Health: Brothers, do you go to the doctor every year for a physical?

Do you take FULL advantage of your medical insurance?

  • Yes

    Votes: 125 66.8%
  • No

    Votes: 62 33.2%

  • Total voters
    187

playahaitian

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Arts & Entertainment
https://abc7ny.com/society/hip-hop-...es-his-vision-in-fight-with-diabetes/5653484/

Hip-Hop pioneer Doctor Dre loses his vision in fight with diabetes
4325254431.jpg


Episode 253: Segment 3, Former co-host of MTV's "Yo! MTV Raps" opens up about his battle with diabetes.

Tuesday, October 29, 2019 11:17AM
New York (WABC) -- A celebrated hip-hop-oriented entertainer and educator, Andre "Doctor Dre" Brown long ago established himself as a savvy creator of popular culture.

Long Island's Doctor Dre, not to be confused with the West Coast producer and gangster rapper, has made his mark on radio and television, in the movies and in print, working successively as a DJ, composer, talent scout, program host, actor, author, and critic, but he is likely best-known as the co-host with Ed Lover of "Yo! MTV Raps", the tv show that did more than any other to make rap music and hip-hop culture global phenomena.

Doctor Dre is now battling type 2 diabetes, which has already robbed him of a toe and most recently his vision.


 

COINTELPRO

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Arts & Entertainment
https://abc7ny.com/society/hip-hop-...es-his-vision-in-fight-with-diabetes/5653484/

Hip-Hop pioneer Doctor Dre loses his vision in fight with diabetes
4325254431.jpg


Episode 253: Segment 3, Former co-host of MTV's "Yo! MTV Raps" opens up about his battle with diabetes.

Tuesday, October 29, 2019 11:17AM
New York (WABC) -- A celebrated hip-hop-oriented entertainer and educator, Andre "Doctor Dre" Brown long ago established himself as a savvy creator of popular culture.

Long Island's Doctor Dre, not to be confused with the West Coast producer and gangster rapper, has made his mark on radio and television, in the movies and in print, working successively as a DJ, composer, talent scout, program host, actor, author, and critic, but he is likely best-known as the co-host with Ed Lover of "Yo! MTV Raps", the tv show that did more than any other to make rap music and hip-hop culture global phenomena.

Doctor Dre is now battling type 2 diabetes, which has already robbed him of a toe and most recently his vision.




I would recommend getting a blood glucose monitor even if you do not have diabetes. You can go into any drugstore and pick one up really cheap. I can tell if I am getting enough exercise or eating too much food based on the readings over time. You do not have to be a diabetic, taking insulin shots to use one.

Another doctor you should be visiting is the dentist. You can get a simple cheap fillings if they detect your cavities early. As soon as you feel the sensitivity in your teeth, the game is over and you were looking at dental implants, tooth extractions, or root canals which are $3000 easy.


Very good article explaining the dental process.
 

playahaitian

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Chadwick Boseman’s death shed light on colon cancer, but rates remain high among Black people
"The No. 1 thing that came out of his death," one doctor said, was more patients "asking specific questions like, ‘What do I need to look for as symptoms?’"
Chadwick Boseman attends the European premiere of "Black Panther" in London on Feb. 8, 2018.Gareth Cattermole / Getty Images for Disney file


Aug. 28, 2021, 6:00 AM EDT / Updated Aug. 28, 2021, 8:21 AM EDT
By Curtis Bunn
In the year since the actor Chadwick Boseman’s death from colorectal cancer, Mo Jenkins said he considered — but resisted — getting screened for the deadly disease.
Two weeks ago, however, he watched for the second time the film “Black Panther” — Boseman’s most famous role — and the next day he made a doctor’s appointment.

Jenkins’ physician in Indianapolis had implored him to be tested. “I wanted to know if I was OK, but I didn’t want to take the test,” Jenkins, 48, said. He added that he watched the man who had played a superhero in a movie face colon cancer. “A superhero.He looked great. He looked strong. And then . . . he was gone.”
“I don’t know why watching that movie this time hit me like it did. But I made an appointment, and did the screening.”
Jenkins, a human resources manager, said he exhaled when his results came back indicating no signs of cancer. “Totally relieved,” he said. “But the point was to make sure I was OK before it was too late. Chadwick Boseman inspired me to do that.”
When Boseman died at 43, Black doctors had hoped it would be an inflection point for Black people in general, Black men in particular, to get screened for colon cancer, a treatable disease if discovered in time.


Chadwick Boseman’s death sheds new light on increased colon cancer rates
AUG. 31, 202001:56

Doctors who spoke to NBC News said more Black men in their practices are being screened for colorectal cancer since Boseman’s death. Still, there is no quantifiable data to discern whether Black men, overall, have increased screenings.
Still, the reality remains: Black people are 20 percent more likely to get colon cancer than any other race, according to the American Cancer Society, and are 40 percent more likely to die from it. Further, they are more likely to have an advanced stage of colon cancer when diagnosed and have a shorter life span after being diagnosed.
Additionally, according to a report from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, factors contributing to the disproportionately high rate of colorectal cancer in Black people include lower rates of screening, structural racism, social determinants of health and difficulty obtaining available treatment, among others.
Boseman’s death highlighted that public health organizations recommend colon cancer screening at 45 years old instead of 50.
“Most people, when they think of colon cancer, think of someone being old,” said Dr. Saundra Dalton-Smith, an internal medicine physician in Alabama. “You don’t think of someone who was in their early 40s, like Chadwick, definitely not someone who looked as healthy as he did. So, I think it really helps people to wake up to just how easy it is for this particular cancer to be active and do harm in your body without you being aware of it.
Dr. Timothy Quinn.Gary Davis
“And I think that was probably the No. 1 thing that came out of his death because a lot of patients did start asking specific questions like, ‘What do I need to look for as symptoms?’ So, awareness definitely increased.”
However, the doctors said two prevailing factors have offset the influence of Boseman’s death: the coronavirus pandemic and the perceived invasive nature of colon cancer testing.
Stay-at-home mandates as Covid raged in 2020 shut down in-person doctor appointments.
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“I’ve seen a lot more people being screened since Covid restrictions were lifted,” said Dr. Timothy Quinn, a primary care physician in the Jackson, Mississippi, area. “But the pandemic changed a lot last year. A lot of people were skipping their doctor’s appointments, understandably afraid to come to the doctor because of factors like being around people in the waiting room. So that slowed down screenings, which never helps.”
Even if screenings increased among Black people, “we’re still on the low end of the spectrum in totality,” Dalton-Smith said. “Chadwick Boseman had this national profile. He was the Black Panther. He obviously raised awareness, but a lot of times in our community, we don’t want to get the screening because we start thinking about the whole invasiveness part of it when it doesn’t even have to be that.”
Dr. Saundra Dalton-Smith. IChooseMyBestLife.com
Men fret over the idea of having a colonoscopy — a procedure in which a long, flexible tube with a tiny video camera called a colonoscope is inserted into the rectum. The camera allows the doctor to view the inside of the entire colon.
Quinn said he recently had a patient whom he convinced to get screened, but only because he offered him a noninvasive option.
“His first concern was the colonoscopy,” he said. “He was trying to get out of there. I told him, ‘Hold up. You’re good. My hands are in my pockets.’ There’s another way.”
Quinn went on to explain that there is an FDA-approved at-home colon cancer test kit, which uses a stool sample from the patient. The physician would order the kit sent to the patient’s home. The patient would provide the sample, package it and send the kit to a laboratory for testing.
“And he’d receive the results in days,” Quinn said. “I told him this could be a life-changer. And he agreed to it. That was a big deal.”
Nolan-Smith agreed. “The No. 1 thing is, Chadwick Boseman was a kind of pushing point for some people being aware of the severity of the disease,” she said. “The idea now is to use that awareness and let people know that the key deterrent to getting tested — it being invasive — is not something to fear. There are other things you can do that are minimally invasive, like Cologuard, that still are very effective in early prevention.
“We’ve got to a place in medicine, where many of the cancers that used to kill people, can now be treated — if we catch it early enough,” she added. “The problem is, we still have double the death rate in the African American community. And a big part of that is because of not getting the preventative testing. That’s what, a year after losing Chadwick Boseman, we have to get out of it.”
 

playahaitian

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apparently Stephen A Smith nearly died from covid It was why he was out for 3 weeks he had a fever over 103 for over 2 weeks had to be admitted to the hospital and still had difficulty exerting himself. He had pneumonia and now liver damage

If he was not vaccinated doctors say he would have died die. (he MAY have not been boosted)

He is 53 and in good health


@22:30
 

COINTELPRO

Transnational Member
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Sitting behind a desk for 12 hours and working out only one hour is not going to cut it. C-19 hit a steel wall when it breeched my superior immune system. This is real work, not lifting a few times, taking a break for twenty minutes at some gym than sitting for 12 hours.

People are so weak and frail by the time they get to 50, that they fold easy to a virus that is nothing.

apparently Stephen A Smith nearly died from covid It was why he was out for 3 weeks he had a fever over 103 for over 2 weeks had to be admitted to the hospital and still had difficulty exerting himself. He had pneumonia and now liver damage

If he was not vaccinated doctors say he would have died die. (he MAY have not been boosted)

He is 53 and in good health


@22:30
 
Last edited:

COINTELPRO

Transnational Member
Registered
This is why Governor Newsom had to shut down the state due to all of those frail, senior citizen like tech workers at Google, Facebook, and other companies that would have dropped like flies to C-19. I bumped into one of them at a store and broke their bone in their arm, like they had osteoporosis in their late 30's.

C-19 spreading at these companies would have been equivalent to an assisted living center. You have to take special precautions such as remote work.

The women say I feel like a block of steel when they hug me as compared to them.
 

djpolo

Rising Star
Platinum Member
VA ran some test and protein levels were high. Pre diabetic. Protein levels were at dangerous levels. Went to a cancer doc because they thought I had bone cancer. Did bone marrow test, only 10% chance of getting it. That shit scared me so much now I overcompensate to stay healthy, literally. Everyday this is what i put in a gallon of water.



1 tbs Elderberries

1 scoop collagen peptides Type 1-3

Pomegranate powder

3 cups fermented oat groats

1/2 cup Greek homemade yogurt no sugar

1 cup fermented blueberries/raspberries

1 organic fermented apple

16 ounces kefir water

16 ounces ginger/turmeric tonic

8 ounces kombucha

8 ounces Jun

1 tsp black pepper

1 tsp spirilla

1 tsp Ceylon cinnamon

BCAA powder

Spinach powder

Kale powder

Pumpkin powder protein

Green superfood powder “veggies and fruit”

Chicory root

Agave

Cacao powder

Beet root powder

6 tbs hemp seeds

Pea protein powder



Solid food



2 cups of natto

1 cup fermented broccoli

1 piece of fish alternating every other day of 4 ounces of salmon or cod

Coated with green banana flour cooked and sprayed in air fryer



Cacao paste as desired

Fermented apples as a snack if desired


Every, single day......... I will not die from a disease that's preventable; I refuse. Now all my levels are above average. BP 116/67 cholesterol 120 glucose 100 after eating. I stay ready now. Won't catch me slippin ever again. I don't add salt or sugar. My BP at one point was 157/87, not acceptable because that's just living and eating a S.A.D. diet, I can do better. Now I have no cravings for anything except in the morning my fermented apples.
 
Last edited:

playahaitian

Rising Star
Certified Pussy Poster
VA ran some test and protein levels were high. Pre diabetic. Protein levels were at dangerous levels. Went to a cancer doc because they thought I had bone cancer. Did bone marrow test, only 10% chance of getting it. That shit scared me so much now I overcompensate to stay healthy, literally. Everyday this is what i put in a gallon of water.



1 tbs Elderberries

1 scoop collagen peptides Type 1-3

Pomegranate powder

3 cups fermented oat groats

1/2 cup Greek homemade yogurt no sugar

1 cup fermented blueberries/raspberries

1 organic fermented apple

16 ounces kefir water

16 ounces ginger/turmeric tonic

8 ounces kombucha

8 ounces Jun

1 tsp black pepper

1 tsp spirilla

1 tsp Ceylon cinnamon

BCAA powder

Spinach powder

Kale powder

Pumpkin powder protein

Green superfood powder “veggies and fruit”

Chicory root

Agave

Cacao powder

Beet root powder

6 tbs hemp seeds

Pea protein powder



Solid food



2 cups of natto

1 cup fermented broccoli

1 piece of fish alternating every other day of 4 ounces of salmon or cod

Coated with green banana flour cooked and sprayed in air fryer



Cacao paste as desired

Fermented apples as a snack if desired


Every, single day......... I will not die from a disease that's preventable; I refuse. Now all my levels are above average. BP 116/67 cholesterol 120 glucose 100 after eating. I stay ready now. Won't catch me slippin ever again. I don't add salt or sugar. My BP at one point was 157/87, not acceptable because that's just living and eating a S.A.D. diet, I can do better. Now I have no cravings for anything except in the morning my fermented apples.

appreciate you!
 

*Marcus Graham*

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
There's history of prostate cancer & heart disease in my family so shit'chea I go get my annual physical. It helps that both my docs are black men and I went to high school with my cardiologist...
 

Mrfreddygoodbud

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Best doctors in the world are in the US. More like US men dont go to the doctor.

its bullshit in the us everybody is a fuckin specialist, to medical bill yo ass to death..

if you ask me, Cuban doctors collectively much better and treating patients without

sending muthafuckas to a specialist for every fuckin thing...

If you aint rich you are NOT getting the BEST medical care or

phramaceuticals in this country, in fact your role is to pretty much

be a labrat for the muthafuckas who got the funds
 

playahaitian

Rising Star
Certified Pussy Poster
How do you learn this? What kind of test needs to be ran for this?

I only know a little cause my dad has it and I have had to deal with medical geneticists (more for blood). I assume they could do a genetic test for mutations and find the markers for Alzheimer's and probably only if you are showing early signs - something I was worried about recently. You should talk to your PCP about it if you got a family history and showing signs. If not I wouldn't worry about it.
 
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