Now
it has not been tested. What if you are vice president? Now, Okay,

(27:20):
this is moot because he says he's not going to
be run running as JD. Vans's vice president. It's not
gonna happen. But in theory, what would happen if he
is JD. Vans's vice president and then JD. Van says,
you know what, it's been a good week. I'm out
Trump takeover. Would he only get to take over for

(27:43):
two years? Or would he not be allowed to take over?
The Secretary of State, Speaker of the House would have
to take over. I don't really know much. I'm not
a constitutional expert by any means, but you know, with
somebody else to take over, and then when his final
two years could start, he takes over. Not sure, but

(28:06):
I do not believe he is going to run again.
I think with his age, I think if he could
solidify what he wants to solidify. But again, he is
having a fantastic first term. First, I'm sorry, he's having
a fantastic you know, first part of the second term.
Who knows what's going to happen after the midterms. If

(28:26):
he loses control of the House and the Senate and
he can't get anything done, you know, or some of
his things get stalled or reversed or or that can
you know, that might change things. Because the one thing
I think we are all pretty aware of is he
was not happy that all the work he did first
term got negated once Biden came into office. It happens,

(28:51):
but there are some things that should have still stuck,
the wall being built, et cetera. And no, so yeah,
I think it's kind of messing with with you know, people.
But you know, Trump being the most popular Republican president
in a long time. I mean, uh, you know, we

(29:13):
haven't seen anything, you know, since Reagan in terms of
popularity like that. And a big part of it is
one is he's not a politician. Number two is he's
getting stuff done. You guys probably remember more of the
Reagan presidency than I do. And I remember liking President Reagan,
and I remember, you know, thinking, this guy is a badass.

(29:33):
You know, wow, probably one of the best presidents we've
ever had. But again I was young, so I really
didn't understand a lot of politics. But I don't you know,
you know, did he work on the weekends like this,
did he you know, did he try to get as
much done. I know people have been faulting Trump with
his executive actions, et cetera, But I mean he protected

(29:54):
women's sports. I mean, he's you know, he's making changes
to our pharmaceutical. I mean, it's about flipping time that
somebody tells big Pharma, Look, you're not gonna charge us
more than England or Canada or Mexico. We're gonna get
the best rate possible. We're done with being screwed over NATO.

(30:19):
Uh huh. You're not gonna get the most money from
US comas. You're gonna give the hostages back. This is
huge now with the Iran Iranian hostage crisis, they didn't
even want to mess with Ronald Reagan and they let
those hostages go the day he came into office. And
that was flipping impressive. And you know that, And that's

(30:42):
one of the reasons why you know, we've looked at
Reagan as one of being one of the best presidents
because it's you know, other countries feared him and respected him,
and you know, you're not gonna mess with us. That's
that is the attitude we want. Don't mess with us.
Strength through peace or peace through strength. But you know,

(31:05):
I think right now it's too early for people to
be a lot of people are kind of panicking and
they're already you know, I've done this where you know,
I'm worried that I'm turning thirty, or I'm turning forty,
or I'm turning fifty, and I sit there and think
about it so much that I don't even enjoy the
rest of my thirties or my twenties or my forties,

(31:26):
you know, And I'm thinking of myself. But I'm gonna
be fifty one day, or I'm gonna be fifty soon,
or I'm gonna be you know, just just you know,
enjoy whatever you know. Now, if you don't like his presidency,
then you're gonna have risk perle thinking that you know,
he leaves, you know, in three four years. But I
do not believe he is going to try to remain
in office. One eight seven seven Doctor Dolly over the way.

(32:00):
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Speaker 6 (33:34):
As an organ donor, your story doesn't have to end.
The good in you can live on. In fact, you
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(33:57):
Health and Human Services Health Resources and Services Administration.

Speaker 2 (34:22):
All right, we are Madam Rocadelli the show. Thank you
all for tuning in. One eight seven seven Docadelli one
eight seven seven D O C D A L I.
So you want to hear something cheap and easy to
help cut your dementia risk. And I'm not going to
make you do cross the puzzles, nothing like that. What
I want you to do is pull up on your

(34:45):
playlist some of your favorite songs to boogie too. All right,
I want to booge and listen to your music. Another
study has shown that listening to music can cut after
age seventy can cut dementia risk by nearly forty percent.

(35:06):
Now that is huge. Now I'm not saying you're not
gonna get dementia and if you pull up cool in
the game, but still, this is something you could do
older adults. According to the study publish a neuroscience news
dot com, older adults who regularly listen or play music
may significantly lower their risk of dementia. According to a

(35:28):
study of ten eight hundred people who were over seventy,
those who always listened to music showed a thirty nine
percent lower risk of developing dementia and better memory performance,
while those who played instruments like still play piano, guitar
flutophone thirty five percent lower risk. If you combined both activities,

(35:52):
played your guitar while listening to MTV all right, you
would have a great protective effect. Researchers suggest that engaging
with music could be an accessible, enjoyable strategy to help
maintain brain health in later life. I love music. Now

(36:13):
I'm not seventy, but when I drive, I always have
to have music ont of the car. Yo. I like singing.
I like dancing when nobody's looking, because I don't dance
really well and love karaoke, and I think music is
a fantastic way to do this. They say, always listen
to music lowered your dimension risk by thirty nine percent

(36:33):
playing this vers thirty five percent. Music engagement was linked
to overall cognitive and episodic memory scores and finding support
music as a simple lifestyle based intervention. The you know,
the memories, I think are a big part of it.
The study was published in the International Journal Geriatric Psychiatry.

(36:54):
And so when I hear a song from eighties, I
don't need to memorize when a song came out, because
I remember when I hear a song the Dance, the
Sadie Hawkins, the Homecoming, and I'm like, okay, wait, that
must have been nineteen eighty three. That must have been

(37:15):
nineteen eighty four when I was in high school, So
that had to have been eighty seven eighty eight. And
so these songs know how to capture your memory and
bring things back. Now, the problem is is if you
have bad memories of childhood, you don't like listen to
the songs. There's some songs I just can't listen to

(37:36):
and I just, you know, it just brings me back
to you know my early childhood, and I just you know,
not not a lot of good memories, and so, you know,
you would think this would be a slam dunk, everybody
would do that, but there's a lot of people who
don't like listening to music. So one of my favorite
genres are the fifties and in the eighties, I discovered

(37:57):
the fifties because of Back to the Future. So I
watched it Back to the Future movie and I go, damn,
I really like the fifties and then Earth Angel and
I started looking up the songs and I was like,
wait a second, little Richard, whoa wait a second? And
I just started falling in love with music from the fifties,

(38:17):
Elvis and so, you know, I would go to my
mom but like, do you remember the songs? You remember
the song? And she'd be like, I don't want to,
I don't want to hear it. And I'm this is
a great song from the from your your generation. Well,
it's because she had bad memories as a child, And
I noticed my mom doesn't listen to a lot of music.
That was one thing I thought I would actually bond

(38:39):
with her on because I really liked the fifties and
I asked her a lot about that. She wouldn't talk
about that. And part of the reason why is a
brother was diagnosed with leukemia and died two weeks after
he was, you know, his thirteenth you know, he was diagnosed,
he was only thirteen. You know, she didn't get along
with her parents. It was a really rough childhood. And

(39:02):
and you know, so we don't get to talk a
lot about the fifties or music and all that. And
so I think, you know a lot of people don't necessarily,
you know, you'll take advantage of what they can, especially
for something like this, which I really do believe can help. Now.
It doesn't mean you have to listen to the music
you grew up with. I don't listen to that much

(39:24):
eighties music. I listened to a lot of nineties music. Yeah. Also,
I mean, I love the eighties music. It is one
of my favorite year decades of music. A lot of
good eighties songs that I love, you know, metal bands
and things like that. But you know, oh and def
Leppard one of my favorite favorite bands. But I don't
listen to that all the time. I got to be
able to sing along to a lot of songs, and

(39:46):
and so I listened to a variety of music, even
modern day, absolutely modern day, and so also classical music.
You can listen to, but you you really are. It's
the problem with the brain is if don't use it,
you lose it. And I understand some of our brains
just can't handle things like they used to. If you

(40:07):
asked me to study like I did and memorize facts
like I did in high school, college and medical school,
I couldn't do it. My brain just doesn't seem to
have that capacity. I can learn things new, I can't
study tests, et cetera. But I just now I'm like,
you know what, if I don't have to learn biochem again,
I'm not going to. But if you don't use it,

(40:30):
you lose it. Now. Another thing also that seems to
help cut dementia risk is your shingles vaccine. Not only
does your shingles vaccine help prevent shingles, but researchers at
Case Western Reserve University have also found that it could
reduce your risk of developing vascular dementia. Now, is it
because the shot itself does that or is it because

(40:54):
you don't get shingles? And when you don't get shingles,
you don't get the inflammation and the stress that could
put you at risk for dementia. They say the vaccine
has been associated with a significant decrease risk of cardiovascular
events and death in people fifty and older. Experts presented
the findings this week at the Georgia World Congress Center
in Atlanta, the site of ID Week twenty twenty five.

(41:16):
Leading infectious disease group. They looked at health records from
one hundred and seventy four thousand adults in the US.
They followed participants who received the vaccination over a span
of three months up to seven years. Participants who received
the single the shingles vaccine had about half the risk
of developing vascular dementia. They also had a twenty five
percent lower risk of getting a heart attacker stroke, twenty

(41:38):
seven percent lower risk of blood clots, twenty one percent
lower risk of death. So they believe that the shingles
vaccine helps lower those risks. Okay, so is it because
you don't get shingles. Shingles, as you know, is chicken
pox that quiesces or decides to lay dormant after your
chicken pox chicken pox event as a child or young adult,

(42:04):
hopefully as a child, because young adults have severe chickenpox,
and then it comes out as an adult. When you're
stressed or some other factor can cause shingles to come out.
It's a very painful, blistering rash. If you get it
near the eye, it could cause blindness. If you get
it near the ear, it could cause hearing loss. If
you get it across the chest, it could interfere with
your breathing, and it could cause life long pain in

(42:25):
some people. For other people, they get over the rash
ain't no thing but a chicken wing, But for other
individuals it could be lifelong post herpetic neuralgia, which is
just horrible. I want to wish out on my worst enemy.
So when you see a study like this, does it
mean that that vaccine has some magical serum that'll help
protect your heart, help protect you from stroke or is

(42:46):
it that you are less prone to getting shingles so
you end up doing better? Also, could it be that
those who are getting the shingles vaccine are also more
health conscious. If somebody's going to go in to get
the shingles vaccine, are they also more likely to go
and get their flu shot? So that they don't get flu,

(43:07):
and flu could put you out of risk for dementia
and heart attack and stroke. So you know, with these studies,
there there are a lot of questions that end up
coming up, you know. And and but you know, we
see this time and time again where people who vaccinate
may do better overall in life. And so and I

(43:29):
know people think, well, that's just you know, the pharmaceutical companies,
But there's something to that, because I'm sorry, you go
through shingles. That does a number on your body. One
eight seven seven dot dollar don't go away? Can you believe?

Speaker 9 (43:54):
With all the recent violent protests, looting, and destruction, some
areas are considering either defund or abolishing the police. At
a time when America's neighborhoods need the protection of police
the most, some elected officials would rather create more chaos
by playing politics. If you're sick of elected officials caving
in to demands of the radical left, you're not alone.

(44:17):
It's time we stand up and declare our support for
local police. The majority of police officers are important partners
in protecting our god given rights. If you prefer freedom
over chaos, then learn how you can help protect the
local police that serve your community. Call today and request
your free support your local police info packet NLE eight

(44:38):
hundred JBS USA one. That's eight hundred JBS USA one.
Request your free support your local police info packet by
calling eight hundred JBS USA one today
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