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Topics

Skin Saver – Dermatologist Checkups Can Find, Prevent Cancer

Linda Gardner of Aurora wears a hat in the sun, even in the pool. Unless, it’s midnight swimming, she says with a laugh.

That’s because 15 years ago, her husband Mark noticed an odd spot on her back. On a hunch, she got it checked. Her dermatologist removed it and sent it to the laboratory. It came back precancerous.

“I’m sure it was from those first 20 summers of not using enough sunscreen,” says the fair-skinned redhead who is in her 50s. She now gets regular skin screenings to prevent cancer.

RETIREMENT YEARS AND SUN EXPOSURE

Linda is right, according to her doctor. “Ninety percent of sun exposure starts in first 20 years of your life,” says Dr. Monique Cohn, dermatologist at Advanced Dermatology in Twinsburg. “That’s when you feel no limit on the sun. Then, you get a job and you’re not outside as much.”

Sun exposure may increase during retirement years when activities such as fishing, gardening, boating and motorcycling get folks outdoors for longer hours. Ditching Northeast Ohio for sunnier climates also can expand the exposure.

“Even for adults, it’s worthwhile to be protected. It can still prevent cancers,” Dr. Cohn says. “Especially for men who are now balding and have their whole scalp now exposed, the head is an area we see a lot of pre-cancers developing. They should wear a cap or sunscreen.”

MAKE TIME FOR A CHECKUP

Skin cancer is the most common form of cancer, affecting one in five Americans, reports The American Academy of Dermatology. In 2016, an estimated 10,130 deaths in the United States will be attributed to the more aggressive melanoma cancer, while another 7,130 will be attributed to other forms of skin cancer. Those numbers have more than doubled since 1982.

Tanning beds are considered part of the problem. They have stronger skin damaging rays and should be avoided, Dr.

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Travel Plans? – Get Your Pet Set for a Kennel

I f you have pets and plan to travel, you may be considering a place to board your pet while you’re gone. Here are five practical tips when planning to board your pet:

1 Update your pet’s core vaccines, plus those required by the boarding facility and as recommended by your veterinarian.

2 Make sure your pet is free of parasites such as fleas and intestinal parasites. Your veterinarian can help you manage these for your pet.

3 Get to know the boarding facility staff so you can feel that your pet is in the hands of people who care about your pet like you do.

4 Understand what your pet’s experience will be like during your absence.

5 Finally, and most importantly, don’t leave planning to the last possible moment. Make an appointment with your veterinarian and the boarding facility well ahead of time (one month ahead). If you don’t already have a veterinarian or boarding facility, start your research now for a suitable fit for you and your pet.

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Turn Your Walk into a Hike – Discover Nature by Foot

The truest sign of life is when something transforms into a more developed outgrowth — such as when a flower bud opens into a blossom, a chrysalis makes way for a butterfly or a walk evolves into a hike.

The Oxford Dictionary defines walking as “moving at a regular and fairly slow pace by lifting and setting down each foot in turn, never having both feet off the ground at once.”

On the other hand, hiking is “walking for a long distance, especially across country or in the woods.”

Local hiker and “60 Hikes within 60 Miles of Cleveland” author Diane Stresing simplifies it: “Walking is for transportation while hiking is for leisure exploration.” The biggest distinction is the sense of discovery inherent in hiking. You can walk around your block for predictable exercise on predictable terrain over a predictable surface. When hiking, you explore a new trail in a changed environment, and that can make your blood pump stronger even before taking your first step.

STARTING WITH A WALK

H. Michael (Mike) McCormick, 78, of Cleveland’s Brooklyn suburb, took his “first step” in 1991.

“I really began walking when I quit smoking. It started in the neighborhood, then I moved to the APT (All-Purpose Trail) in the Cleveland Metroparks.”

McCormick’s next step came with retirement at age 62 in 2000, after a career as a newspaper pressman at The Plain Dealer. Searching for some new pastime, he began leading hikes for school children at the Cuyahoga Valley National Park.

Soon he was also leading city and park tours at Cleveland Metroparks’ CanalWay Reservation.

Hiking was a great reason for McCormick to get up in the morning. Not only were groups depending on him for leadership, but “the obvious benefit is health and strength,” he says.

“The biggest benefit was when I found out I had colon cancer.

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Get Happy- Lift Weights, Lift Your Spirit

For most people, much of what they do is aimed at improving happiness.

Careers can provide personal satisfaction and enhanced self-esteem from earning money and providing for others.

The same is true for many recreational activities, fulfilling marriages and some aspects of parenting (as a parent of three, I know firsthand that it’s not always fun, however).

Achieving happiness is often challenging. About one in six Americans experience anxiety for 15 to 30 days each month. Anxiety often results in feeling nervous, afraid or apprehensive. About 7 percent experience depression annually. Americans spend about $50 billion each year to treat depression. Anxiety and depression can lead to insomnia, pain, social withdrawal and poor health.

THE EXERCISE OPTION

Medications as well as psychotherapy can be effective for treating depression and anxiety. However, researchers from the University of Georgia studied another option: exercise. They found seven studies involving strength training in which anxiety levels were a measured outcome. Most people in the studies had moderate anxiety; two studies had people with high levels. All of the studies found that strength training reduced anxiety.

The research team looked at the effects of activity on depression. As a whole, physical activity reduces depression among all types of people (older adults, college students, cancer patients), Regardless of the initial depression level, strength training significantly cut depression. They found it was much more effective than low-intensity aerobic activities for reducing depression symptoms.

This leads to the next question: How does strength training improve mental health? Strength training increases the production of neurotransmitters, which are the chemical substances that send signals between nerve cells. One neurotransmitter is dopamine, which is responsible for delivering the message of joy that we feel after winning a game or receiving a gift. Strength training may also help create new blood vessels in the brain.

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Ask the Orthopedist – My Shoulder Hurts

QUESTION: “The pain in my shoulder keeps me awake at night. What causes this, and what can I do?”

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ANSWER: One of the most common complaints I hear in my office is that a patient cannot sleep due to shoulder pain. It may seem that no matter what side you try to sleep on, it still hurts. Your shoulder might feel stiff, or a dull pain might become worse when you raise your arm or shift from side to side. You also might feel a muscle spasm or numbness and tingling in your fingers.

The shoulder is one of the most agile joints of the body, allowing movement in all directions. Because of this, it can be more susceptible to injury. Painful conditions also might arise from overuse because of a specific activity or shoulder motion that you make repetitively. Racquet and ball-throwing sports are some of the main culprits, but any repetitive shoulder motion can cause an overuse injury.

Typically, shoulder pain that gets worse at night might be caused by bursitis, tendinopathy or an injury to the rotator cuff.

Bursitis is an inflammation of the bursa, which is a fluid-filled pad that provides a cushion to the bones of the joint. When injured, fluid in the bursa increases, and this swelling can be painful.

Biceps tendinopathy is usually the result of long-term overuse and deterioration of the biceps tendon that connects muscles and bones in the shoulder joint. Tendons may also get less flexible as we age and are more prone to injury. Tendinopathy is often part of the aging process. Biceps tendinopathy can give sharp pains in the arm with certain motions like reaching behind you.

Rotator cuff injuries usually involve a tear in these tendons. The rotator cuff includes four muscles that come together as tendons and connect your humerus bone to the shoulder blade.

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Honey of a Hobby – Urban Beekeeping is a Sweet Hobby for Retiree

When Larry Theurer’s garden in Old Brooklyn wasn’t yielding as many vegetables as it used to, Larry and his wife Brenda recalled a PBS television special that showed an elderly Asian man hand-pollinating his pear trees in Japan. The area had lost all its honeybees from pollution.

The next day, Larry tried his hand at pollinating his own garden with a cotton-tipped swab dipped in water; the result was amazing.

“My garden exploded,” Larry says. “The big difference was in the yields. So my wife and I decided to find out more about honeybees. We checked out various beekeeper organizations in Medina County, Lorain County and a few more counties. That year, 2009, we also went to the Cuyahoga County Fair and met people from the Greater Cleveland Beekeepers Association. The association was only about six months old at the time.”

Larry and Brenda began attending beekeeper meetings at the Rocky River Nature Center. “The club was very warm and receptive,” he says. “And nobody wanted your annual dues up front until you were sure this was something you’d like to do. They genuinely wanted to see you succeed as a beekeeper.”

Larry is now president of the GCBA, one of the youngest and largest clubs in Northeast Ohio. Members meet the second Wednesday of the month with educational and networking sessions. The association holds an annual bee conference. This year’s event featured nationally known naturalist beekeeper Ross Conrad, a feature writer for Bee Culture Magazine, which is published in part by A.I. Root Company in Medina.

A POST-RETIREMENT HOBBY

Larry, 60, who retired in 2015 after 31 years with Cleveland Public Power, considers himself nearly a full-time beekeeper. Hives can require constant attention to keep up with the ever-producing honey yields, to protect hives from predators and to prevent colony collapse from pests such as varroa mites and hive beetles.

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Niagara-on-the-Lake – Looking For (And Finding) Adventure On a Motorcycle

How do two people — one who is 6 feet 2 inches tall — fit three days of clothing, including theater attire, onto one motorcycle? And, with a black Honda Gold Wing motorcycle — a comfy cruiser — we’re the lucky ones with a trunk and two saddlebags.

The secret: dress in black, wear things twice and roll everything. All told, we had enough space to bring home four bottles of Canadian wine.

ON THE ROAD

We travel by motorcycle when possible to wring every sensual experience from a trip. Riding sensitizes. You see, smell, hear and feel deliberately.

Farmers talk about the influence of subtle climate changes. Check: We feel temperature shifts. Fields smell luscious and ripe during harvest season? Check: We smell them. Niagara Falls’ roar was apparent to us earlier than when we’re car captives. We see details in the seasonal shifts of wildflowers that dress the median strip.

Plus, motorcycles often enjoy better (and cheaper) parking. This was ano-brainer of a trip for us.

THE FALLS AND MORE

The Niagara region is much more than the Falls. It’s a gateway to cultural experiences — food, wine, theater — on the Niagara Peninsula between lakes Erie and Ontario.

While the Queen Elizabeth Way highway speeds visitors between destinations and navigation systems may select it, the Niagara Parkway is the better connector. The 14-mile stretch between the Falls and the Lake parallels the river and offers access to prime destinations such as the Niagara Parks Botanical Gardens, Floral Clock, Niagara Whirlpool and a few of the region’s wineries.

We’ve done this trip before, so we have a pattern. Leave work early and launch at mid-day. Hug Lake Erie’s south shore roads on the journey north. Enter Ontario, Canada. Then follow the Niagara Parkway to Lake Ontario and Niagara-on-the-Lake. Park our stuff at the hotel or bed and breakfast, and begin our adventures.

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Word Power – Book Bank Invests In Kids’ Future

In a downtown warehouse, thousands of gently used children’s books are sorted and boxed by an army of volunteers. Their goal? To get 100,000 free books distributed monthly to children in need. In their first three months, they’ve passed out 61,718 books.

The Cleveland Kids’ Book Bank is a nonprofit group established by Judy Immerman Payne and Judi Kovach. Since opening in February, they’ve distributed more than 88,000 free, gently used, quality children’s books to Clevelanders. Among the program’s goals: Help teach at-risk new parents the importance of reading to their babies; teach family childcare providers to read with the children in their care; and establish creative youth programming.

In addition, 1,700 Cleveland public school students received books from AARP Experience Corps tutors, which is locally sponsored by Greater Cleveland Volunteers. The program recruits people 50 and older to tutor students.

As part of the program through a partnership with Discover Books, the nation’s second-largest online bookseller, the Kids’ Book Bank is repurposing hundreds of thousands of books that would otherwise end up in a recycling center.

The more books volunteers sort, the more that will get into the hands of kids in need. Interested in volunteering? Visit kidsbookbank.org or call Judy Immerman Payne at 216-417-1803.

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