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Health Matters

This is at least the second YouTube health influencer whom I tend to trust who is backing Astaxanthin supplementation. The other is my fave health YouTuber, Rimon (Wellness Messiah). As I posted elsewhere, but apparently not on this thread, I have been subcribing to a monthly supply of AX3 brand Astaxanthin which has research scientists behind it who have been interviewed by Rimon. I take 24mg (two tablets - double the basic recommendation) daily but can't vouch that it's having any beneficial effect.

 
Well done - for a small fee I'd poke her.
Just started moving around a couple of 10kg kettle bells myself - bit late in life. Fend off sarcopenia, self toilet to my day of death is my intoxicating ambition.

I follow this 70 yo on X, great story.

 
I think this proposal would make a HUGE impact on the health of older adults and many other people as well.
Elegant. simple, practical and very do able.

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A data scientist named Erin Rolandsen has started a business called Angel Assist to find people to act as live-in helpers for mainly elderly people who want to keep living at home but need a bit of help.

The deal is that the "helpful housemate" agrees to do 14 hours of active helping per week — shopping, cleaning, gardening — in return for free board and food. It's also expected that they would sleep there at night in case something happens. The person can work full time as well as do the 14 hours of helping.

The idea has a number of benefits: it relieves the government from paying for a home care package, which can run to thousands of dollars; it keeps people out of nursing homes; it uses a spare bedroom in a house that is too big; and it takes someone out of the rental market.

The live-in helpers are often women aged over 50 who are "housing insecure", sometimes homeless.

Erin asked the government to pay the one-off $2,999 fee to help find the "helpful housemate" as part of the home care package system, but was turned down flat, even though it would be much cheaper.

Chalmers can have that idea for nothing, without having to pay my airfare to Canberra.
 
Allulose again, this time from Dr Ben Bikman whom you can look up and seems very credible to me. I've been using it for quite a while, sometimes alternating with glycine or inulin for sweetness in coffee and tea. Allulose reputedly doesn't spike blood glucose and as far as I know has little effect on insulin. Could also be a GLP-1 agonist? Haven't heard the bit about competing with fructose for uptake by the liver before. So far so good - haven't had any cause to doubt its efficacy yet.



 
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