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	<title>Dementia Avocacy &#8211; Urban City Podcast Group</title>
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		<title>Radio Health Journal: Segment 1: Facing Dementia: Early Detection And Advancements In Treatment</title>
		<link>https://www.urbancitypodcast.com/radio-health-journal-segment-1-facing-dementia-early-detection-and-advancements-in-treatment/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Urban City Podcast Group]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 22 Aug 2025 16:00:25 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Radio Health Journal]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dementia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dementia Avocacy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Early Warning Signs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mind Health]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.urbancitypodcast.com/?p=4020</guid>

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									<h2>You&#8217;re listening to Radio Health Journal, the trusted news source for medicine, science and<br />technology. I&#8217;m Elizabeth Westfield. I&#8217;m Mayan Vastabetancourt.</h2><p><br />And I&#8217;m Greg Johnson. This week, how can we reduce severe injury in young athletes? Kiddos<br />are seeing injuries because of more repetitive actions and higher risk motions that they&#8217;re just<br />doing again and again and again, as opposed to having the opportunity to diversify. But first,<br />everything you need to know about dementia.<br />There are many, many studies that show correlations between more exercise, less dementia. I<br />would say doing crossword puzzles in Sudoku, probably not. All that and more this week on<br />Radio Health Journal.<br />Summer&#8217;s here. Get ready for backyard barbecues, trips to the pool and COVID-19? That&#8217;s right.<br />COVID isn&#8217;t taken this summer off and can actually spread year round.<br />I&#8217;m Dr. Simone Wiles, and as an infectious disease expert, I know my patients are often<br />surprised by this fact. They don&#8217;t expect COVID to strike in the summer and derail their plans,<br />but guess what? It can. COVID can be unpredictable and quickly turn serious, especially for<br />those who are 50 plus or have certain underlying medical conditions.<br />The good news is, is that if you start feeling sick or test positive, you don&#8217;t need to wait it out.<br />Prescription medications exist to treat COVID for certain people. If you catch COVID this<br />summer, don&#8217;t delay.<br />Ask your doctor if prescription medication is right for you. Learn more at PfizerForAll.com slash<br />COVID-19. This message is sponsored by Pfizer.<br />When we&#8217;re young, the idea of monsters under our beds is the biggest fear we can imagine.<br />But as many of us age, that fear begins to take a different shape. One that we can&#8217;t fight with<br />our fists.<br />One that&#8217;s wrapped up in deceptively calm words delivered by a white coat in a sterile room.<br />Dementia. It&#8217;s this fear that drives many people to keep their heads in the sand, pushing<br />forward with life as normal and ignoring their diagnosis.<br />Dr. Peter Rabins, Professor Emeritus in the Departments of Psychiatry and Medicine at the<br />Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, says since so many different diseases can cause dementia,<br />it&#8217;s important to parse out which one is the culprit to get the best treatment. Because there is<br />treatment. Somewhere around one or two percent of people who have dementia have a totally<br />treatable disease.<br />For example, low thyroid, very low vitamin B12. There are a number of medical treatable<br />diseases that have dementia as one of their symptoms, particularly if they go on long enough.<br />So having a thorough evaluation is important.<br />Rabins is the author of Is It Alzheimer&#8217;s? 101 Answers to Your Most Pressing Questions About<br />Memory Loss and Dementia, Second Edition. His mission is to inform and empower both<br />patients and caregivers to optimize their quality of life, no matter which state of the disease<br />progression they&#8217;re dealing with. Which is why Rabins believes it&#8217;s so important for patients to<br />fully understand their condition, even if they&#8217;re not part of the small percentage with a curable<br />condition.<br />When we get a more specific diagnosis, that tells us something about the here and now, what<br />are the problems the person&#8217;s having, but also what&#8217;s likely to happen in the future. And also<br />about what might help the person function better and have a better quality of life. I mean, I will<br />say that many of, if you put aside the biological treatments, many of the principles of care are<br />the same, whether it&#8217;s Alzheimer&#8217;s or Parkinson&#8217;s dementia or Lewy body dementia.<br />But having a specific diagnosis can help. While each disease provides its own challenges, Rabins<br />says the goal is always to maximize the person&#8217;s quality of life. This looks different as the<br />condition progresses, but big impacts can be made even when someone&#8217;s in the more<br />advanced stages.<br />Pain, for example, is hard to notice in dementia patients, so being aware of the signs can make<br />a world of difference for these people. Many people lose the ability to speak or to use language,<br />so they can&#8217;t say, I&#8217;m in pain. Now, they may be crying or when you touch them, they may<br />cringe.<br />So there are markers that somebody is in pain, but you have to be looking for it. And someone<br />who can&#8217;t tell you it hurts. And of course, if you have a memory problem, even if you can speak,<br />you may not remember that a half an hour ago you were in a lot of pain and for some reason<br />things are better now.<br />So that&#8217;s a big one. It does appear that treating depression when people are severely ill, that<br />can help some people. Keeping people maximally functional from a physical therapy point of<br />view seems to be associated with a better quality of life, even an advanced disease.<br />Learning what triggers someone to be upset can help avoid these unpleasant situations<br />altogether. And once you get to know somebody, even at the late stage of the disease, you<br />learn what triggers them, or you see that they&#8217;re starting to get upset, stop doing it, even if it&#8217;s<br />quote, to help them. So there are lots of care things like that, that you can do that also improve<br />quality of life, even at the end of the disease.<br />And we treat sick people somewhat differently than we do, whether it&#8217;s cancer or heart disease<br />or dementia. But understanding that the person has a disease that affects their thinking, I think<br />is important Because then you start using common sense and trial and error. So if there are<br />problems, how do you solve those? And when you do that, you make life better for everybody.<br />And though a majority of cases are not curable, Rabin says there are some exciting<br />advancements that have come out in the last few years. The first are blood tests that physicians<br />will be able to use to diagnose patients in addition to the brain scans that are currently used.<br />That&#8217;s a huge advance, partly because when doctors could only diagnose by symptoms, we<br />were wrong from 10 to 30 percent of the time.<br />And whether it was Alzheimer&#8217;s disease or some other cause of dementia. Though they are<br />currently made for people with Alzheimer&#8217;s disease, Rabin&#8217;s believes that the same strategies<br />will soon be able to diagnose other conditions as well. Along with the blood tests, there have<br />been two medications approved to treat the disease, but they aren&#8217;t yet able to make a<br />dramatic difference.<br />Currently, patients taking these drugs see about a 7 percent improvement. And though it&#8217;s a<br />modest change, Rabin says for these people and their families, it&#8217;s a noticeable difference. It&#8217;s<br />as if we&#8217;re at the dawn of a treatment era.<br />I like to think of it compared to cancer treatment. This is like 1960 when we were just starting to<br />have medicines that help people live a little bit longer. So we need to have lots of progress and<br />not better medicines, but probably different kinds of medicine.<br />In other words, medicines that work differently. And you know, it took a long time to figure out<br />in cancer. For many cancers, you need three or four medicines.<br />And somehow that combination is much better than any one alone. So it may be a combination<br />of these medicines and other new ones that target different aspects of the disease. So it&#8217;s a<br />start.<br />While we wait for these breakthroughs in drug development, there are other ways for people to<br />increase their quality of life when living with dementia. The first is getting an early diagnosis.<br />You may be wondering how to tell the difference between dementia and age-related memory<br />issues, but Rabin says it&#8217;s a much more clear drop-off than most assume.<br />For example, when given a list of words, a healthy young person can remember about one<br />extra word than a healthy 70-year-old. Not a huge difference, right? If you were to give that list<br />to somebody with mild Alzheimer&#8217;s disease, maybe they&#8217;d get three. So it&#8217;s a big difference.<br />And sort of related to that, let&#8217;s say there&#8217;s somebody who&#8217;s getting married this coming<br />weekend and I forget about it and I&#8217;m reminded, a normal aging person is most likely to<br />remember that. A person with Alzheimer&#8217;s disease is most likely not to remember it because it&#8217;s<br />learning new information that gets impaired first. So do you have a doctor&#8217;s appointment? Are<br />you going out to dinner tonight with somebody? Those are the kinds of things in people with<br />Alzheimer&#8217;s disease that become impaired.<br />And so it is pretty noticeable. When looking for the signs of dementia, either in yourself or a<br />loved one, it&#8217;s important to have a full picture of the risk factors. Unfortunately, the biggest one<br />is something none of us can outrun, age.<br />Still, that doesn&#8217;t mean that everyone will develop dementia as they get older. Let&#8217;s say at age<br />80, somewhere around 20% of people have dementia. 20, maybe 30.<br />Some people say 30. So that still means that at age 80, 70 or 80% of people are normal in their<br />thinking. So I think it&#8217;s important to keep that in mind, that it doesn&#8217;t appear to be inevitable<br />that you&#8217;ll develop it.<br />The second biggest risk factor is high blood pressure. And what&#8217;s really important is high blood<br />pressure in midlife. So people who are listening and who are 40, 50, maybe 60 and have high<br />blood pressure, it&#8217;s really important that you get that treated as well as you can.<br />Rabin says the connection between high blood pressure and dementia later in life isn&#8217;t well<br />understood. But the leading theory is that it damages blood vessels in the brain and increases<br />the risk of stroke. There are a number of other risk factors that aren&#8217;t anywhere near as<br />powerful, but it clear that there&#8217;s a good correlation between exercising more and being<br />socially more active and having a lower risk of developing Alzheimer&#8217;s disease.<br />It&#8217;s really hard to prove cause and effect. You&#8217;d have to tell a group of people, don&#8217;t exercise for<br />the next 20 years. And another group of people, you have to exercise.<br />Forget it. We&#8217;re never going to do that. But there are many, many studies that show<br />correlations between more exercise, less dementia, more social activity, less dementia.<br />I would say doing crossword puzzles in Sudoku, probably not. If that statement was a shock,<br />you&#8217;re not alone. Society has long held puzzle games as the gold standard for staying mentally<br />sharp.<br />And while Rabin&#8217;s agrees that these challenges can be helpful, there&#8217;s no magic injected into<br />these specific games. In fact, he says the best activity you can do for your brain is simply one<br />that you enjoy doing. It&#8217;s much better to find something else mentally stimulating that you<br />enjoy.<br />Reading or being in a discussion group or arguing with people or playing sports or, you know,<br />thinking about what&#8217;s new in football and different plays and all that. I think it&#8217;s finding<br />something that people find mentally engaging, whatever that is. And to think that, well, if I just<br />do crossword puzzles or just do Sudoku, that&#8217;s going to be it.<br />Again, you&#8217;re probably not going to continue because you have to do this for years if it&#8217;s going<br />to have a prevention. And as Rabin&#8217;s mentioned earlier, consistent physical activity like walking<br />has been shown to be protective against dementia. I think there&#8217;s strong agreement that more<br />exercise in general is protective.<br />And then there&#8217;s some other things just for prevention. I think we should say that there&#8217;s at<br />least a suggestion that if you have hearing impairment, getting that treated might help,<br />especially if you have other risk factors like heart disease might help prevent dementia. There&#8217;s<br />something about physical, about exercising that affects the brain.<br />Well, in a sense, hearing and comprehending what you&#8217;re hearing, that&#8217;s exercising that part of<br />the brain. Same thing with vision. So it&#8217;s a two-way street between the inside the body affecting<br />what&#8217;s outside and outside inside.<br />While many discussions around Alzheimer&#8217;s and dementia center around the patient, Rabin&#8217;s<br />book dedicates the last two chapters to caregivers. In fact, he argues that every chapter was<br />written with caregivers in mind. We wrote the first edition of the book in 1981.<br />So that was a time when most people had never heard of Alzheimer&#8217;s disease, and I include<br />doctors and nurses in that most people. But more importantly then was that even though we<br />don&#8217;t have biological treatments, there are lots of things that we can do to make life better,<br />both for the person and whoever is caring for them. And throughout the disease, most people<br />live at home with another person.<br />So we wanted to target caregivers and caregiving because we really believe that if people were<br />informed about what to do and how to do it, they had a better chance of helping the ill person.<br />This conversation has touched on the importance of increasing the patient&#8217;s quality of life,<br />however possible. And Rabin says the same is true for caregivers.<br />They often are giving so much of themselves that their own needs are neglected. It&#8217;s<br />distressing for most people to be a caregiver, not everybody, but for most people. And that<br />means don&#8217;t shut yourself off from your friends and family and other loved ones.<br />You need to keep active and busy and stimulated, even if you feel like you&#8217;re the best caregiver<br />for your loved one. And often that&#8217;s the truth. And don&#8217;t neglect your health.<br />Make sure that you keep up your medical appointments and whatever you need to do to keep<br />your own health up. I think it&#8217;s easy for that to get lost when you&#8217;re spending a lot of time<br />caring for somebody else. These are some of the things that people can do.<br />Rabin goes into even more detail in his book, Is It Alzheimer&#8217;s?, which is available now wherever<br />books are sold. You can find more information about Dr. Peter Rabin and all of our guests on<br />our website, RadioHealthJournal.org. For more behind the scenes, follow RadioHealth Journal<br />on Facebook, Instagram, and X. Our writer producer is Kristin Ferra. Our executive producer is<br />Amira Zaveri.<br />I&#8217;m Elizabeth Westfield. Coming up, have sports become too specialized? When RadioHealth<br />Journal returns. It&#8217;s a classic odor tale.<br />You fried fish for dinner, cleaned up, but the smell is still in the house. And the neighbors are<br />coming over for game night. They&#8217;re on their way.<br />And then you spray Febreze Air Mist. Febreze Air starts working instantly to fight even your<br />toughest odors. So you go from fish to fresh like that.<br />Now all you have to worry about is Pam cheating at charades. How many sports did you play<br />growing up? For many kids, it&#8217;s common to try as many as possible to figure out which ones<br />they like best. Often this looks like swimming in the summer, soccer in the fall, basketball in<br />winter, and track and field in the spring.<br />This type of varied routine exposes kids to many different activities, exercise and team<br />dynamics. However, as athletics have evolved into a lucrative opportunity for the top players,<br />more and more kids are choosing to put all their focus on one sport. And so I think definitely<br />over the last 10 or 15 years, as we&#8217;ve seen the growth of these mega clubs that are able to play<br />11 months out of the year and travel the country and compete and play against each other, that<br />it&#8217;s definitely grown.<br />And even some of the other institutions that allow kids to come and train for an extended<br />period of time. And so I would say definitely over the last 15 years, we&#8217;ve seen exponential<br />growth in that situation. That&#8217;s Nathan Fitton, a team physician for Michigan State University<br />Athletics and associate professor at Michigan State University College of Osteopathic Medicine.<br />He and a team of researchers recently released a paper in the Clinical Journal of Sport Medicine.<br />Their investigation tracked how this shift into hyper specialization has impacted the health of<br />athletes. As someone who&#8217;s in his 40s growing up, you didn&#8217;t have the opportunity to play one<br />sport year round.<br />It just wasn&#8217;t there. And so by default, we ended up playing, you know, three seasons, three<br />sports. But as we&#8217;ve seen the evolution of club sports and year round sports, I would say from<br />an injury perspective, we&#8217;re seeing kind of what&#8217;s consistent with this study in the sense that<br />kiddos are seeing injuries because of more repetitive actions and higher risk motions that<br />they&#8217;re just doing again and again and again, as opposed to having the opportunity to diversify.<br />The research team surveyed more than 200 student athletes playing at the collegiate level. We<br />looked at division one, division two and division three athletes, and we asked them three simple<br />questions. Did they focus on one sport in high school? Did they quit other sports to do it? And<br />did they train in that sport greater than eight months out of the year? And based on their<br />answers, we grouped them into low, moderate and high specialization.<br />The more yes answers, the more specialized they were. And so what we found for the kiddos<br />that answered yes to all three of those is that there was a clear pattern between these highly<br />specialized athletes and increased injury risk that was not due to chance or other external<br />elements. We found that kiddos that were highly specialized were five times more likely to have<br />sustained an injury than the low specialization, and they had tripled the risk of needing surgery<br />to correct that injury.<br />Then when they looked at overall recovery times, the team found that the athletes who were<br />highly specialized reported needing 30 more days of recovery than the other groups. Despite<br />the longer downtime, these athletes were also at a higher risk of re-injury when they were<br />finally able to return to their sport. By analyzing the recovery time, the research team was able<br />to capture how the rate of serious injuries fluctuated between the three groups.<br />And so for the low and moderate specialization, the average recovery days was just over two<br />months. In the highly specialized, it was approaching almost four months. And so that would<br />tell you that the injuries that were brought up or that they were reported were more significant<br />and severe injuries.<br />So maybe they were, you know, a significant joint sprain or a significant muscle sprain or tear<br />or something that needed surgery. Each athlete&#8217;s recovery times were reported based on how<br />long it took before they were able to return to their sport. That may mean being a practice-only<br />player or being able to fully compete in matches.<br />But if focusing all your efforts on one sport dramatically increases your chances of serious<br />injury, why aren&#8217;t we seeing the same trends when we move the scope from high school to the<br />professional level? I can&#8217;t speak for certainty, but I definitely know that in that professional<br />level, they&#8217;re getting a variety of exposed experiences to help with this, right? And so it&#8217;s the<br />awareness that they need to diversify. But at the same time, they&#8217;re not growing anymore. And<br />so there&#8217;s that factor that comes into all of this as well, is that as in our adolescence, we&#8217;re still<br />growing.<br />There&#8217;s still, you know, bones are not as strong as muscles. So there&#8217;s that type of injury pattern<br />versus as we age and our growth is over with. So it&#8217;s a little bit of a different injury pattern and<br />injury risk we would potentially see.<br />Athletes going through puberty are more likely to develop growth-related overuse injuries. In<br />kids, bones grow faster than muscle, which makes them more vulnerable to muscle and tendon<br />damage. And sadly for some athletes, one injury may be the first of many.<br />A 2020 study published in the journal Sports Health assessed the risk of re-injury for athletes<br />under 20 years old. It found that of those returning to sport after ACL reconstruction, one in<br />five would suffer another tear in either knee. Fitton hopes that since these findings are out<br />there, athletes will be more intentional about diversifying their activities.<br />What we&#8217;re trying to get out there is that just one season off dramatically reduces injury risk<br />and surgical risk for those particular injuries. So our goal with this is just to bring forth that<br />highly specialization is dangerous to student athletes, but it is not far off or difficult to lower<br />your risk through a shift of just about three months. If you can get that three months to do<br />something different, to enhance other skills, to take a break, to take just a mental break, to<br />allow yourself to explore other things and then come back to your sport, you&#8217;re going to<br />dramatically reduce the risk of injury and potential need for surgery.<br />In fact, the group of athletes that had low specialization and were part of multiple activities<br />throughout the year showed such low rates of injury that a majority of the respondents had<br />never had an injury. Whereas in the highly specialized, over 75% of those kiddos had a<br />substantial injury. And so you can see how it escalates as you would imagine, but these are still<br />all college athletes, right? So what we&#8217;re trying to get away from is, well, they&#8217;re low specialized,<br />so they can&#8217;t work as hard.<br />They must not be as talented. No, we don&#8217;t see that. We don&#8217;t see hours spent in per week<br />training when they&#8217;re in season different from side to side, from high to low.<br />Rather, they all commit when they&#8217;re in that sport. It&#8217;s just the low specialization goes on to<br />different sports and does different things. And so I would say that the one sentence takeaway<br />from this is find a sport you&#8217;re passionate about.<br />That&#8217;s fine, but try to take one season off to see a significant reduction in your risk of injury and<br />potential need for surgery to correct that injury. High school and youth sports programs can<br />also use this information to inform their training protocols. You can find more information<br />about Nathan Fitton and all of our guests on our website, RadioHealthJournal.org. For more<br />behind the scenes, follow Radio Health Journal on Facebook, Instagram, and X. Our writer<br />producer is Kristen Farrah.<br />Our production manager is Jason Dickey. I&#8217;m Greg Johnson. Radio Health Journal returns in just<br />a moment.<br />Hey, Ma, I&#8217;ve been meaning to talk to you about some new COVID information I saw online. I<br />read that Black folks like us with certain conditions like diabetes, heart disease, mental health<br />conditions, or being 50 and older, like you, are at high risk. Boy, you sound like a commercial.<br />I&#8217;m just saying. I know you love your ginger teas and essential oils, but remember, there are<br />treatment options for COVID-19. I promise if I get sick again, I&#8217;ll call my doctor to ask about my<br />options.<br />Visit wetalkwerise.com to learn more. Brought to you by Pfizer. Oh, no.<br />Ah, that&#8217;s the sound of someone who&#8217;s misplaced&#8230; My debit card. &#8230;their debit card. Where did<br />I leave that thing? Not at the gas pump, or the checkout counter, or the roof of your car.<br />Now, if he has the Chase mobile app, he can use Card Lock. Wait, I could just lock my card. Yep,<br />just a few tippy taps on his phone and&#8230; That sound? That&#8217;s peace of mind from Chase.<br />Chase mobile app is available for select mobile devices. Message and data rates may apply.<br />JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., member FDIC.<br />Here&#8217;s comedian Howie Mandel for hands-free Cozy Fit Sketchers slip-ins. Hey, everybody. I&#8217;m<br />holding a new Cozy Fit Sketchers slip-in sneaker.<br />And first of all, I barely know I&#8217;m holding it. It&#8217;s that light. You see, Cozy Fit is a cool new sneaker<br />where the upper is made of a soft quilted material.<br />It&#8217;s kind of like a little puffer jacket for your feet, except it looks like a super stylish sneaker.<br />Introducing new Cozy Fit Sketchers slip-ins. The latest comfort creation from Sketchers.<br />Featuring Sketchers&#8217; new Contour Foam, a soft, cushy footbed that shapes your foot when you<br />walk, softening every step. Best of all, they have slip-in technology so I can just step in and go<br />with no bending down and no touching my shoes. Once I start walking, you know, this is like<br />Contour Foam is hugging my foot.<br />And normally, I don&#8217;t like hugs. But when it&#8217;s my Cozy Fit&#8217;s doing it, I&#8217;m all in. Hug away, shoes.<br />Hug away. You can find Cozy Fit Sketchers slip-ins at a Sketchers store, Sketchers.com, or<br />wherever stylish footwear happens to be sold. Nice spot, Howie.<br />Give me a hug. Give me a hug, baby. Oh, I&#8217;m being hugged.<br />Medical Notes This Week Not all generic drugs are created equal. You may want to start paying<br />attention to where your medications are manufactured, according to new research. A study<br />published in the journal Production and Operations Management has found that drugs coming<br />out of India have 54% more adverse event reports.<br />These products have the exact same pharmaceutical makeup as ones made in America,<br />suggesting that the fault lies in lax regulation policies. How much of a benefit do you get from<br />learning a second language? For kids with autism, the outcomes are significant. In general,<br />bilingual children have stronger executive functioning skills that help them control impulses.<br />When applied to kids with autism, researchers noticed an improvement in their symptoms. This<br />is a significant step in helping kids on the spectrum thrive in school and workplace<br />environments. The research is published in the journal Autism Research.<br />There&#8217;s a new product to help stop the spread of malaria. In areas with high transmission rates,<br />mosquitoes are becoming resistant to insecticides. Thankfully, a new tool called Mosquito<br />Shield has proven to be a valuable added protection.<br />It&#8217;s a spatial repellent that, when used alongside nets, cuts malaria infections by one-third. The<br />research is published in the journal The Lancet. And finally, your next hospital visit may look a<br />bit&#8230;greener. The design of a medical room directly impacts patient outcomes.<br />New research out of Texas A&amp;M University reveals that adding plants to these spaces can make<br />a big difference in patient recovery. This effect occurs even in virtual reality settings. Indoor<br />plants promote relaxation and mental clarity.<br />And that&#8217;s Medical Notes this week. I&#8217;m Mayan Vos, Tibetan Court. Mmm, that smells good, Ma.<br />What you making? Just a little something. Collard greens, cornbread, fried chicken, and peach<br />cobbler. Some leftovers.<br />Some leftovers? Listen, I&#8217;ve been meaning to talk to you about some new COVID information I<br />saw online. See, because you&#8217;re always on that phone. I&#8217;m serious.<br />I read that three out of four adults in the United States have a high risk factor for severe COVID<br />19. And Black folks like us with certain conditions like diabetes, heart disease, mental health<br />conditions, or being 50 and older, like you, are at high risk. Boy, you sound like a commercial.<br />I&#8217;m just saying. I know you love your ginger teas and essential oils. But remember, there are<br />treatment options for COVID-19 if you ever get it again.<br />Uh-huh. I promise if I get sick again, I&#8217;ll call my doctor to ask about my options. I love you.<br />I love you too. I&#8217;m glad we had this talk. Me too.<br />Now get out of my kitchen. Visit wetalkwerise.com to learn more. Brought to you by Pfizer.<br />Transcribed by TurboScribe.ai<br />. 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