Pretty tough page 4 717-459-3803 HIRING DRIVERS STACAREERS COM Applyonline orcalltoday upto$25/hr helP your grandchild love reading page 3 Complimentary | Lancaster County Edition March 2023 should PeoPle over 75 be screened for colon cancer? page 12
Pets of the Month
Pine and Ambrose
Spayed female Pine (233941) and neutered male Ambrose (233942) are looking for their forever home together!
These cuties are 2 years old, which means there is plenty of time for snuggles. This pair happens to be FIV positive and positively “purrfect.”
Ambrose is an absolute snuggle bug who will instantly crawl into your lap for cuddles and pets. Pine is a chatty girl who loves to tell you about all the birds she saw while sitting on the windowsill as you pet her.
Interested in learning how you can bring this pair home?
Visit Pine and Ambrose today! Please send your application to the Lancaster Center for Animal Life-Saving at adoptlancaster@humanepa.org, or give the shelter a call at (717) 393-6551 to learn more.
2 March 2023 50 plus Life www.50plusLifePA.com
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Ambrose Pine
Celebrate Reading and Help Your Grandchild Develop a Love for It
By Kimberly Blaker
What better day to celebrate
Read Across America Day with your grandchild than on the birthday of the beloved Dr. Seuss, March 2?
It’s the perfect kickoff to March’s National March Into Literacy Month, both of which are dedicated to the promotion of reading and literacy.
Read Across America Day was first introduced by the National Education Association in 1998. The NEA’s goal for the celebration is to motivate kids to become lifelong readers, thereby improving student performance.
Every year, schools, public libraries, and other organizations celebrate this day by holding reading events for kids.
Ways Grandparents Can Promote Reading
There are many ways to promote a love of reading and encourage grandkids to read not only during this celebration, but also year-round.
Read to kids. Begin reading to your grandchild very early. The NEA suggests infancy is an excellent time to start.
As your grandchild grows, encourage their participation in reading the story with or to you. Although your grandchild may not be ready to read, kids often memorize some of their favorite books or pages. Making children an active participant helps develop their love for reading.
Visit the library. Think of the library as a big, free, educational toy store. Help your grandchild choose some books, but also encourage him or her to select some on their own. Kids can take home audiobooks, video games, videos, and music CDs too.
Help your grandchild build a collection. One commonality among reading lovers is how much they enjoy having their own book collection. Help your grandchild grow a personal library of their favorite series, author, or genre. Then assign a special shelf to store and display the collection.
Play word games. Look for board, computer, or phone games that help kids develop their reading and spelling skills and vocabulary.
Sign up for Goodreads. Through this Android and iOS app, kids can track both the books they’ve read and those they want to read. They can also check out what their friends are reading.
Subscribe your grandchild to a magazine. There’s a host of kids’ magazines on the market and something for every age group. It will give your grandchild something to look forward to each month and build enthusiasm for reading.
Read in front of your grandkids. Show them that reading isn’t just a school requirement, but rather a lifelong activity. Let them see you reading both to learn and for pleasure.
Form a kids book club. If your grandchild is interested in it, this is a great way to build excitement for reading. You’ll want to find kids who are all at about the same reading level. You’ll then need to decide where to hold the weekly or monthly meetings, which could be at your house, or perhaps your school or public library will provide you space. You might be able to advertise it through your grandchild’s school or public library, as well.
Set up a reading room or corner. Find a quiet, distraction-free area in your home to designate as the reading area. It should have comfy seating, perhaps even a beanbag chair or two, pillows, blankets, and good lighting.
Kimberly Blaker is a freelance writer. She also owns an online store, Sage Rare & Collectible Books, specializing in out-of-print, scarce, signed, and first editions; fine bindings; ephemera; and more at sagerarebooks.com
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Across America Day: March 2 The ultimate resource for boomer and senior living and care options. 27th annual edition read it online, in print, and on mobile/tablet devices. onlinepub.com
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Pretty Tough
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It’s hard to imagine a life that spans a tough job as special agent enforcing safety regulations for trucks coming through the Mexican border; succeeding as a finalist in a national beauty competition; and handing out hugs and stuffed animals to strangers in the park.
Maria Frisby has never hesitated to explore her varied passions with grit, resolve — and love.
She began life in Brooklyn, New York. At age 7, Frisby moved with her mother and brothers to Middletown, Pennsylvania, a charming, low-key small town, with the dubious distinction of close proximity to the now-defunct Three Mile Island nuclear reactor.
“I always wanted to be somebody and to reach out to others,” says Frisby.
Her varied career has permitted her to do both. She enjoyed life in Middletown and took jazz, tap, and ballet lessons as a child, early skills that allowed her to shine during her years of pageant competitions.
Frisby began participating in pageants in 1997, representing Middletown in the Mrs. Pennsylvania America Pageant. At age 39, she was selected as Ms. Pennsylvania 2004, part of the United States Beauties pageant system, and won second runnerup in the national competition.
Her desire to compete despite a severe bout of acute pancreatitis is just one example of the grit that carried her through many life adventures.
“I had competed in a Ms. Pennsylvania pageant with the pain of acute pancreatitis and was eventually hospitalized — I didn’t want to let down my sponsors,” says Frisby.
During another hospitalization, she was in and out of consciousness in the ICU and relied on her faith and her prayer circle to survive. Nurses considered her a “walking miracle,” says Frisby.
“You don’t often get up the same night, healed after sepsis and a temperature of 108 degrees.”
Recognizing her grit and faith despite adversity, her fellow pageant director and staff voted her an “Inspiration” award, an accolade she took to heart.
‘Sometimes you have to be tough’
The same determination that carried her through a potentially life-threatening illness had served her well when she completed a B.S. degree in criminal justice at Penn State University and moved to Arizona in 1990.
There she worked with the Arizona Department of Public Safety (the state police) and assisted other law enforcement agencies to screen incoming truck drivers from Mexico and enforce hazardous-
“I had to interrogate people and do investigations,” says Frisby. “I even did strike forces with the California Highway Patrol and Sacramento State Police Department. Sometimes you have to be tough.”
In 1994, Frisby moved back to Middletown and started working with children from a local community.
“For kids from at-risk families without good role models, it’s easy to get into bad things,” she says.
Frisby wanted the children to develop empathy for the homeless, the disabled, and the elderly and learn to love everyone. Together they practiced gospel songs.
As the Angels of Mercy, the child chorus and Frisby went to hospitals, nursing homes, and homeless centers, where they sang and gave out stuffed animals and inspirational cards.
‘People need to hear they are loved’
For the last 20 years, she has continued her efforts to spread cheer and goodwill with stuffed animals, roses, cards, and hugs.
“It is really important to provide comfort and tell people they are loved, they are cared for, and they are accepted — no matter what race, age, nationality, or skin color,” Frisby explains.
She and a group of “Angels” continue their mission in local nursing homes, although Frisby often spreads her message of love by herself, when she passes through a park, a parking lot, or even a restaurant.
“In the time we’re living in now, there is so much division,” she says. “People need to hear they are loved, by me and by God — a hug often makes people’s day.”
The recent quarantines and social distancing were especially hard for Frisby.
“COVID broke my heart,” she says. “It slowed me down dramatically.”
Now Frisby is thrilled be able to hug again.
“I am motivated by God to do the things Christ would do — to spread love.”
‘We thought we would die that night’: Publicizing the impact of TMI
Her commitment to her local community is also present in her support of efforts to publicize the devastating impact of the Three Mile Island partial meltdown on March 28, 1979.
“My family and I are survivors of the United States’ worst commercial nuclear accident,” she explains. “We lived within the 2- to 3-mile radius that was most affected. Thousands of families left the area, but my family and I could not leave the
4 March 2023 50 plus Life www.50plusLifePA.com
area due to car problems. We thought that we would die that night.”
As a result of the radioactive releases to prevent a total core meltdown, Frisby and her family all experienced the “strong metallic taste that people in Chernobyl and Fukushima had,” she says.
Researchers do acknowledge that after the accident, residents near the Middletown plant began to report nausea, vomiting, hair loss, and skin rashes — signs of radiation exposure.
Frisby notes that while researchers initially refuted claims of increased cancer risk, as more time passes, some researchers have documented the increased risk of some cancers in communities close to the nuclear reactor.
While controversies over the amount of radiation released — and its ongoing impact on health — continue, Maria Frisby joins many local people who provide stark anecdotal evidence that their families definitely saw a rise in cancer.
A sign in
“Many people in my brother’s and my high school classes died of cancer — including thyroid, colon, lung, leukemia, lymphoma, and breast cancers,” says Frisby. “I know so many people, including myself, with a host of health problems.”
Many of Frisby’s own family have developed, and in some cases, succumbed to a wide range of cancers, while others have developed longterm thyroid disorders
Frisby notes that Mary Stamos, another TMI survivor, documented another TMI impact: the many mutated plants and animals she found in the area around TMI in the ’80s, including plants with abnormally huge leaves, roses with flowers growing in the middle of the stem, and daddy long leg spiders with four legs rather than eight.
There was even a two-headed calf born on a farm in New Cumberland. The documentation of the nuclear accident-related oddities is now found at the Smithsonian Institute.
As a TMI activist, Frisby is part of the East Coast publicity team for two TV programs based on the 1979 nuclear accident: Plutonium Skies (a fivepart dramatic TV series) and Powerhouse (a five-part docu-drama series). Both series are written, produced, and directed by Jill Murphy Long of JML Films.
Frisby shares her story of survival at film-launch parties and takes photographs and videos of other survivors and local businesses that were
1999,
around during the nuclear incident. She was also interviewed for an upcoming TV documentary about the TMI partial meltdown: Radioactive: The Women of Three Mile Island
In addition, Frisby has set up a Facebook group for people who were impacted by TMI called, “Surviving Another Day: The Three Mile Island Citizens Survivor Group.”
Maria Frisby and her family still live in Middletown, despite its dark history. On a sunny afternoon or even when it’s overcast, you may find her walking through a local park or restaurant to reach out with love to the sick, the disabled, the homeless, and anyone who is willing to smile back.
She’ll tell you that all of our divisions and differences don’t matter. You are loved.
on the cover:
from left, Maria frisby participating in a Harrisburg-area parade as Ms. Pennsylvania 2004; frisby distributing gifts as part of her Angels of Mercy initiative.
Three Mile Island Nuclear Generating Station closed since the accident in 1979.
Credit: “Three Mile Island Nuclear Generating Station as of february 2014” by Z22, licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
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The unit 2 of
Credit: “Three Mile Island accident sign” by Z22, licensed under CC BY-SA
3.0.
Middletown, Pa., dedicated in
describing the Three Mile Island accident, the evacuation of the residents in the area, and the impacts to the nuclear power industry.
Ad Materials Deadline — May 12, 2023 Features: • Informative Articles • Directory of Providers • Ancillary and Support Services To be included in the July 2023 edition, please call 717.285.1350 or email info@50plusLifePA.com 69% of caregivers receive no Paid help all need Products and services to help them on their Journeys. Scan QR code or view the 2022 e-dition online at 50plusLifePA.com May 1-5, 2023 ww w.lancseniorgames.org ing Bo it.” For registration information, please call 717-299-7979. “Exercising Body, Mind, and Spirit.” www.lancseniorgames.org Ti Me To RegisTe R! SEE PAGE8
Savvy Senior How to Reduce Your Medical Bills
Dear Savvy Senior,
What tips do you recommend to Medicare beneficiaries dealing with hefty medical bills? My husband recently had open heart surgery and is recovering slowly, but the medical bills are coming in fast and furious, and they’re putting us in medical debt.
– Struggling in Springfield
Dear Struggling,
I’m sorry to hear about your billing struggles, but medical debt has unfortunately become a chronic problem in this country.
According to U.S. Census data, 19% of American households carry medical debt, including 10% of households headed by someone 65 or older. Even seniors on Medicare can easily get snagged in a web of complicated billing and coverage problems.
To help you slash your medical bills, here are some tips recommended by healthcare experts that you should try.
Double check your bills: Almost half of all medical bills contain at least one error, including duplicate charges or charges for services you never received.
Lend us your ear!
If you’re facing a high bill and are on the hook for some portion of it, request itemized invoices from the hospital and other providers that detail everything you were charged for, and go through them line by line.
If you see something you don’t understand or find fishy, contact the provider for an explanation or a correction.
Wait for your EOB: Doctors’ offices and hospitals may mail initial bills to you before they even submit them to your health insurer.
So, hold off on any payment until you receive an explanation of benefits from your provider — Medicare, supplemental Medicare, Medicare Advantage, or private insurer. This will show what you owe after your insurance has paid its portion.
If your EOB shows that your insurer is refusing to pay for services you think should be covered, call them to see whether it’s a correctable mistake, such as a coding error for a certain test or treatment.
If it’s truly a denial of coverage, you may need to file an appeal. For details on how to file a Medicare appeal, see Medicare.gov/claims-appeals/how-do-i-filean-appeal.
Ask for a discount: Call the hospital’s accounting office or the billing staff at your doctor’s practice and ask if they can reduce your bill. You’d be surprised how often this works.
Or, if you have the funds to pay the entire bill, ask the hospital or provider for a “prompt pay” discount, which may save you 15% or more.
If it’s best for you to pay your bills over time, ask the billing office to set up a no-interest payment plan for you. It’s in the provider’s interest to work with you to obtain payment.
You can also call the hospital where your husband had his surgery and ask a billing specialist if the facility offers financial assistance.
According to the American Hospital Association, about half of U.S. hospitals are nonprofit. This means they are required to offer free or discounted services in some instances.
This is usually reserved for low- to moderate-income patients who have limited or no health insurance, but requirements vary from hospital to hospital.
Get help: If you’ve gotten nowhere on your own, contact the Patient Advocate Foundation at patientadvocate.org or (800) 532-5274, whose resources can help you understand and negotiate your medical bills, free of charge.
Or consider hiring a medical billing professional to negotiate for you, but be aware that these services can cost upward of $100 an hour.
You can find potential candidates through the Alliance of Professional Health Advocates (advoconnection.com). Be sure to choose someone who is credentialed by the Patient Advocate Certification Board.
6 March 2023 50 plus Life www.50plusLifePA.com
Send your senior questions to: Savvy Senior, P.O. Box 5443, Norman, OK 73070, or visit savvysenior.org. Jim Miller is a contributor to the NBC Today show and author of The Savvy Senior book.
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50 plus Life and Vision Resources of Central Pennsylvania have partnered to bring you weekly audio readings of 50 plus Life’s editorial content! for more information, call Vision Resources at (717) 238-2531 and listen at visit www.vrocp.org.
Jim Miller
Puzzle Page
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Solutions for all puzzles can be found on page 18.
Across 1. Rolled items 5. Grunge 10. Lecture locale 14. Stead 15. Mystiques 16. Lip balm ingredient 17. Dutch export 18. Tour of duty 19. Sitar music 20. Pre-entree course 22. Stabilized 24. Secret message 27. Caddie’s offering 28. Bien’s opposite 1. Rousing cheers 2. Slave girl of opera 3. Canvasback kin 4. Poison plant 5. Roadside sign 6. Furrow 7. Camera part 8. Praying ___ 9. Dimethyl sulfate, e.g. 10. Tough 11. Jai ___ 12. Theater box 13. Toxic element 21. Flyspeck Down WORD SEARCH SUDOKU your ad could be here on this popular page! Please call (717) 285-1350 for more information. About a Book
Mountain lakes 33. Headache intensifier 37. J.F.K. postings 39. Dead heat 40. Antique auto 41. Western wolf 42. Having a bite 45. Jacob’s twin 46. Methuselah’s father 48. Singer Shannon 49. Lackluster 50. Spine-tingling 51. Tropical Asian starling 53. “C’___ la vie!” 23. First-class 25. Facts and figures 26. Speed skater Heiden 28. Free-for-all 29. Perform penance 30. Drudgery 32. Disadvantaged 34. Distribute 35. Furry pinnipeds 36. Rejoice 38. Hobnob 43. It’s overhead 44. Boring 47. Life saver 54. Jason’s ship 56. Red-bearded god 58. Green-eyed monster 62. Small drum 66. Pro’s foe 67. Actress Dern 70. Place to pray 71. Don Juan’s mother 72. Sachet scent 73. Tickled 74. Pool division 75. Part of an act 76. Building additions 51. Tessera site 52. Steamy 55. Cobs 57. Kitchen appliance 58. Monopoly square 59. Sicilian city 60. Egyptian solar deity 61. Christmas season 63. Formal dance 64. Track shape 65. Many wines 68. Skedaddled 69. Duffer’s dream
CROSSWORD
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The Beauty in Nature Maple Sugaring
John Burroughs, farmer and famous naturalist in the 19th century, wrote, “Next week, or the week after, it may be time to begin plowing, and other sober work about the farm, but this week we will picnic among the maples, and our campfire shall be an incense to spring.”
Late February through March is the time of maple sugaring in northeastern North America, which is the original range of sugar maple trees.
During that time, many afternoons are warm, which expands cells in trees’ cambium layers, just under the bark. That swelling draws winter-stored, waterylooking sap up trees’ trunks, cell by cell, to fill those expanding cells. However, the cells contract during nightly cold, further squeezing the sap up, cell by cell.
Native Americans of America’s northeastern forests were the first people to make pure maple syrup, probably by accident. I like to think a group of American Indians camped where water wasn’t available to drink or cook in. But those people knew that by slashing maple and birch tree bark, they could collect the trees’ sap.
They put food into the sap in clay pots by the fire and let it all simmer for a while. They found the food to be sweeter when boiled in maple or birch tree sap. Then they might have boiled sap down by itself and discovered pure maple syrup, their only sweetener.
European pioneers had honey in Europe but knew nothing of maple syrup, even though there are maple and birch trees in Europe. They learned the process from Native people, and we have had pure maple syrup ever since.
Whether maple syrup is made commercially or for home use, a few tools and procedures are needed. For home use, a hand drill can be used to drill a few small holes into each large tree to penetrate the cambium layer under the bark. Then a spile is tapped into each puncture to conduct the sap into a container. Sap is regularly collected and poured into a boiling-down container. The
Nature’s Wonders
boiling sap emits lots of steam, but the sugar stays in the cooking container. The sugar burns and becomes darker, and the liquid becomes thicker. Pure maple syrup is the resulting product.
Sugar maples have 2% sugar in their sap; other maples and birches have only 1%. About 40 gallons of sugar-maple sap boil down to 1 gallon of syrup. Lots of sap, time, and fuel go into making pure maple syrup, the reason it is expensive to buy. But refrigerated maple syrup keeps quite a while.
Pure maple syrup is another gift from nature and Native Americans, along with corn, tomatoes, potatoes, and pumpkins. Today all those products are big business.
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NaturesWondersByClyde.BlogSpot.com Eachstoryislikeawalkwithyourownnaturalist. byClyde
A nature blog by Clyde McMillan-Gamber, retired Lancaster County Parks naturalist and longtime 50 plus LIFE columnist
Clyde McMillan-Gamber is a retired Lancaster County Parks naturalist.
Clyde McMillan-Gamber
Pail used to collect sap from maple trees.
EASTWOOD VILLAG E HOM E S LLC
Route 30E – Green eld Road Exit, Right onto Ben Franklin Blvd, Right onto Eastwood Lane, follow signs to model homes. Professionally managed by
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The History of Ordinary Things Ever Wonder about the Cigarette filter?
Evidence of smoking was first documented in 1556 in a report of an English sailor “emitting smoke from his nostrils.” French diplomat and scholar Jean Nicot (origin of the word nicotine) introduced tobacco to France in 1560.
In 1925, Hungarian inventor Boris Aivaz patented the process of making a cigarette filter from crepe paper. Its purpose was to filter the fine flakes of tobacco in the rolled cigarette that often flecked off on the tongue.
This was objectionable to women who had begun to smoke. Companies added beauty tips, often made of cork, for the sake of, or sale to, women. They promoted smoking to women as a sign of liberation and independence.
It wasn’t until the 1950s that research linked smoking with lung cancer. In response, American cigarette companies spent millions of dollars to engineer a filter to reduce the health hazards of smoking.
They developed synthetic fibers in cigarette mouthpieces, but these created new problems. In 1952, the Kent Micronite introduced a filter that sucked particles out of the smoke, but the Micronite held asbestos fibers that were far more dangerous than tobacco smoke.
Philip Morris promised that an antifreeze chemical (diethylene glycol) in the mouthpiece would take “the fear out of smoking,” but the mouthpieces shed tiny fibers that could be inhaled into the lungs. The industry called it “fallout.” DuPont scientists experimented with Dacron, the same polyester that allowed for wrinkle-free pantsuits.
In 1953, a Reynolds Tobacco Company chemist, Claude Teague, invented a filter that could turn brown when exposed to smoke. It was introduced as Winston in 1954, the first successfully marketed filter cigarette.
It was followed in 1956 by Salem, the first filter-tipped menthol cigarette. The Belair menthol brand was launched nationally in 1960. By the mid-60s, scientists realized that any material that effectively
trapped particles also weakened the cigarette’s kick. The filter was designed to remove exactly what the smoker wanted from smoking.
Ultimately, the industry settled on filters being perceived by consumers as effective. They opted for the illusion that Teague’s filter was filtering (turning brown), despite the reality that filters do not make cigarettes any safer.
Filter cigarettes’ market share climbed from 0.5% in 1950 to more than 98% today. Filters are usually made from plastic cellulose acetate fiber, derived from bleached cotton or wood pulp treated with acetic acid and other chemicals.
Today filter ventilation is used to dilute the smoke. Ventilation holes vary in size and quantity, thus impacting the ease of inhaling smoke. Modifications in filter ventilation have created light and ultra-light cigarettes.
Other additives to filters include flavors (menthol), sweeteners, softeners (triacetin), flame retardants, breakable capsules releasing flavors on demand, and agents that will color the tobacco smoke.
On an environmental note, the cellulose acetate used in cigarette filters will eventually break down but never disappears. These plastic filters, containing toxic chemicals once smoked, are the most littered item in the world. They release their chemicals into the air, soil, and water and do not biodegrade for years.
Worldwide, every year, roughly 4.5 trillion cigarette butts are discarded, leading to over a billion pounds of toxic trash, according to American Nonsmokers’ Rights. Three-quarters of smokers report disposing of butts on the ground or out of a car window, making cigarette butts nearly 38% of all litter. Wow.
Doris Montag is a homespun historian and an exhibit curator who researches and displays historical collections of ordinary things, such as can openers, crochet, toy sewing machines, hand corn planters, powder compacts, egg cartons, and more. Contact or follow her on Facebook, HistoryofOrdinaryThings.
10 March 2023 50 plus Life www.50plusLifePA.com
Doris Montag
“Marlboro: the filter cigarette with the unfiltered taste.” Ad from 1962 featuring Paul Hornung, halfback for the Green Bay Packers.
A 1951 ad for Phillip Morris cigarettes portrays a woman who looks proud, confident, glamorous — capitalizing on women’s liberation movements.
“ filter cigarette after smoking,” by Alexander Klepnev, licensed under CC BY 4.0
Many cigarette filters turn brown after use, giving smokers the false impression the filter has made the cigarette safer.
University Concert Choir to Perform
Westminster Presbyterian Church will host the Cedarville University Concert Choir at 7 p.m. Saturday, March 25, at the church, 2151 Oregon Pike, Lancaster.
The Concert Chorale comprises 50 undergraduate singers from Cedarville University in southwest Ohio. Their varied repertoire includes masterworks, sacred anthems, spirituals, and contemporary praise selections.
Under the direction of Dr. Lyle Anderson, they have performed on 11 international tours.
There is no cost, but a free-will offering will be taken for the Music Series. Parking is plentiful and the church is handicapped accessible. For more information, call the church office at (717) 392-5909.
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CoLoRECTAL CANCER AWARENESS Mo NTH
Should People over Age 75 Be Screened for Colorectal Cancer?
By Elia Ben-Ari
Since the untimely death of 43-year-old Black Panther star Chadwick Boseman in 2020, the rapid rise in the rate of colorectal cancer among younger adults has been in the news. This increase played a key role in a revised recommendation by an independent U.S. advisory panel to start screening for colorectal cancer at age 45 instead of 50. Screening for colorectal cancer, which can detect cancer and precancerous lesions before symptoms develop, has been shown to reduce deaths from the disease.
But while the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force updated its guidance to recommend screening for all adults aged 45-75, the panel concluded the “net benefit” of screening after age 75 is small and did not change its guidance for this age group.
However, a more recent study provides some evidence that screening for colorectal cancer appears to be beneficial for people beyond age 75 as well.
Although the study’s findings don’t contradict the advisory panel’s screening recommendations for older Americans — that is, that the decision should be
made on a case-by-case basis — the researchers believe their results provide helpful information for physicians to use in discussing whether their older patients should get screened for colorectal cancer.
Because the task force suggests that decisions about screening people 76 to 85 years old be made selectively, “it’s been a bit of a gray area for physicians, and for [older] patients, to know what to do,” said Andrew Chan, M.D., M.P.H., a professor of medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital.
Chan co-led the study assessing the impact of colorectal cancer screening in more than 56,000 people aged 75 or older. His team found that the risk of dying from colorectal cancer was reduced by more than a third in people over age 75 who had been screened by colonoscopy or sigmoidoscopy.
Evidence Suggests Benefits of Screening beyond Age 75
Among more than 56,000 participants who reached age 75 during the study,
please see SCREENED on page 14
12 March 2023 50 plus Life www.50plusLifePA.com
you know a good story when you hear it. Please email story submissions to Megan Joyce, editor, at mjoyce@onlinepub.com or send via mail to 50plus Life, P.o. Box 8049, Lancaster, PA 17604. Think you or someone you know would make an interesting profile story for 50 plus Life? We are looking for central Pennsylvanians over age 50 who have a unique hobby, passion, or history of volunteer work, or who are a part of an interesting local club. Ideal story candidates are willing to talk about themselves and to be photographed. Your name: _______________________________________________________________ Your address: ____________________________________________________________________ Your phone: ________________________________________ Email:_____________________________________________ Nominee’s name (if not self): ____________________________________________________________________________ Nominee’s town of residence: ___________________________________________________________________________ Nominee’s phone: __________________________________ Email: _____________________________________________ Why they would make a great story: _____________________________________________________________________ Note: Please get your nominee’s permission before submitting them!
CoLoRECTAL CANCER AWARENESS M o NTH
Keto Molecule o ffers Clue for Preventing Colorectal Cancer
By Sharon Reynolds
Your diet and your colon have an intimate relationship. Molecules broken down from food and drink continuously bathe the cells that line the intestines.
It’s these cells, called epithelial cells, that give rise to the most common type of colorectal cancer. This relationship has sparked decades of research into diet and colorectal cancer risk.
In a new study in mice, researchers have found evidence that a compound produced while eating a ketogenic diet — that is, a diet very high in fat and low in carbohydrates — could inhibit the development of colorectal cancer.
The compound, called β -hydroxybutyrate (BHB), jump-started a signaling pathway in epithelial cells in the colon that instructed them to stop dividing.
The study’s leaders and other experts warned, however, that although the study results are intriguing, they do not mean that a ketogenic diet or taking a BHB supplement should be used to prevent or treat colorectal cancer.
In the study, the research team, led by Christoph Thaiss, Ph.D., and Maayan Levy, Ph.D., from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, found that treatment with BHB alone slowed or stopped the growth of colorectal tumors in mice, independent of the diet they were fed.
It also slowed the growth of colorectal cancer cells taken from people and grown in the lab.
“When we treated [colorectal cancer] cells with BHB, they didn’t die, but they seemed to start sleeping, basically,” said Levy.
The study results offer potentially important new insights into one of the most common cancers, said Phillip Daschner, M.Sc., of NCI’s Division of Cancer Biology, who was not involved in the study.
“This is a significant contribution to our understanding of the link between diet and colon cancer risk,” Daschner said. “But additional studies on BHB’s effects in people are needed, such as clinical trials using BHB supplements, before any conclusions can be made about its role in cancer prevention or treatment.”
The research team started by feeding mice one of six different diets containing varying levels of fats and carbohydrates. Two were ketogenic, being composed of 90% fat.
The mice were then exposed to chemicals that caused them to develop colorectal cancer. Mice fed either of the ketogenic diets had fewer tumors and smaller tumors than mice fed diets with a higher percentage of carbohydrates. Mice with colorectal cancer who were fed the ketogenic diets also lived longer.
When mice were fed a ketogenic diet after tumors had already formed,
their tumors grew very slowly or stopped growing altogether. When the researchers discontinued the diet, the tumors started growing again.
Further experiments ruled out that the keto diets’ effects on tumor growth were due to differences in calories between the diets, changes in the immune system, or reduced inflammation.
However, the researchers did observe a decrease in cell division (proliferation) in the epithelial cells lining the colon and in colorectal cancer cells in mice fed the ketogenic diet.
A factor potentially complicating the understanding of how BHB works in the human colon is that the current study didn’t touch on the microbiome’s possible role in influencing the body’s response to different nutrients, Daschner said.
The makeup of a given person’s microbiome — the collection of bacteria, fungi, and viruses that live in the human gut and that varies widely from person to person — can affect its interactions with nutrients, medications, and anything else that passes through the gut.
In some people, depending on their microbiome, BHB may not have an effect, he explained.
So, for now, BHB is a “don’t try this at home” scenario, said Daschner. It’s currently sold widely as a dietary supplement, but its risks and benefits need much more study.
“Keto Molecule Offers Clue for Preventing Colorectal Cancer” was originally published by the National Cancer Institute.
www.50plusLifePA.com 50 plus Life March 2023 13
March is National Colorectal Cancer Awareness Month
Almost 6
people in
U.S. care
WSA addresses the unique challenges that well spouses face every day. If you could benefit from this information, please join us! Meetings held 2nd & 4th Wednesdays of the month 7:00 p.m. – Wegmans, 2000 Crossings Blvd., Lancaster, PA 17601
million
the
for an ill or disabled partner
It Was 50 Years Ago Today
‘Rocky Mountain High’
John Denver and his wife, Annie, moved to Aspen, Colorado, in December 1970, hoping to purchase a home in the couple’s favorite part of their favorite state. What they discovered was that everything cost much more than they could afford.
The two thus bought land in a nearby scenic valley, with plans to build a house there the next year — if John’s career star continued its ascent.
The success of “Rocky Mountain High” would put their minds at ease.
He was born in the summer of his 27th year
Comin’ home to a place he’d never been before He left yesterday behind him
You might say he was born again
You might say he found the key for every door
In his autobiography, Take Me Home, Denver stated, “I remember, almost to the moment, when that song started to take shape in my head.”
“Rocky Mountain High”
By John Denver March 1973
He recalled how he and Annie and some friends had hiked up to Lake Williams to camp below the stars and watch the Perseid meteor showers. (They are called the Perseids because the point from which they appear to hail lies in the constellation Perseus.)
“Imagine a moonless night in the Rockies in the dead of summer and you have it … We were right below the tree line, just about 10,000 feet … Around midnight, I got up and could see the shadow from the starlight, there was so much light from the stars.
“I went back and lay down in front of our tent, thinking about how in nature all things, large and small, were interwoven, when swoosh, a meteor went smoking by … It got bigger and bigger until the tail stretched out all the way across the
SCREENED from page 12
the team identified 661 new cases of colorectal cancer and 323 deaths from the disease.
They then compared the rates of new colorectal cancer diagnoses and deaths from the disease among participants who reported having a screening colonoscopy or sigmoidoscopy after age 75 and those who did not undergo either test.
Screening after age 75 was linked with a 39% reduction in the incidence of colorectal cancer and a 40% decrease in the risk of death from the disease. The researchers found similar reductions in the risk of death from colorectal cancer, whether or not participants had ever undergone screening before age 75.
“Our data provide additional support for the USPSTF recommendations. And they give people more confidence that if they decide to continue screening beyond age 75, or even to start screening for the first time after age 75, there are data to support that decision,” Chan said.
More Research Questions to Address
The study’s results are far from the last word on this subject, researchers said. Because this was an observational study, “it is not completely clear if the improved outcomes are from the screening [test] or from the selection of patients to get screened,” Shivan Mehta, M.D., a gastroenterologist and health policy
sky and burned itself out. It was raining fire in the sky.”
He began work on a folk tune about the experience with friend Mike Taylor, an acoustic guitarist who had performed with Denver and had also moved to Aspen. The result was Denver’s autobiographical “Rocky Mountain High.”
After Denver tweaked it for several months, the resulting RCA Records single became a Top 10 classic.
The Colorado Rocky Mountain high
I’ve seen it rainin’ fire in the sky
The shadow from the starlight is softer than a lullaby Rocky Mountain high
However, his creation became controversial when some listeners thought the word “high” referred to drug use. (Nine times we hear “high in Colorado” in the background whenever the line “Rocky Mountain high” is sung.)
This led Denver to testify before a Senate hearing.
“My song ‘Rocky Mountain High’ was banned from many radio stations as a drug-related song,” he said.
“This was obviously done by people who had never seen or been to the Rocky Mountains and also had never experienced the elation, celebration of life, or the joy in living that one feels when he observed something as wondrous as the Perseids meteor shower.”
End of discussion.
In 1915, “Where the Columbines Grow” became Colorado’s state song. In 1973, “Rocky Mountain High” was added as the official second one.
Randal C. Hill is a rock ’n’ roll historian who lives at the Oregon coast. He may be reached at wryterhill@msn.com.
researcher at the University of Pennsylvania, said.
The researchers could not account for factors that may have influenced doctors’ decisions on whether to suggest screening to certain patients and people’s decisions to undergo screening, he explained.
For example, because colonoscopy is invasive and the preparation can be difficult, it’s possible that only the older participants who were fit and healthy underwent this screening test. And that could explain the lower death rate seen in the group that was screened.
“I hope we will reach a point where we can start to think about more sophisticated ways [than a person’s age] to help guide” decisions about colorectal cancer screening — for example, by looking at certain lifestyle factors or genetic risk factors that predispose some people to the disease, Chan said.
Although this study focused on colonoscopy, “there is increasing evidence of the value of noninvasive screening tests for colorectal cancer, such as stool-based testing,” which people can do at home and don’t require cleansing the colon, Chan said.
“And how those tests fit into screening recommendations for people over age 75 remains an area for future research.”
“Should People Over Age 75 Be Screened for Colorectal Cancer?” was originally published by the National Cancer Institute.
14 March 2023 50 plus Life www.50plusLifePA.com
Randal Hill
Spring Cleaning Tips for Your Collections
Spring cleaning has its drawbacks and its advantages. The drawbacks are many, as no one really enjoys house cleaning all that much. But for art and antiques collectors, spring cleaning offers a great opportunity to review the condition of art, collectibles, and vintage objects.
Deciding to repurpose items can result from a good cleaning spree, too. Identifying what to keep and what to sell can be the benefit of spring cleaning, and so can making new display areas within your home.
Here are some tips when it comes to spring cleaning your art and antiques:
1. Don’t be too hasty to clean an oil-on-canvas painting. On my video-call appraisals, I can’t tell you the vast number of collectors who want to clean their antique and vintage oil paintings.
Many paintings don’t need to be cleaned. Paintings will darken over time, but cleaning paintings may not be the solution. For instance, if a painting only has minor evidence of surface dirt or dust and it has no evidence of yellowing varnish, leave the painting alone.
Never clean a painting using soap and water, an early-1900s technique, because this process will dry out the pigment and the canvas. It will lead to pigment flaking and serious damage over time.
If you still want to clean a painting, contact a professional art-restoration service.
2. Don’t be overzealous when cleaning sterling silver pieces like tea sets, trays, water pitchers, picture frames, and candlesticks. This goes for silver-plated items, too.
When cleaning silver or silver plate, you are basically rubbing off a layer of the metal’s sheen. So, don’t polish your silver too often. Try to polish sterling silver and silver-plate items no more than every six months.
Use appropriate white-cotton cloths and recommended silver or silver-plate polish. They are different, so don’t use silver polish to polish silver plate and vice versa.
Be gentle when polishing silver plate so you don’t rub the silver off to the point where the under metal — usually copper — is showing through the silver plating. Flatware of sterling silver should be placed in a protective storage box when not in use.
3. Crystal and glass items require special care when cleaning. Crystal is supposed to be very clear and attractive when compared to glass items.
For cloudy vases or bowls, use equal parts of white vinegar and distilled water, and wash the crystal or glass object very gently. Try to avoid using any harsh chemicals or cleaning agents on any of your antique items.
Do not submerge any glass or crystal item into standing water that is too cold or too hot, as this “shock to the system” may result in cracking your item upon impact. Be sure to keep vintage and antique glass items away from other items that may damage them, and never put them in the dishwasher.
4. The tools you use during spring cleaning of your art or antiques are just as important as the cleaning agents and techniques. Cloths that do not leave textile or cotton residue behind are the desirable choice. Q-tips or cotton swabs can be very helpful to get into those tight places.
And, don’t forget to do your cleaning of fragile collectibles while seated at a table when you are well rested and have plenty of time for the task. Happy spring cleaning!
Ph.D. antiques appraiser, author, and award-winning media personality Dr. Lori presents antique appraisal events nationwide and appears on History channel’s The Curse of Oak Island and Pawn Stars Do America. Visit DrLoriV.com, watch her Real Bargains show on YouTube.com/DrLoriV, or call (888) 431-1010.
free Tax Assistance o ffered
The AARP Tax-Aide program will offer free one-onone counseling as well as assistance on the telephone and internet to help individuals prepare basic tax forms, including the 1040, 1040A, 1040EZ, and other standard documents.
The following are locations in your area. Please call for an appointment or visit aarp.org/money/taxaide for more information.
First Methodist Church
29 E. Walnut St., Lancaster
Mondays and Tuesdays, 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m.
(717) 584-4886
Glossbrenner United Methodist Church
713 Church St., Mount Joy
Tuesdays and Thursdays, 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
(717) 478-3712
Lancaster Brethren Village
3001 Lititz Pike, Lititz
Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. (717) 569-2657
West Willow United Methodist Church
118 W. Willow Road, Willow Street
Saturdays, 8:30 a.m. to noon; 1-3 p.m.
(717) 723-8269
www.50plusLifePA.com 50 plus Life March 2023 15
Art
Antiques
Dr.
&
by
Lori
Lori Verderame
Try to polish sterling silver and silver-plate items no more than every six months.
The Healthy Geezer Poor Sleep Not a Normal Part of Aging
fred Cicetti
Q. I have found that I don’t sleep as well as I used to when I was younger. How common is this?
Many people believe that poor sleep is a normal part of aging, but it is not. Sleep patterns change as we age, but disturbed sleep and waking up tired every day are not part of normal aging.
Seniors need about the same amount of sleep as younger adults — seven to nine hours a night.
Unfortunately, many older adults don’t get the sleep they need, because they often have more trouble falling asleep. A study of adults over 65 found that 13% of men and 36% of women take more than 30 minutes to fall asleep.
Also, older people often sleep less deeply and wake up more often throughout the night, which may be why they nap more often during the daytime.
Nighttime sleep schedules may change with age too. Many older adults tend to get sleepier earlier in the evening and awaken earlier in the morning.
Lancaster County Office of Aging
Maintaining the independence and quality of life for Lancaster County’s aging population through information, protection, services, and community support
Our Philosophy:
u Support the older person’s right to decide his/her own destiny. Encourage consumer self-determination and choice.
u Support the older person’s right to risk.
u Promote independence and dignity.
u Avoid unnecessary/inappropriate institutionalization.
Here are some pointers to help you get better sleep:
• Go to sleep and wake up at the same time, even on weekends. Sticking to a regular bedtime and wake-time schedule helps keep you in sync with your body’s circadian clock, a 24-hour internal rhythm affected by sunlight.
• Try not to nap too much during the day — you might be less sleepy at night.
• Try to exercise at regular times each day. Exercising regularly improves the quality of your nighttime sleep and helps you sleep more soundly. Try to finish your workout at least three hours before bedtime.
• Try to get some natural light in the afternoon each day.
please see SLEEP on facing page
About Us – The Lancaster County Office of Aging (LCOA) was established 45 years ago as a result of the passage of the Older Americans Act. This act directed states to develop a network of services and supports to help keep older adults healthy and independent.
The Pennsylvania Department of Aging was created to fulfill this mandate. In turn, a network of 52 Area Agencies on Aging (AAA) was established throughout the commonwealth to carry out this mission at the local level.
Funding for aging-related services is a combination of state and federal monies, with the Pennsylvania Lottery providing the major source of funding.
In Lancaster County, the AAA is part of county government. We are dedicated to providing Lancaster County residents, 60 years of age and older, with a wide range of informational resources and services as well as advocacy efforts and elder abuse protection.
The LCOA offers the following services:
• Information and referral services
• Long-term living assessments
• Home and community-based support services
• Protection from abuse and neglect
• APPRISE, Medicare, and related health insurance counseling
• Senior center services
• Adult daily living services
• Caregiver support
• Employment
• Ombudsman services
• Transportation
• Legal services
• Health and wellness programming
• Volunteer opportunities
For more information, please call us Monday – Friday from 8:30 a.m. – 5 p.m. at 717-299-7979/1-800-801-3070, visit our website at www.lancoaging.org , or email aging@co.lancaster.pa.us.
16 March 2023 50 plus Life www.50plusLifePA.com
EMPOWERMENT • PROTECTION DIGNITY• ADVOC A C Y • • MOC P A S S I ON • ACTIVEAGING •
March is National Sleep Awareness Month
The Bookworm Sez
The Queen: Her Life
You couldn’t hide, even if you wanted to. There’d be nowhere to go — and besides, everyone knows who you are. Your entire life has been catalogued, from the moment you were born until probably just a few seconds ago, and it will be until you’re dead, plus a week or two.
As in the new book, The Queen: Her Life by Andrew Morton, it reigns on your parade every day. Ten-year-old Princess Elizabeth was not a fan of her uncle’s ladyfriend.
Even at that tender age, she was aware that Mrs. Simpson had turned everyone’s life upside down, including that of her beloved uncle. David was once full of pranks and play, a favorite in the York household nursery, but with that woman around, everything changed.
Even Elizabeth’s little sister, Margaret, could understand the significance of Uncle David’s decision regarding that woman. It meant, of course, that Elizabeth would one day be queen.
It was a responsibility she was never supposed to have, but she assumed it with an astounding maturity and no complaints. For the rest of her childhood, her growing-up, when she was a young bride, a mother, and a negotiator of prickly family issues, Elizabeth never wavered in her solemn promise to give herself to her country.
The Queen: Her Life
By Andrew Morton c. 2022, Grand Central Publishing 448 pages
And yet, as Morton shows, there was a side of the queen that peeked out beneath the edge of those colorful hats on a delightfully regular basis. She was “obsessed” with horses, adored her dogs, and was able to pivot cleanly whenever there was a problem; in fact, she and Prince Philip “loved” when things went wrong at events they attended.
At a young age, Elizabeth had a keen sense of the absurd, and she was able
SLEEP from facing page
• Be careful about what you eat. Don’t drink beverages with caffeine late in the day. Caffeine is a stimulant and can keep you awake. Also, if you like a snack before bed, a warm beverage and a few crackers may help.
• Don’t drink alcohol or smoke cigarettes to help you sleep. Even small amounts of alcohol can make it harder to stay asleep. Smoking is dangerous for many reasons, including the hazard of falling asleep with a lit cigarette. Also, the nicotine in cigarettes is a stimulant.
• Create a safe and comfortable place to sleep. Make sure there are locks on all doors and smoke alarms on each floor. A lamp that’s easy to turn on and a phone by your bed may be helpful. The room should be dark, well ventilated, and as quiet as possible.
• Develop a bedtime routine. Do the same things each night to tell your body
to make fun out of even the biggest annoyances, at home and abroad.
Sadly, however, because of her position, her role as the leader of the Church of England, politics, and British culture, that roll-with-the-punches ability didn’t necessarily extend to her family …
Considering all the coverage that was available when Queen Elizabeth II died recently, you might think you know everything there ever was to know about Her Majesty.
Betcha don’t. Bet you need to read The Queen: Her Life.
Opening with his lively introduction, author Andrew Morton surprises readers with all kinds of tidbits and tales and a humorous anecdote of an angry and vindictive 10-year-old princess and a perfectly upper-crust snit.
It’s this kind of humanness that Morton brings to the queen’s biography, to show that she was royal by birth but everyman at heart — although sometimes, in many places inside this book, readers might question such a sentiment.
On that, Morton shows a metamorphosis that begins with resigned acceptance, continues with steely-strict rule-keeping, and culminates in the softer monarch we came to love.
Surely, this is something historians will enjoy, and the most avid Anglophile should pounce on this book that, despite its heft, is a quick read. The Queen: Her Life will make you smile; enjoyment like you’ll get here is hard to hide.
The Bookworm is Terri Schlichenmeyer. Terri has been reading since she was 3 years old, and she never goes anywhere without a book. She lives on a hill in Wisconsin with two dogs and 14,000 books.
it’s time to wind down. Some people watch the evening news, read a book, or soak in a warm bath.
• Use your bedroom for sleeping, not daytime activities. After turning off the light, give yourself about 15 minutes to fall asleep. If you are still awake and not drowsy, get out of bed. When you get sleepy, go back to bed.
• Try not to worry about your sleep. Some people find that playing mental games is helpful. For example, tell yourself it’s five minutes before you have to get up and you’re just trying to get a few extra winks.
If you are so tired during the day that you cannot function normally, and if this lasts for more than two to three weeks, you should see your family doctor or a sleep disorders specialist.
Fred Cicetti is a senior and health writer with more than three decades of experience. The Healthy Geezer is devoted to the health questions of seniors who are wondering what is going on with these bodies of ours.
www.50plusLifePA.com 50 plus Life March 2023 17
Terri Schlichenmeyer
Know Your Kidneys: How to Prevent and Manage Kidney Disease
You may not think much about your kidneys unless there’s a problem, but they play a vital role in your health.
Your kidneys continually filter your blood to remove extra fluid and waste, which is released from the body as urine. They also help control blood pressure and keep bones healthy.
Consider this information from Know Your Kidneys — an education campaign from the American Kidney Fund, Boehringer Ingelheim, and Otsuka — to understand how your kidneys work, how to protect them, and how to help prevent kidney disease, which has no cure.
What is Kidney Disease?
Kidney disease means your kidneys are permanently damaged and do not work as they should. This lets extra fluid and waste flow back into your bloodstream instead of leaving your body as urine.
An estimated 37 million Americans are living with kidney disease, and 1 in 3 adults is at risk for the disease, according to the American Kidney Fund. Kidney disease typically does not have any symptoms until the late stages, so most people do not know they have it.
Who is at Risk?
Kidney disease doesn’t discriminate; people of all backgrounds get it. However, multiple barriers contribute to inequity in kidney care, including systemic racial and ethnic biases, language and cultural differences, and where a person lives.
These barriers make it more likely for certain people’s kidney disease to progress to kidney failure — the last stage of kidney disease. For example, Black Americans make up just 13% of the population, but they are 3.4 times more likely than white Americans to progress to kidney failure.
Other risk factors include diabetes, high blood pressure, hereditary causes or having a family history of the disease, being over the age of 60, obesity, and smoking. Being tested for kidney disease if you are at risk can help detect early problems.
What Are the Symptoms?
In the later stages of kidney disease, you may have symptoms like foot swelling, nausea, and fatigue. Other potential symptoms include itching, muscle cramps, changes in urine output, loss of appetite, trouble catching your breath, and problems sleeping.
Regular blood and urine tests can help monitor your kidney health. Ask your doctor to check your kidney function, and if the tests reveal concerns, work together to create a plan.
What Are the Treatment Options?
There is no cure for kidney disease, but you can take actions and medicines to manage your condition and possibly help prevent the disease from progressing to kidney failure.
Depending on the specific cause of your kidney problems, your doctor may suggest controlling your blood sugar, blood pressure, and cholesterol; eating healthy; quitting smoking; and being more physically active and maintaining a healthy weight. Medicines can also help control kidney disease for people with diabetes.
If kidney disease progresses to kidney failure, dialysis or a kidney transplant is required to survive.
How to Advocate for Kidney Health
Dawn Edwards was just 23 when she developed kidney failure, reinforcing that kidney disease can affect anyone at any age. While Edwards juggles life with dialysis, she also regularly talks to newly diagnosed and high-risk patients.
“My advice is to learn as much as you can and have honest, frank discussions with your doctor,” Edwards said.
“Learn about your treatment options, including the side effects of medications, and lifestyle changes that can manage your diabetes and high blood pressure and ultimately slow or stop the progression of kidney disease.”
For more information, visit KidneyFund.org/KnowYourKidney s. (Family Features)
18 March 2023 50 plus Life www.50plusLifePA.com Puzzle Solutions Puzzles shown on page 7.
March is National Kidney Month
Photo courtesy of Getty Images
www.50plusLifePA.com 50 plus Life March 2023 19 aGreatWayToSpendMyDay.com April 15, 2023 9 a.m. – 2 p.m. Spooky Nook Sports 2913 Spooky Nook Road Manheim 9th Annual omen’s Expo Hosted by: and Sponsor and exhibitor opportunities available! Please, join us! Health & Wellness Finance Home Technology Beauty Nutrition Home-Based Businesses and more! It’s a time to rejuvenate your spirit and: Skip the line and register online to attend—it’s free! Sponsored by: information and support whenever you need it! View online at: www.onlinepub.com (under supplements)
Sponsor & Exhibitor Opportunities Available! (717) 285-1350 50plusExpoPA.com aGreatWayToSpendMyDay.com Health & Wellness Finance Home Shopping Technology Beauty Nutrition Fashion and more! omen’s Expo
Join Us for These Spring 2023 Events! Caregiving Finances Health & Wellness Home Improvements Leisure Activities Nutrition Retirement Living Technology and more! May 10 9 a.m. – 2 p.m. Wyndham Resort (Formerly Lancaster Host) 2300 Lincoln Highway East, Lancaster 24th Annual 24th Annual April 11 9 a.m. – 2 p.m. Hershey Lodge 325 University Drive Hershey omen’s xpo York County E 1st Annual May 6 9 a.m. – 2 p.m. York Expo Center Memorial Hall East 334 Carlisle Ave., York 9th Annual April 15 9 a.m. – 2 p.m. Wyndham Resort (Formerly Lancaster Host) 2300 Lincoln Highway East, Lancaster DAUPHIN COUNTY LANCASTER COUNTY 19th Annual June 6 9 a.m. – 2 p.m. Church Farm School 1001 East Lincoln Highway Exton 10th Annual June 3 9 a.m. – 2 p.m. Hershey Lodge 325 University Drive Hershey
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