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Der Witz des Tages vom 14.09.2024 mit dem Titel 'Gleich Krebs und Altzheimer' als Video.
Der Witz des Tages vom 14.09.2024 mit dem Titel 'Gleich Krebs und Altzheimer' zum Hören.
This Episode is sponsored by Unpacked's new podcast, ‘Homeland: Ten Stories, One Israel‘ https://jewishunpacked.com/podcast-series/homeland-ten-stories-one-israel/ *** What would you do if you had 2.5 million dollars to invest in scientific research? Would you search for a cure for Altzheimer's? Cancer? MS? Would you try to send the first man to Mars? Or would you attempt to create the perfect tiktok video? These are the questions that faced Professor Ido Kaminer from the Technion. Well, maybe not the last one. Professor Kaminer applied for the prestigious Polymath award, given each year by Eric Schmidt, former CEO of Google. The rules are simple: submit a research proposal in a field that you've never explored. In other words, the applicants are requested to leave their comfort zones, think outside of the box and come up with an innovative idea that's worth the money - 2.5 million dollars. Professor Kaminer was recently notified that he was awarded the prize. Now, he faces probably THE greatest challenges of his career - trying to explain to us simpletons what in the world his research is about. Prof. Ido Kaminer is a physics professor, he studies quantum mechanics and he's the first Israeli to have gotten the Adolph Lomb medal, awarded since 1940 to a person who has made a noteworthy contribution to optics at an early age. It's an honor to have him on the show today. (Photo: BAYS Israel Chem Laureate)
This week on the Retirement Quick Tips Podcast, I'm talking about the 5 ways to ruin your retirement...and all have nothing to do with the economy, the stock market, social security, inflation, or interest rates. Today, I'm talking about how health care costs can ruin your retirement. Healthcare is one of the biggest expenses for most retirees - ranking right up there with housing and transportation costs, and it comes with an equally big lifetime price tag. Fidelity estimates that about 15% of the average retiree's annual expenses will be used for health care-related expenses, including Medicare premiums and out-of-pocket expenses. In that same study, Fidelity found that the average retired couple age 65 in 2019 will spend $285,000 on health care expenses in retirement. For single retirees, the estimate is $150,000 for women and $135,000 for men. Ouch! On an annual basis, in my experience I find that most of my clients end up spending $5,000-$15,000 per year on healthcare costs. And then there's the big unknown of long-term care costs. If you require long-term care for an extended period or if you develop dementia or Altzheimer's, the costs skyrocket. The estimated lifetime cost of care for someone with dementia is $341,840. There's about a 50/50 chance that you'll need some form of long-term care in your lifetime, and 15% of Americans will spend more than $250,000 on long-term care in our lifetime. Those expenses can wipe out your wealth, which is why it's so important to understand your options and protect yourself. If you're in your 50s it's a good time to look seriously at a long-term care policy and decide if you're going to purchase coverage or take your chances with self-funding if you need expensive long-term care later in life. The takeaway with today's episode is that understanding your annual costs for healthcare in retirement is essential. Medicare isn't free. You'll still have out-of-pocket expenses each year. Make sure you understand what those costs are likely to be and make sure you include those expenses in your annual retirement budget before you retire. That's it for today. Thanks for listening! My name is Ashley Micciche and this is the Retirement Quick Tips podcast. --------- >>> Subscribe on Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2DI2LSP >>> Subscribe on Amazon Alexa: https://amzn.to/2xRKrCs >>> Visit the podcast page: https://truenorthra.com/podcast/ ---------- Tags: retirement, investing, money, finance, financial planning, retirement planning, saving money, personal finance
Arkansas bans Namaste; and How much TV leads to Altzheimer's? See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Find listings in New York City: https://www.hallocasa.com/ https://www.hallocasa.com/ - the international real estate marketplace Create your Profile for free! This time, I talked to Brett Ari Fischer from New York City, New York, USA. Brett has more than 10 years of experience in real estate in New York City. 0:17 Introduction 1:30 How it all started for Brett 3:50 Overcoming the first 6-8 months as a real estate agent 5:25 Tips by Brett towards new real estate agents to be successful 7:30 Being part of a brokerage firm versus independent 11:50 Dynamics of Covid on New York City and its surroundings 15:20 Trend of investment from overseas 16:10 Overview of the services Brett is offering 19:30 Communicating the value proposition of real estate services 21:30 Animations about real estate services 23:00 Brett´s contribution to Altzheimer foundations 25:43 Contact information Email: brett@thenewyorkcitybroker.com Youtube: @thenewyorkcitybroker Website: http://thenewyorkcitybroker.com/
Find listings in New York City: https://www.hallocasa.com/ https://www.hallocasa.com/ - the international real estate marketplace Create your Profile for free! This time, I talked to Brett Ari Fischer from New York City, New York, USA. Brett has more than 10 years of experience in real estate in New York City. 0:17 Introduction 1:30 How it all started for Brett 3:50 Overcoming the first 6-8 months as a real estate agent 5:25 Tips by Brett towards new real estate agents to be successful 7:30 Being part of a brokerage firm versus independent 11:50 Dynamics of Covid on New York City and its surroundings 15:20 Trend of investment from overseas 16:10 Overview of the services Brett is offering 19:30 Communicating the value proposition of real estate services 21:30 Animations about real estate services 23:00 Brett´s contribution to Altzheimer foundations 25:43 Contact information Email: brett@thenewyorkcitybroker.com Youtube: @thenewyorkcitybroker Website: http://thenewyorkcitybroker.com/
This week I’m talking about how much healthcare will cost in retirement. Today, I’m talking about long-term care which is an expensive need for many retirees later in life, and is in addition to the typical health care costs I mentioned this week. A 65 year old couple can expect to pay about $285,000 for healthcare related costs in retirement. But what about if you need long-term care? Long-term care is needed when you can no longer take care of yourself or meet the regular activities of daily living on your own. The median annual cost for long-term care ranges from $18,000 for adult day care to $97,000 for a private room in a nursing home. If you require long-term care for an extended period or if you develop dementia or Altzheimer’s, the costs skyrocket. The estimated lifetime cost of care for someone with dementia is $341,840. There’s about a 50/50 chance that you’ll need some form of long-term care in your lifetime, and 15% of Americans will spend more than $250,000 on long-term care in our lifetime. Those expenses can wipe out your wealth, which is why it’s so important to understand your options and protect yourself. You can take your chances and self-fund, which is likely the way to go if you have millions in assets or if you haven’t saved much at all for retirement. The problem lies when you’re in the middle. If long-term care costs have the potential to wipe out your wealth in retirement and you need to preserve that wealth for your spouse, your kids, or for some other reason, you’ll want to look seriously at buying long-term care insurance. That’s it for today. Thanks for listening. My name is Ashley Micciche and this is the One Minute Retirement Tip. ---------- >>> Subscribe on iTunes: https://apple.co/2DI2LSP >>> Subscribe on Amazon Alexa: https://amzn.to/2xRKrCs >>> Check out our blog: https://truenorthretirementadvisors.com/blog/ ---------- Tags: retirement, investing, money, finance, finances, financial planning, retirement planning, saving money, personal finance, wealth management, money tips, fee only financial advisor, financial planner, financial podcast, retirement podcast, financial independence podcast
Mary en Anja Brokken trokken aan de bel. Hun vader is 83 jaar en zit al ruim 3 maanden gevangen in een verpleegtehuis. Ben Brokken leidt aan Altzheimer en mist zijn dochters ontzettend. Al die tijd geen knuffel en fysiek contact. Pas sinds kort zien ze elkaar achter een glazen deur maar nog steeds geen aanraking of zoen. En dat heeft er toe geleidt dat Ben nu geen zin meer heeft in het leven en hoopt dat hij morgen niet meer wakker wordt. Mary en Anja zijn verdrietig en schreven een prachtig gedicht op basis van een "Altzheimer" gedicht van Youp van t Hek. Ze vroegen mij om hulp om onzichtare zichtbaar te maken. Het verborgen verdriet van vele hoogbejaarden in isolatie. Mary en Anja willen hen een stem geven middels hun vader. Hun geliefde vader die door dit kabinet en het RIVM in 'zogenaamde'veiligeheid wordt gesteld, terwijl de 83 jarige het virus totaal niet vreest.
This week, I’m sharing with you several types of stress tests that you should run on your retirement portfolio. Today, I’m talking about stress testing your retirement with a long-term care health event. According to a 2017 study by AARP, if you’re 65 or older, there is a 52% chance that you will need some type of long-term care in your lifetime. 52%. Toss a coin and it could go either way. So the odds are pretty high. The median annual cost for long-term care ranges from $18,000 for adult day care to $97,000 for a private room in a nursing home. If you require long-term care for an extended period or if you develop dementia or Altzheimer’s, the costs skyrocket. The estimated lifetime cost of care for someone with dementia is $341,840. And 15% of us will spend more than $250,000 on long-term care in our lifetime. That’s a big drain on your portfolio in retirement, so ignoring the impact and likelihood that you’ll need long-term care at some point, perhaps at considerable expense, could completely derail your retirement, and if you don’t recover, the costs associated with extended long-term care expenses can devastate your surviving spouse. The problem with long-term care is that most people simply can’t afford to pay the premiums that come with purchasing a long-term care insurance policy. But if you’re in the sweet spot of having enough income to afford a policy, yet you aren’t so wealthy that a long-term care health event costing $250,000 or more would still devastate your retirement portfolio, then looking into buying long-term care insurance policy would be a smart move. That’s it for today. Thanks for listening. My name is Ashley Micciche and this is the One Minute Retirement Tip. ---------- >>> Subscribe on iTunes: https://apple.co/2DI2LSP >>> Subscribe on Amazon Alexa: https://amzn.to/2xRKrCs >>> Check out our blog: https://truenorthretirementadvisors.com/blog/ ---------- Tags: retirement, investing, money, finance, finances, financial planning, retirement planning, saving money, personal finance, wealth management, money tips, fee only financial advisor, financial planner, financial podcast, retirement podcast, financial independence podcast
This week, I’m talking about estate planning essentials. If you think a will is all you need, think again. In practice, I find that many people either don’t have a will, or they haven’t updated in 30 years, which was also 4 marriages and 8 stepchildren ago. Ok, maybe I’m exaggerating here a little bit, but you get the point. So this week, I’m helping you kick it into gear and take the essential steps necessary to just get the basics done with your estate plan. That usually starts with a will, so today, I’m focusing on a few other vital estate plan documents you’ll want to have completed and updated. #1 - Durable Power of Attorney - this helps ensure that someone is in place to act on your behalf, if you are no longer able to. I see examples of this all the time with older clients who develop dementia or Altzheimer’s, so it’s critical that you get this in place, especially as you get older. Otherwise things can get messy when it comes to decisions about your affairs and finances. #2 - Advance Healthcare Directives - also known as a living will - what you will use to provide details about what actions should be taken for your health if you are no longer able to make decisions for yourself because of illness or incapacity. When my husband and I had these drawn up a number of years ago, we discovered that we are polar opposites in this regard. He is like “keep me alive at all costs! I want to be a burden, even if there is no hope!” And I’m like, “oh it’s a paper cut...pull the plug!” It’s possible you’ve even dealt with the pain and guilt of having to guess at what someone’s wishes were when they didn’t have in place, and if not, you probably know someone who had to make difficult decisions for someone who was incapacitated, possibly taking their loved one off life support without the direction of the healthcare directive. It’s very sad. Please don’t put your loved ones in a situation where they will have to play a guessing game with life and death situations. That’s all I have time for today. I’m going to devote an entire day this week to beneficiary designations, and of course, if you have young kids or a special needs child, you will want to have a few other documents in place as well. That’s it for today. One last point here, I am not an estate planning attorney and I don’t play one on this podcast. This is not intended to be legal advice, but rather just some useful information to get you moving in the right direction toward putting these things in place. Before you go, please take a minute to leave a review for the One Minute Retirement Tip in Amazon or iTunes. If you find these tips valuable, or if you have feedback for me or topic suggestions, it’s a great way to share the love and share your ideas with me! And thanks to you if you who have already left a review. Thanks for listening. My name is Ashley Micciche and this is the One Minute Retirement Tip. ---------- >>> Subscribe on iTunes: https://apple.co/2DI2LSP >>> Subscribe on Amazon Alexa: https://amzn.to/2xRKrCs >>> Check out our blog: https://truenorthretirementadvisors.com/blog/ ---------- Tags: retirement, investing, money, finance, financial planning, retirement planning, saving money, personal finance, wealth management, fee only financial advisor, financial planner, estate planning documents checklist, estate planning, estate planning definition, estate planning trusts, estate planning checklist, estate planning attorney, estate planning documents, beneficiary designation, primary beneficiary, contingent beneficiary, beneficiary designation form, beneficiaries, will, last will, digital estate plan, power of attorney, living will, medical directives, advance healthcare directives
In this week's magazine-style episode, Gilly Smith meets the future foods man who's the first to give the beyond meat burger a home of its own, the B&B owner who's quietly converting her guests to living lightly on the planet and best selling author, Wendy Mitchell, whose memoir about dementia has plenty to teach us about how to enjoy our food. Plus two Masterchef judges from opposite sides of the world, Monica Galetti from the UK and Thailand's most famous TV chef, Ian Kittichai. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This week, we’re going back through the archives of the One Minute Retirement Tip to cover the most downloaded episodes, and covering a wide range of retirement topics that you might have missed along the way. Today we're revisiting the most downloaded episode of the one minute retirement tip - the statistics about long-term care to help you understand the harsh and expensive reality of paying for long-term care. First of all, let’s talk about the likelihood that you’ll need long-term care in the first place. According to a 2017 study by AARP, if you’re 65 or older, there is a 52% chance that you will need some type of long-term care in your lifetime. 52%. Toss a coin and it could go either way. So the odds are pretty high. If you’re a woman, the odds are even higher - it’s a 58% chance that you’ll need long-term care. On average, a man will need long-term care for 1 ½ years while a woman will need long-term care for 2 ½ years. One of the downsides of living longer for us women is that we will usually require long-term care more often and for longer periods of time. Now let’s talk about the financial cost of long-term care. The median annual cost for long-term care ranges from $18,000 for adult day care to $97,000 for a private room in a nursing home. If you require long-term care for an extended period or if you develop dementia or Altzheimer’s, the costs skyrocket. The estimated lifetime cost of care for someone with dementia is $341,840. And 15% of us will spend more than $250,000 on long-term care in our lifetime. Those costs can wipe out your wealth, which is why it’s so important to understand your options and protect yourself. That’s it for today! Thanks for listening. My name is Ashley Micciche and this is the One Minute Retirement Tip. ---------- >>> Subscribe on iTunes: https://apple.co/2DI2LSP >>> Subscribe on Amazon Alexa: https://amzn.to/2xRKrCs >>> Check out our blog: https://truenorthretirementadvisors.com/blog/ ---------- Tags: retirement, investing, money, finance, financial planning, retirement planning, saving money, personal finance, wealth management, long term care, long term care insurance, long term care definition, long term care cost, what is long term care facility, long term care options, long term care insurance, long term care insurance cost, alternatives to long term care insurance, long term care insurance quotes, long term care insurance definition, pros and cons of long term care insurance, probability of needing long term care, long term care insurance companies, when to buy long term care insurance
Would you like better memory? Most would answer yes, but not know how to do it. Here's some GOOD NEWS: Everyday memory loss, ADD (attention deficit disorder), and even ALTZHEIMERS can be improved with better thyroid function. That's right, the most common and most often undiagnosed illness worldwide is low thyroid. And the brain is the organ most often affected. Luckily, better diagnosis and simple over-the-counter treatment are now available without a prescription. See www.ThyroidPower.comThis show is broadcast live on Wednesday's at 12PM ET on W4HC - Health Cafe Live Network (www.w4hc.com) part of Talk 4 Radio (http://www.talk4radio.com/) on the Talk 4 Media Network (http://www.talk4media.com/).
This week, we’re talking about long-term care and why it’s important to make some decisions today about how you’re going to pay for long-term care in retirement. Today we’re covering the statistics about long-term care to help you understand the harsh and expensive reality of paying for long-term care. First of all, let’s talk about the likelihood that you’ll need long-term care in the first place. According to a 2017 study by AARP, if you’re 65 or older, there is a 52% chance that you will need some type of long-term care in your lifetime. 52%. Toss a coin and it could go either way. So the odds are pretty high. If you’re a woman, the odds are even higher - it’s a 58% chance that you’ll need long-term care. On average, a man will need long-term care for 1 ½ years while a woman will need long-term care for 2 ½ years. One of the downsides of living longer for us women is that we will usually require long-term care more often and for longer periods of time. Now let’s talk about the financial cost of long-term care. The median annual cost for long-term care ranges from $18,000 for adult day care to $97,000 for a private room in a nursing home. If you require long-term care for an extended period or if you develop dementia or Altzheimer’s, the costs skyrocket. The estimated lifetime cost of care for someone with dementia is $341,840. And 15% of us will spend more than $250,000 on long-term care in our lifetime. Those costs can wipe out your wealth, which is why it’s so important to understand your options and protect yourself. That’s it for today! Thanks for listening. My name is Ashley Micciche and this is the One Minute Retirement Tip. ---------- >>> Subscribe on iTunes: https://apple.co/2DI2LSP >>> Subscribe on Amazon Alexa: https://amzn.to/2xRKrCs >>> Check out our blog: https://truenorthretirementadvisors.com/blog/ ---------- Tags: retirement, investing, money, finance, financial planning, retirement planning, saving money, personal finance, wealth management, long term care, long term care insurance, long term care definition, long term care cost, what is long term care facility, long term care options, long term care insurance, long term care insurance cost, alternatives to long term care insurance, long term care insurance quotes, long term care insurance definition, pros and cons of long term care insurance, probability of needing long term care, long term care insurance companies, when to buy long term care insurance
De vader van radiomaker Maartje Duin heeft Alzheimer. Nu zijn herinneringen verdwijnen, komen bij haar de vragen. Wat deed hij in de jaren voor haar geboorte als sterrenkundige in Leiden?
Sett at du har fått Altzheimer, da kunne det kanskje vært greit med litt påfyll. Av nye, friske hjerneceller? Årets nobelpris i medisin går til en revolusjonerende oppdagelse som gjør at du i framtiden kan bruke en av dine egne hudceller til å lage for eksempel nye hjerneceller.