October 10 – 10 Signs in 10 Cities – Alzheimer’s – Optimum Senior Care – Chicago In Home

October 10 – 10 Signs in 10 Cities – Alzheimer’s – Optimum Senior Care – Chicago In Home  – www.OptimumSeniorCare.com

The warning signs of Alzheimer’s disease are often dismissed as normal age-related memory changes. We’ll separate myth from reality and address commonly-held misconceptions about Alzheimer’s disease at the Know the 10 Signs program offered all across Illinois on Wednesday, October 10, 2018. Find a program near you and register today!

Know the 10 SIGNS

Know the 10 SIGNS

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10 Signs in 10 Cities – October 10 – All Over Illinois

The warning signs of Alzheimer’s disease are often dismissed as normal age-related memory changes. We’ll separate myth from reality and address commonly-held misconceptions about Alzheimer’s. Hear from people who have the disease, find out how to recognize the warning signs in yourself and others, and learn why EARLY DETECTION MATTERS. This Know the 10 Signs program will all be offered across Illinois on Wednesday, October 10, 2018.

Find a program near you below and REGISTER TODAY!

1

HUNTLEY

Wednesday | October 10 | 10-11:30 am
Sun City of Huntley | 12880 Del Webb Blvd
» REGISTER TODAY

2

CHICAGO

Wednesday | October 10 | 11:30 am-1 pm
Liberty Baptist Church | 4849 S King Dr
» REGISTER TODAY

3

PARK RIDGE

Wednesday | October 10 | 1-2:30 pm
Centennial Activity Center | 100 S Western Ave
» REGISTER TODAY

4

JOLIET

Wednesday | October 10 | 10-11:30 am
Senior Services Center of Will County | 251 N Center St
» REGISTER TODAY

5

FRANKFORT

Wednesday | October 10 | 7-8:30 pm
Frankfort Library | 21119 S Pfeiffer Rd
» REGISTER TODAY

6

PEORIA

Wednesday | October 10 | 9:30-11 am
Alzheimer’s Association | 614 W Glen Ave
» REGISTER TODAY

7

NORMAL

Wednesday | October 10 | 10:30 am-12 pm
The ARC | 600 E Willow St
» REGISTER TODAY

8

SPRINGFIELD

Wednesday | October 10 | 6-7:30 pm
Schnucks Community Center | 2801 Chatham Rd
» REGISTER TODAY

9

CARTERVILLE

Wednesday | October 10 | 6-7:30 pm
John A Logan College | 700 Logan College Rd
» REGISTER TODAY

10

QUINCY

Wednesday | October 10 | 12-1:30 pm
Alzheimer’s Association | 105 N 36th St #201
» REGISTER TODAY

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Americans living with Alzheimer’s may more than double by 2060 – Americans living with Alzheimer’s may more than double by 2060

Americans living with Alzheimer’s may more than double by 2060 –  Americans living with Alzheimer’s may more than double by 2060www.OptimumSeniorCare.com

The number of people living with Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias in the United States is projected to more than double by 2060, according to a new study published in Alzheimer’s & Dementia®: The Journal of the Alzheimer’s Association. More than 5 million Americans are living with Alzheimer’s; the authors from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimate that number will grow to 13.9 million by 2060, which is similar to other projections. The researchers believe Hispanic Americans and African Americans will see the largest increase.

The number of people projected to have Alzheimer’s disease or dementia in the United States is expected to double by 2060, a study from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says.

In 2014, there were 5 million people in the U.S. with Alzheimer’s or dementia. The CDC estimates by 2060, that number will grow to 13.9 million.

“Early diagnosis is key to helping people and their families cope with loss of memory, navigate the health care system, and plan for their care in the future,” CDC Director Dr. Robert R. Redfield said in a statement.

The study, which the CDC said is the first to forecast estimates of Alzheimer’s by race and ethnicity, found non-Hispanic whites will have the most total cases of Alzheimer’s and dementia. However, because of population growth, Hispanic Americans will see the largest projected increase in cases.

Sept. 18: Husband yanks leash attached to wife’s neck at Pennsylvania fair, police say

Aug. 27: Comedian Tim Conway suffering from dementia; family feuds in court over care

Among people who are 65 and older, African-Americans have the highest prevalence of Alzheimer’s and dementia at 13.8 percent, followed by Hispanics (12.2 percent) and non-Hispanic whites (10.3 percent).

By 2060, researchers project 3.2 million Hispanics and 2.2 million African-Americans will have Alzheimer’s disease or dementia. The CDC said as more people survive other diseases and grow older, the odds of being diagnosed with dementia go up.

The study was published Thursday in the journal Alzheimer’s & Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer’s Association.

Kevin Matthews, a health geographer and lead author of the study with the CDC’s Division of Population Health within the National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, said in a statement early diagnosis is key not just for patients, but for caregivers who need support.

“It is important for people who think their daily lives are impacted by memory loss to discuss these concerns with a health care provider,” he said.

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Look Who Is Turning 65 – Alzheimer’s – Optimum Senior Care – Chicago In Home Care

Look Who Is Turning 65 – Alzheimer’s – Optimum Senior Care – Chicago In Home Carewww.OptimumSeniorCare.com

View the celebrities turning 65 in September 20

September 1 John Zorn, musician

Think you’ve never heard of him? John Zorn has racked up hundreds of album credits as a performer, composer and producer in a broad range of music genres, from classical, to rock, through jazz and even surf music and metal!
He’s also been lauded by Down Beat as “one of our most important composers.” Zorn arranges, composes and produces records, in addition to playing sax, pipe organ, drums, double bass, keyboards and a little clarinet, too. He even established his own record label, Tzadik, in the 90s.
Tzadik has allowed Zorn to promote new musicians outside of the mainstream, as well as a prolific catalog of his own recordings. He tours all over the world, often performing at festivals, and continues to compose for concerts, opera and film.

September 11 Tommy Shaw, musician and singer (Styx)

Guitarist, singer and songwriter Tommy Shaw got his start playing with local bands in his native Montgomery, Alabama. When vocalist/guitarist John Curulewski abruptly left Styx right before a nationwide tour, Shaw was called in to audition. Once they listened to his demo tape and heard Shaw could sing the high harmony for “Lady,” he was hired. “The guitar never came out of the case,” he recalls.
Shaw wrote and sung on six of the band’s eight singles written before 1979. He wrote “Renegade” and “Blue Collar Man” as well as singing “Sing for the Day.” Shaw also wrote “Mademoiselle,” “Shooz” and “Fooling Yourself (The Angry Young Man).” But it was his promotion of “Come Sail Away” (written and sung by Dennis DeYoung) that got the band noticed nationally.
Ironically, it was when the DeYoung hit “Babe” premiered in 1979 that the band began to fracture. Shaw was loyal to the band’s progressive/hard rock roots, and he hated catering to pop radio. He also detested the DeYoung-staged Kilroy Was Here tour, even though it was during this time he wrote his only Top 10 hit, “Too Much Time on My Hands.”
Eventually, the band broke up and Shaw recorded as a solo artist, opening shows for The Kinks and Rush. But eventually Styx reunited and Shaw joined in on and off as he also performed with his band Damn Yankees. Shaw is married to his third wife, Jeanne Mason, and is a strict vegetarian.

 

September 12 John Williams, American archer (1972 Olympic gold)

John Williams is the only person, ever, to hold all three archery world titles at the same time! No wonder he pulled the bow for the first Olympic archery medal for the U.S. in 52 years. How did he get his start?
Naturally, he was part of the famed “Shooting Williams Family.” I quote: “Like so many others from his generation, he spent time at the local archery range with his mom and dad.” Hmmm. I got an archery set as a kid and promptly sailed one over the fence where our neighbor was relaxing on a lounge chair. Ended my career right there.
But Williams began shooting in the men’s division when he was 14 and just killed it. In 1984, he was named an Olympic coach, and ran with the torch in 1996. He also worked as a product manager for Yamaha Corporation’s archery division.

 

September 16 Jerry Pate, golfer

When you win the U.S. Open as a rookie like Jerry Pate did in 1976, it’s hard to go much higher. He had enjoyed a great amateur career, and played on winning U.S, teams for the 1975 Eisenhower Trophy and the Walker Cup. He managed to tie teammate Jay Haas for low amateur at the U.S. Open that year, just before turning pro.
After his Open win in 1976, he also edged out Jack Nicklaus to claim the Canadian Open title. His dominance in the sport led to his selection as Rookie of the Year and Co-Player of the Year. But it’s always hard to stay at the top. Six more tour victories came between 1977 and 1982, including several titles around the world. His last big victory was the Tournament Players Championship in 1982, which Pate celebrated by tossing course designer Pete Dye and the PGA tour chief into a lake next to the 18th green, before jumping in himself.
Shoulder injuries curtailed Pate’s career. He became a broadcast analyst and went into business with a golf course design firm and turf and irrigation company. Not one to rest on his laurels, Pate returned to the University of Alabama for his bachelor’s in administrative science, graduating alongside his daughter, Jenni.

September 27 Benjamin Gene Brown, runner (1976 Olympic gold)

Benny Brown is remembered for running the second leg in the 4×400 Men’s Relay at the 1976 Olympics, when the team won gold. Brown won the 1975 NCAA Men’s Outdoor Track and Field Championship at 440 yards for UCLA, then placed fourth in the U.S. Olympic Trials to qualify for the team.
Brown was an active participant in the U. S. Corporate Games and a part-time coach for Cal State Fullerton’s track team while working for Hughes Aircraft Company. Brown was killed in a car accident at the age of 42.
“He was one of the greatest quarter-milers that ever lived,” said Jim Bush, Brown’s former UCLA coach.
“He got very mad at me once,” Bush said. “I put a slower runner in the mile relay and Benny got the baton when he was 50 yards behind the leader. He caught him and won the race. He told me after, ‘Don’t you ever do that again.’ I told him he ran the fastest time he ever ran the 440 [yards]. Everyone just laughed. This is a great and sad loss.”

Click below for the other articles in the September 2018 Senior Spirit


Health – Seven Top Services Medicare Doesn’t Cover


Money – How the New Tax Law Influence Charitable Giving


Lifestyle – MYTHBUSTER: Too Old to Learn?


Technology – Online Budget Planners Save Money and Time


Coffee Break – Looking at People over 100 for Clues to Longevity

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Looking at People over 100 for Clues to Longevity – Alzheimer’s – Optimum Senior Care – Chicago In Home Care

Looking at People over 100 for Clues to Longevity – Alzheimer’s – Optimum Senior Care – Chicago In Home Carewww.OptimumSeniorCare.com

Veritas is studying the genes of very old people to figure out how they manage to avoid the diseases that fell their counterparts.

Looking at People over 100 for Clues to Longevity
Veritas is studying the genes of very old people to figure out how they manage to avoid the diseases that fell their counterparts.

Veritas Genetics is interested in extremes. The company is taking a look at the outliers of the human experience, whether it be for memory, old age or other skills. It wants to know if there’s a genetic component to living an exceptionally long time.

The biotechnology start-up, situated north of Boston, can map the human genome for a price: $1,000. That’s nothing compared to what Apple founder Steve Jobs paid only seven years ago. While battling pancreatic cancer in 1911, Jobs shelled out $100,000 to sequence his genetic code.

That kind of economy enables Veritas to study people like Nelson Dellis, who has won the U.S. memory championship four times. That’s interesting news considering how many people are coping with memory loss from aging and disease. The company has also worked with former NASA astronaut Scott Parazynski and free diver William Trubridge, who can dive more than 330 feet deep on a single gulp of air. 

“I think studying these extreme cases is a really interesting approach,” said Robert Green, a medical geneticist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and a consultant to Veritas. “In some ways, the notion of extremes is so fundamental to what we have learned and ever learned about in medicine.”

One of the company’s areas of study is extreme old age. Headed by Veritas’ co-founder and chief scientific officer Preston Estep, the team has collected DNA from over 50 people who are more than 110 years old.

“We want them to be as old as possible,” Estep said. “But we also need a large enough sample to get a sufficient statistical power.”

With only an estimated 1,000 such people in the world, Estep has begun to study those who’ve lived at least 105 years. Another interest is in families where the siblings have all become centenarians. Participants don’t have to pay anything, thanks to a collaboration with the Personal Genome Project. That company is working to sequence and publish the medical records and genome data from 100,000 volunteers.

One barrier to the research is the difficulty finding birth records for some claiming to be at least 100. Birth certificates were not as common then, especially in certain areas around the globe.

Estep can’t say what they’ll discover. That comes with the territory. However, in the recent past scientists have taken data from two women with exceptionally low LDL cholesterol and found a rare genetic mutation common to both that spawned a drug imitating the effects of the mutation. Who knows? Studying genetics may eventually provide the clue to longer, healthier lives.

Click below for the other articles in the September 2018 Senior Spirit


Health – Seven Top Services Medicare Doesn’t Cover


Money – How the New Tax Law Influence Charitable Giving


Lifestyle – MYTHBUSTER: Too Old to Learn?


Technology – Online Budget Planners Save Money and Time


Famous & 65

Source:

https://www.cnbc.com/2018/08/19/veritas-wants-to-sequence-dna-of-the-extremely-old-and-young.html

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Online Budget Planners Save Money and Time – Alzheimer’s – Optimum Senior Care – Chicago In Home Care

Online Budget Planners Save Money and Time – Alzheimer’s – Optimum Senior Care – Chicago In Home Carewww.OptimumSeniorCare.com

Money manager apps can make your life easier. We take a look at several different managers and tell you which one we think is best for various tasks.

Money manager apps can make your life easier. We take a look at several different managers and tell you which one we think is best for various tasks.

Do you still sit down with a pencil and a sheet of paper to make your budget, calculator at your side? Have you thought about switching to one of the computerized budget systems, but figured it would be too much of a hassle, or no better than your old system? Think again.

There are various free or inexpensive tools and apps to help you pay your bills, save money or even plan and maintain your personal budget and track your investments. Thanks to online banking, they’re quick to set up and easy to use. Plus, they have an array of security features you can view.

Whether you’re a seasoned pro at managing your money, or a newbie taking control of your finances  for the first time, an online money management system will make your life easier. These tools are a whole lot simpler than trying to fill in a spreadsheet by yourself, and the pages are already set up. 

Mint

Our overall winner is the wildly popular (for good reason) Mint. It performs a broad variety of tasks with minimal hassle for the user. 

Billed as a “personal financial management service,” Mint can import all of your bank and brokerage accounts in one place, as well as monthly bills (such as utilities, rent or mortgage) and various sources of income. You create a picture of your income streams (required minimum distributions, Social Security, small jobs, consulting, etc.) and also your anticipated monthly expenses. 

Mint enters your expenses from credit cards and bank withdrawals, cashed checks and online payments. They automatically appear in a related category, which you can change if needed. For instance, it wasn’t groceries you bought at the supermarket, but gas for your car. It’s easy, and you can tell Mint to always place something in a particular category, such as ongoing payments to a local clinic as “charity” instead of “health care.” 

In the Overview tab, Mint shows your financial health in a snapshot. On the left are bank accounts, brokerage accounts and the net worth of your car and home (regularly updated with a number from Zillow). Financial accounts are updated every time you log in. Bills and your current credit score are in the middle, and on the right you’ll find a line-by-line picture of your budget, with a vertical stripe indicating how much of the total allotment you’ve already spent. 

It’s simple to eyeball your budget for overages and savings. If you’re under your budget on any item for the month, it appears in green. Meet your expected expense, and it appears in yellow. Go over, and see the result in red. If you spend $20 on a category where you’ve budgeted $60, a third of the grey line will fill with green. 

Mint boasts a robust platform. Your credit score is enhanced with six categories, broken out to show how much they impact your score, how you’re doing in each and what you could do to improve. Reporting is another win for Mint. A colorful pie chart breaks down spending in every category for any period you choose. Not sure you’re claiming all your business purchase deductions? Click on that category for the year to double-check. Wonder if you’re really spending more on pedicures now than three years ago? Check it out. Caveat: Mint only knows what you’ve been spending since you’ve been using Mint. It can’t retrieve previous information. 

One more feature sweet as tea in Georgia is the one that allows you to save for specified long-term goals. Maybe it’s a savings account for your granddaughter’s college education, or a trip for you to Prague, or both. Enter them in the goals budget, and Mint will tell you how long it should take to achieve each. Save more or less, and Mint tells you how you’re doing. Your goals appear in a box on the budget page that automatically lists the monthly savings needed as expenses, so you’re not tempted to cheat. 

To top it off, Mint is absolutely 100 percent free. It works on the web, Android and iOS, so you can always access your account. Security with the data you’re sharing is tight; you can read about how Mint protects your information here. It can even handle two-factor authentication.

Mint is dang good, but it’s not perfect. What’s not to like? While it is a broad program that is easy to use, it’s barely supported. It claims it offers email support, but feedback from users is doubtful at best. Mint was acquired by Intuit (think TurboTax) in 2009, and since then techies bemoan the difficulty entailed in getting a response from the company. This means that if you encounter a problem, you may need to paddle your own way out. And innovation has come to a virtual standstill since the buyout. But with millions of users, it’s likely you’ll sigh with relief every time you launch the program and know you don’t have to check in with every bank, broker and biller to know your financial health ever again.

EveryDollar

Can You Trust the Credit Score on your Budgeting Service?

Budgeting tools such as Mint show you what they say is your credit score, and even update it automatically. The score impacts how much you’ll pay to finance a car or get a home equity line of credit (HELOC) for home improvements.
With so much riding on it, we wondered if it’s the same score you’d get by asking the big three credit companies, Transunion, Experian and Equifax. Everyone is entitled to a free annual report from the companies to monitor any false reports or information that’s out of date.
“The score that Mint provides is a VantageScore or an Experian Score, which are competitors to FICO,” according to Thomas Eyssell, associate dean and director of graduate studies in the Department of Finance and Legal Studies at the University of Missouri – St. Louis. “The VantageScore and FICO scoring algorithms are somewhat different and can provide different scores.”
In fact, Eyssell suggests, the systems have five basic differences.

  • Scoring. Although both gather similar information to determine a score, they collect it in different ways.
  • Requirements. If your credit history is short (under six months), you won’t have a FICO score, but you may be able to prove credit worthiness with your VantageScore.
  • Late payments. FICO treats all late payments the same, while Vantage dings you harder if you were tardy on the mortgage.
  • Credit inquiries. Say you’re car shopping, and several dealers have made hard inquiries into your credit worthiness. Both FICO and VantageScore bundle these inquiries (which count against you), but FICO uses a 45-day period, whereas VantageScore only allows two weeks.
  • Low-balance collections. FICO ignores unpaid balances under $100. VantageScore doesn’t overlook any amount until it’s paid off.

As a researcher in credit score accuracy among older adults, Eyssell recommends ordering the annual credit report as a precaution. His studies show that many seniors have inaccuracies on their credit reports they never suspect.

Email support is standard on the free EveryDollar platform, or you can pay $99 a year for their Plus service that comes with a phone call from a real person. 

EveryDollar is the birth child of vaunted money manager Dave Ramsey, he of the frugal habits and aversion to debt like it’s radioactive. So it’s a bit surprising that you can buy the Plus version with a credit card, and link either platform to credit accounts. Maybe Dave saw the light of cashback cards, every tightwad’s friend when they are paid off monthly. At any rate, you can connect all of your financial accounts to EveryDollarPlus. However, they’re not on the main screen. 

The initial release of EveryDollar is sparse on reporting features. That may change with future versions as users provide feedback. Where EveryDollar shines is in the ease of its budgeting tool. Broad categories and subcategories are listed on the screen for you, so you scroll through without failing to account for Rover’s annual vet visit or Susie’s trip to the dentist. All you have to do is punch in numbers to get your budget in place. There’s also a place for income, so money coming in and money going out appear on the same page. Can you do it all in ten minutes like the site claims? Yes, according to the majority of users.

One other way EveryDollar beats Mint is in the quality of its design. Maybe it’s just because Mint hasn’t had a facelift in so long, but EveryDollar has a fresh appeal that you may find engaging. On the other hand, many of us resent it when a “free” offer lures us into its costlier cousin. It’s hard not to think that at $99 a pop every year, Ramsey is the big winner here.

You Need A Budget (YNAB)

At $5 a month or $50 for a year, you’ll have to put YNAB in your budget expense category. For those who favor a very hands-on approach, the cost may be worth it. YNAB claims that it can help you find money you may have missed, because it forces you to categorize every expense yourself, rather than doing it automatically like Mint. 

Each day (or however often is necessary), you’ll import and assign a tag to each expense. The idea is that you’ll stay focused and disciplined because you have to account for every dollar. YNAB is also serious about protecting your data, and you can find their security protocols here.  

YNAB doesn’t anticipate monthly expenses like Mint does. Instead, you start with how much money you currently have and then begin importing transactions. The app will only import them for you if you ask it to. The basis of YNAB is a zero-sum budget, accounting for every last dollar. It may be a good choice for someone having issues with regularly going over budget. Rather than anticipating your budget, YNAB takes it a day at a time and forces you to make adjustments as you go. Mint allows you to track expenses with minimal effort after setup, while YNAB buries your nose in every expense. 

YNAB has a tool to help you save for goals, but it works a little differently than the one in Mint. For YNAB, you choose one of three options: saving a specific total amount, saving enough to achieve your goal by a certain date, or choosing an end date and goal amount to allow YNAB to tell you the amount you’ll need to save per month to succeed. This sounds doable until you realize YNAB won’t, say, automatically calculate the dollar amount of interest on a credit purchase you’re paying off. 

Another difference between YNAB and Mint is their focus. Mint shows you your total financial status, while YNAB focuses like a laser on your monthly budget and spending. YNAB won’t show you your credit score, nor will it tabulate your net worth or value hard assets such as real estate or a car.

Like Mint, YNAB works on various platforms, including the web, Android and iOS, so you can access it from a desktop computer, laptop or your smartphone.

Click below for the other articles in the September 2018 Senior Spirit


Health – Seven Top Services Medicare Doesn’t Cover


Money – How the New Tax Law Influence Charitable Giving


Lifestyle – MYTHBUSTER: Too Old to Learn?


Coffee Break – Looking at People over 100 for Clues to Longevity


Famous & 65

Sources:
https://www.nerdwallet.com/blog/finance/budgeting-saving-tools/
https://scottalanturner.com/everydollar-review-everydollar-vs-mint-comparison/
https://lifehacker.com/budgeting-software-showdown-mint-vs-you-need-a-budget-1764607246
https://www.ftc.gov/faq/consumer-protection/get-my-free-credit-report
https://www.usatoday.com/story/money/personalfinance/2017/12/21/fico-vs-vantagescore-5-differences-you-should-understand/964591001/
https://www.youneedabudget.com/
Blog posting provided by Society of Certified Senior Advisors
www.csa.us

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