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From YouTube: Focus on Health with Dr Jonathan Liss 12 17 2020
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A
Welcome
to
focus
on
health
now,
yes,
I
know
I'll
give
a
teaser,
I'm
gonna
give
another
one
this
time.
This
is
actually
the
first
time
that
I've
had
this
topic
or
discuss
this
topic
on
my
show
we're
talking
about
eight
or
nine
years.
So
you
know
it
must
be
important.
So
don't
you
go
nowhere,
see
you
on
the
other
end
of
this.
A
Welcome
back
to
focus
on
health
all
right,
I
know,
you've
been
in
suspense
you've
been
nervous
wondering
whether
you
answered
64,
000
question
to
my
right.
I
have
dr
jonathan
liss
and
he
has
some
really
really
really
good
information
for
you
and
so
doctor.
If
you
can
take
the
time
and
let
everybody
know
something
about
you
where
you're
you're
you're
at
brick
and
mortar,
the
google
stuff
and
all
that
technological
stuff
and
your
ad
and
your
phone
number
cause
they're
gonna
want
to
contact
your
office
after
they
see
what
you
have
to
say.
A
A
C
Honor
to
join
your
audience
today,
I
feel
so
privileged.
The
basic
contact
information
is
I'm
dr
jonathan
liss
liss.
I
run
the
columbus
memory
center
on
the
north
side
of
town.
It's
next
to
the
social
security
office,
off
of
double
churches
and
veterans.
Parkway,
our
website
is
columbusmemorycenter.com
and
we
are
here
today
we're
going
to
end
up
talking
about
memory
and
memory
disorders,
but
the
message
I
really
want
to
get
to
everybody
is
that
we
have
to
take
brain
health
seriously.
C
A
Well,
I'm
gonna
just
be
honest
with
you
doctor.
The
people
in
the
community
are
gonna,
be
grateful
to
you
for
all
your
research
and
all
that
you've
done
for
for
something
and
then
counselor
mimi
woodson.
You
heard
her
statement.
Yes,
I'm
going
to
allude
to
that
and
we're
going
to
also
talk
about
why
this
is
so
important,
and
so
I'm
going
to
pass
the
time
to
you
to
control
the
slides
all
right.
C
Well,
we've
got:
we've
got
our
first
slide,
which
is
just
the
the
title
slide
of
understanding
memory
memory
is
a
incredibly
complex
issue
that
we're
going
to
try
to
make
very
simple
today,
because
the
brain
is
an
incredibly
complex
issue
that
we
can
also
make
simple
today.
So
let's
go
on
to
the
next
slide
and
just
to
point
out,
our
mission
is
to
defeat
alzheimer's
disease
by
maintaining
independence.
So
we've
got
two
different
prongs
to
this.
We
are
working
so
hard
to
actually
end
alzheimer's
disease.
That's
the
major
form
of
memory
disorder.
C
It's
not
the
only
one
we're
going
to
talk
about
a
few
others,
but
for
those
that
have
alzheimer's
disease
and
we
can't
keep
it
from
ever
starting.
Our
job
is
to
maintain
as
much
independence
as
possible,
maintain
the
individual
keep
that
person
as
the
head
of
their
family,
the
head
of
their
community,
the
the
go-to
person
in
their
in
their
circle,
and
that's
our
that's
our
goal
and
so
we're
doing
everything
we
can
possible
to
make
that
happen.
C
We're
doing
a
lot
of
world-class
research
to
slow
down
this
disease
and
we're
certainly
using
all
the
proven
tools
that
are
available
to
us.
So
let's
go
to
the
next
slide.
If
we
could
so
there's
generally
three
things
that
people
discuss
with
memory,
the
first
one
is
that
kind
of
worried
well
moment
the
senior
moment
right
and-
and
you
know
certainly-
I
didn't
name
this.
These
are
older
folks
that
came
up
with
this
charming
thing.
They
can't
come
up
with
a
word.
A
memory
is
a
little
slow
to
come.
They
want
to
get
a
concept.
B
C
You
know
bob
you
always
you're
the
greatest
order.
I've
ever
known,
I
don't
think
you'll
ever
you
could
be
200
years
old.
I
don't
think
it'll
hit
you,
but
for
the
rest
of
us
we
do
actually,
you
know,
try
and
get
a
word
out
sometimes,
and
I
want
people
to
out
there
to
know
that.
That's
a
normal
part
of
aging,
it's
even
not
necessarily
aging.
C
I've
had
some
of
that
my
whole
life,
but
so
when
you
struggle
over
finding
a
word
or
or
somebody
familiar
to
you,
the
name
is
just
not
coming
straight
to
your
head
or
you're
driving
and
you
go
from
point
a
to
point
b
and
you
don't
really
remember
how
you
got
from
a
to
point
from
point
a
to
point
b
because
you've
done
it
a
thousand
times
those
are
senior
moments,
those
aren't
illness.
Those
are
everything
so
take
a
deep
breath.
A
So
I
told
I'm,
I
told
you
you're
going
to
be
getting
some
really
good
information
and
before
I
forget
this
here
at
the
end
of
this
show,
the
doctor
has
written
a
a
booklet
that
I
have
passed
so
many
of
them
out
that
have
been
a
blessing
in
case
you
might
forget
what
the
doctor's
saying
now.
That's
really
going
to
be
a
blessing
to
you,
so
I'm
going
to
try
to
make
myself
a
little
I'll
put.
I
said
I
do
little
mental
mental
things.
C
C
Really
easy,
but
we
do
have
copies
out
of
brick
and
mortar,
feel
free
to
stop
by
and
get
that
and
we're
going
to
talk
about
actually
simple
ways
to
check
your
memory,
which
will
require
stopping
by
somebody's
brick
of
morning.
Mortar
we'll
talk
about
that.
Just
a
second.
So
the
first
category
that
we
want
to
talk
about
was
was
senior
moments,
because
I
want
everybody
to
go.
Take
a
deep
breath.
C
We
all
have
those
moments
where
we
don't
remember
quite
the
way
we
should
right
the
the
and
so
those
are
lapses
of
attention,
a
mis-thought,
a
word
finding
problem:
let's
go
to
the
next
slide,
which
is
now
a
really
important
general
concept
and
a
little
bit
harder
to
get
to
which
is
called
mild,
cognitive
impairment,
mci,
and
I'm
going
to
tell
you
that
this
is
a
difficult
concept,
because
we
have
not
done
a
good
job,
even
training
other
doctors
in
this
okay.
C
Relatively
new
concept-
it's
maybe
10
years
old
and
when
it
first
came
out,
we
didn't
we
kind
of
launched
it.
When
I
say
we
as
a
medical
profession,
we
launched
it,
but
we
didn't
have
a
good
definition
of
it.
I
think
the
best
way
to
define
mild
cognitive
impairment
is
simply
to
say
not
at
the
top
of
your
game
that
he
or.
B
B
A
C
Just
not
top
of
your
game,
so
if
you're,
not
on
top
of
your
game,
you
would
qualify
for
this
diagnosis
as
a
general
umbrella
of
mild,
cognitive
impairment
and
then
somebody
like
me,
a
memory
specialist
like
me,
is
supposed
to
help
you
figure
out.
Why
you're
not
at
the
top
of
your
game,
many
of
them,
I
would
say
frankly,
most
of
the
time
they're
correctable
most
of
the
time
they
have
things
to
do
with
concentration,
that
a
person
has
some
depression,
so
they
can't
think
straight.
C
Anxiety,
so
they
can't
think
straight
or
they
have
a
pain
syndrome,
so
they
can't
think
straight
or
they
have
sleep
apnea.
There's
lots
and
lots
of
things.
Medication,
side
effects
we
as
a
doctor,
I'm
guilty
of
it,
just
like
all
my
colleagues
adding
too
many
medicines.
So
so
you
know
sometimes
we're
trying
to
do
our
best,
but
the
overall
collection
of
medicines
make
us
less
well
than
we
should
be
right.
C
So
we
have
to
look
at
all
those
things
and
by
the
way
each
person
needs
to
be
in
charge
of
their
own
health
care,
so
make
certain.
You
know
why
you're
on
each
of
your
medicines
make
certain
that
you've
discussed
each
one
with
your
doctor,
because
maybe
not
all
of
them
are
necessary,
but
anyway
those
things
are
all
possible
cause
of
mild
cognitive
impairment
and
the
area
that
I
particularly
specialize
in
is
prodromal
alzheimer's
disease,
on
the
pathway
towards
alzheimer's.
C
This
was
the
major
breakthrough
in
medicine
about
10
or
15
years
ago.
Before,
when
somebody
came
in
to
see
me,
I
would
say:
gosh,
I'm
a
little
worried
about
you.
Let's,
let's
look
year
to
year,
let's
see
how
you're
doing
those
kinds
of
things
now
because
of
the
breakthroughs
in
medical
technology,
we
can
actually
determine
whether
somebody
is
on
the
pathway
to
alzheimer's
disease
before
they
get
it.
We
can
actually
painlessly.
Look
into
the
brain.
It's
a
remarkable
achievement.
A
C
A
C
Have
someone
we
can
look,
I
mean
there's
so
many
different
ways
to
do
it
and
we
don't
always
have
to.
We
have
lots
of
different
tools,
but,
but
you
know
in
this
day
and
age
just
to
give
you
a
sense
without
pain
without
risk
to
a
patient.
We
can
measure
the
weight
of
their
brain.
We
can
look
at
the
different
sections
that
are
responsible
for
memory.
We
can
tell
how
thick
they
are.
We
can
certainly
always
have
been
able
to
see
her
for
many
years
been
able
to
see
a
stroke
or
things
like
that.
C
A
Is
awesome
yeah,
it
is
awesome
and
that's
an
awesome
breakthrough.
It
is
and
information
really
that
our
public
needs
to
know
and
don't
have
access
to.
You
know
what
I'm
getting
kind
of
happy.
This
is
good
news
here
that
we're
hearing
from
dr,
and
so
you
all
know
he
is
talking
about
being
at
the
top
of
the
game.
He
is
at
the
or
the
top
of
the
game
to
alzheimer's
research.
We're
going
to
take
a
break
right
now
and
we'll
see
you
on
the
other
end
of
this.
A
C
You
are
the
most
humble
person
in
the
world,
you
are
the
professor,
you
are
the
professor,
so
I'm
not
doing
that
if
we
were
going
through
our
categories.
We
talked
about
senior
moments,
we
talked
about
mild,
cognitive
impairment
and
now
we're
going
to
talk
about
dementia,
that's
the
term
that
most
people
know
and
then
everybody
always
asks
doctor.
What's
the
difference
between
dementia
and
alzheimer's
disease?
Okay-
and
I
know
that
we're
going
to
say
it
500
times
my
mother-
may
she
rest
in
peace.
She
she
was
not
demented.
C
Dementia
is
a
category
remember,
I
said
mild.
Cognitive
impairment
is
a
category,
it's
a
category
and
then
there's
an
umbrella
and
your
and
things
are
underneath
it.
So
dementia
means
that
a
person
has
thinking
troubles.
Okay,
they
could
be
correctable
or
not
correctable.
They
typically
involve
short-term
memory
loss
right.
So
not
who
was
I
as
a
child?
Not
how
did
I
marry
or
how
my
kids
were
raised,
but
did
I
eat
a
moment
ago
did?
Did
I
ever
take
my
medications.
C
What
the
doctor
said
to
me
yesterday
didn't
when
I've
talked
to
my
daughter.
Did
I
call
back
and
do
it
again?
Okay,
short-term
memory
issues
so
typically
affects
short-term
memory
issues.
It
affects
your
life
in
some
other
way,
such
as
the
inability
to
do
some
of
the
things
that
you
used
to
do
well,
balance
a
checkbook
drive
to
drive
to
the
grocery
store,
make
a
recipe,
something
that
takes.
You
know
kind
of
a
collection
of
thoughts.
We
call
that
executive
functioning
and
it
impacts
your
life,
that's
dementia.
C
So
if
we
look
at
dementia,
you
could
have
dementia
in
a
hundred
different
ways.
We
all
unfortunately
know
that
poor
kid
that
was
involved
in
a
terrible
accident
when
he
was
12
and
he
was
never
right
again.
Yes,
that
kid
is
demented
right,
but
that
kid
as
he
grows
to
be
a
man
is
not
going
to
be
any
worse
than
he
was
when
he's
12..
He
got
that
terrible
thing
at
12
and
that's
who
he
is
now.
Alzheimer's
disease
is
a
progressive
loss
of
short-term
memory
that
affects
your
abilities.
C
So
with
alzheimer's
disease,
you
have
the
short-term
memory
deficit
and
it
gradually
gets
worse
over
time.
You
could
have
you
could
have
dementia
from
overuse
of
alcohol
or
drugs.
You
could
have
it
from
other
diseases
like
parkinson's
disease
or
occasionally,
multiple
sclerosis,
but
two-thirds
of
all
older
folks
that
have
dementia
have
alzheimer's
disease.
So
let
me
do
it
slowly.
Dementia
is
a
category
one
of
those
category.
One
of
those
lists
under
dementia
is
alzheimer's
disease.
C
Okay,
just
like,
if
you
play
sports,
if
you're
a
sports
person,
then
you
are
a
sports
person,
but
it
doesn't
say
which
sport
you're
in
right.
So
if
you
have
dementia,
you
have
dementia,
but
it
doesn't
say
which
one
two-thirds
of
those.
If
you're
an
older
adult,
is
going
to
be
alzheimer's
disease.
So
and
that's
what
we
specialize
in
and
that's
the
disease
that
we
need
to
stop
more
than
any
other
because
it
affects
so
many
people
right
and
it.
B
C
More
and
more
common,
as
we
age
next
slide
when
you're
ready.
So
that's
just
listing
the
issues
of
of
alzheimer's.
Excuse
me
of
dementia:
let's
go
to
the
next
slide
too,
and
it
just
lists
his
stages.
So
with
mild
disease,
a
person
with
mild
disease
can
usually
cover
it
up.
The
family
often
doesn't
want
to
face
the
issue.
Usually
a
lot
of
humor
is
played
right.
C
And
so,
if
you
or
your
loved
one
is
having
some
small
problems
and
you're
and
you're
older,
you
know
older.
What
do
we
define
that?
As
I
don't
know
above
65,
that's
something
that
should
be
checked
out.
It
may
simply
be
a
concentration
deficit,
a
senior
moment,
mild
cognitive
impairment,
but
if
you're
on
the
pathway
towards
alzheimer's
disease,
that's
when
you
want
to
do
something
about
it.
C
Right
and
then
moderate
stage
disease,
typically
people
know
it.
In
other
words,
you
can't
hide
it
anymore,
you're
still
very
functional,
but
somebody
may
have
to
help
with
certain
things.
You
know
balance
the
checkbook
or
watch
a
little
bit
in
the
kitchen,
those
kinds
of
things
and
then
with
severe
disease.
That's
the
people
that
we
all
know
need
tremendous
care,
and
we-
and
let
me
just
say
this-
pops,
because
you've
spent
your
life
helping
a
community.
I
mean
everything
you
do
is
helping
our
families
in
columbus.
C
A
Of
one
I
want-
and
I
see
that
as
thank
you
so
much
dr
list
for
bringing
that
up
because
that's
a
reality.
I
see
it
in
the
community
affecting
a
lot
of
putting
a
lot
of
people's
lives
on
lockdown
lockdown.
They
don't
mind
it,
but
you
I
look
at
these
individuals
and
I
see
that
their
lives
on
a
standstill
and
we're
going
to
talk,
because
I
know
council
woodson
shared
some
things
that
we
can.
I
can
talk
on
tv
that
if
you
you
it's
a
slow,
it's
a
slow.
C
C
We've
got
to,
we
just
have
to
help
them.
We
got
to
get
the
resources
to
help
and
let
me
say
pops
that
only
50
of
people
and
families
that
have
alzheimer's
disease
get
diagnosed
and
out
of
those
50
only
about
10
or
12
percent,
ever
go
to
the
alzheimer's
association
for
all
of
their
free
help.
You
know
it's
all
free
so,
but.
A
C
I
think
it
might
even
be
the
next
slide
pops,
let's
see,
can
we
go
to
the
next
slide?
It
might
be
okay.
Well,
first
of
all,
let
me
just
say
this
take
a
deep
breath
that
one
third
of
all
dementias
are
preventable
one-third.
C
Now,
that's
huge,
it
is
it's
in
your
hands,
it's
in
my
hands
to
take
care
of
our
brains,
and
so
let's
go
to
the
next
slide.
I
just
put
up
a
few
things
that
makes
sense.
Everybody
knows
this,
but
not
everybody
practices
this.
So
our
motto,
first
of
all,
at
the
columbus
memory
center
is
be
smarter
tomorrow
than
you
were
yesterday,
all
right.
C
A
C
C
C
Next
stuff,
on
the
slide,
really
talks
about
all
the
stuff
that
everybody
knows
about,
and
they
kind
of
don't
want
to
hear
about
it,
but
it's
just
whatever
is
good,
for
the
heart
is
good
for
the
brain,
so
not
smoking
taking
care
of
your
blood
pressure,
your
cholesterol,
your
diabetes,
getting
some
reasonable
exercise
and
by
the
way
I
got
some
good
news
about
exercise,
at
least
as
it
relates
to
alzheimer's
disease.
All
we're
asking
for
alzheimer's
care
is
a
20-minute
brisk
walk
three
times
per
week.
Okay
are.
C
Yeah,
that's
been
shown
to
actually
help
drain
the
brain
of
the
proteins
that
cause
this
disease.
So
now
that's
awesome,
easy
right.
Yes,
indeed,
if,
as
long
as
it
doesn't
kill
you
from
a
heart
attack,
take
a
brisk
walk
three
times
a
week
right,
you
know
and
then
of
course,
quit
smoking
and
and
start
working
on
these.
These
issues
are
all
solvable.
Okay,
you
just
have
to
decide
that
it's
that
you
are
worth
it
and
you
are
worth
it
right.
That's
exactly!
C
Let's
go
to
the
next
slide
when
you're
ready,
so
the
columbus
memory
project-
and
this
is
something
that
I
have
to
thank
you-
pops,
the
mayors,
both
the
prior
and
the
current
mayor
and
all
of
city
council.
They
have
been
our
partner
along
with
the
state
alzheimer's
association.
C
We
have
been
trying
to
test
every
single
senior's
cognition
for
memory,
loss
and
thinking
loss
for
free
every
year.
So
here's
the
thing-
and
this
is
the
easy
thing
that
right
now
only
12
to
14
percent
of
the
american
population
gets
a
thinking
test
each
year.
We're
talking
about
seniors,
okay
and
a
thinking
test
is
paid
for
by
medicare.
Your
doctor
is
capable
of
providing
it
so
at
your
wellness
check,
please
ask
for
a
thinking
test
as
part
of
your
regular
checkup.
That's
that
it's
there
for
you,
it's
supposed
to
be
there
for
you.
C
We've
made
it
even
easier.
Okay,
in
partnership
with
the
city,
in
partnership
with
the
state,
alzheimer's
association,
we
have
invented
something
called
the
memory
number
it's
the
first
ever
vital
sign
for
the
brain
and
at
the
columbus
memory
center.
You
can
come
in
any
day
that
we're
there
there's
no
appointment
necessary.
There
is
no
cost
and
you
don't
get
a
doctor
out
of
it.
You'll
spend
about
10
minutes
filling
up
paperwork.
The
paperwork
basically
says:
hey
he's,
not
your
doctor.
All
right.
C
Then,
at
the
end
of
that,
you
will
take
a
test-
it's
not
time,
so
you
don't
have
to
be
nervous
about
it
fast
test
takers.
Take
it
15,
minutes,
slow,
test,
taker's
taking
30
minutes,
and
then
you
will
have
your
memory
number
and
what
we
want
you
to
do
is
be
able
to
compare
it
year
to
year.
That
way-
and
this
is
really
important-
pops
as
people
get
older
one
of
the
things
they
talk
about
in
a
group
of
you
know,
let's
just
say,
six
senior
citizens
is
their
memory,
they're
all
kind
of
worried.
C
Has
it
affected
me
right?
If
you
get
your
memory
number
every
year,
you
can
sit
in
that
group,
but
you
don't
have
to
worry
because
you'll
be
looking
at
your
memory
number
from
the
year
before
the
year
before
the
year
before.
You'll
know
that
you're,
okay,
right,
that's
awesome,
isn't
it
and
if
you're,
not
okay,
if
it's
slipping
a
little
bit,
probably
it's
something
correctable,
what
a
great
opportunity
to
correct
it
and
if
by
gosh
you
end
up
with
on
the
pathway
towards
alzheimer's
disease,
we've
got
more
and
more
things
to
do
about
it.
A
Doctor,
while
we're
here
and
because
we're,
I
should
have
done
this
earlier,
I
want
you
to
look
in
there
and
tell
everyone
how
that
they
can
get
in
touch
with
you.
Let
me
tell
you
why
I'm
saying
that,
because
I'm
I
know,
I'm
gonna,
hear
after
this
program
pop
song,
I
I
want
to
be
able
to
take
that.
How
do
I
do
it?
So
I
want
you
to
be
able
to
look
in
there
and
tell
them
how
to
contact
you
again
where
your
brick
and
mortar
is
at.
C
C
Right
next
to
it
and
and
our
phone
number
seven
zero,
six,
three,
two
seven
four
thousand,
so
we
got
an
easy
phone
number
to
remember.
But
let
me
just
say:
the
memory
number
is
easy.
Come
in
at
your
convenience,
come
in
when
you're
having
a
good
day
and
just
pop
in
say.
I
want
to
take
my
memory
number
and
before
the
pandemic
and
we'll
do
it
again.
C
After
the
pandemic,
we
were
actually
making
this
we're,
taking
it
to
churches
and
leaving
the
the
apparatus
in
churches,
so
that
people
could
do
it
any
time
they
want
in
their
local
community.
We
had
to
back
off
right
because
of
the
pandemic,
but
we'll
be
back
out
in
your
community
center.
If
you
want
the
memory
number
in
your
community
center
or
your
church,
just
let
us
know
we'll
arrange
it.
A
A
C
And
I
think
people
are
scared.
I
think
you
know,
for
whatever
reason
people
want
to
know
about
their
heart.
Get
a
heart
attack
they'll
go
to
the
hospital
right,
but
people
are
scared
of
somebody
saying
that
you're
not
as
sharp
as
you
once
were,
but
the
reality
is
for
so
many
of
you.
We
can
make
you
sharp
again.
C
That
I
just
that
was
a
reminder
that,
after
the
pandemic,
we
come
out
to
churches,
we
come
out
to
community
groups,
we
give
talks
about
lane
just
like
we're
sitting
here.
We
give
those
talks
and
we
have
the
electronic
ability
to,
and
also
the
paper
just
regular
papers
for
people
to
take
the
memory
number
and
in
their
own
location,
without
having
to
come
out
to
our
office.
So
these
are
all
possible.
I
just
want
to
put
that
van
up
to
let
you
know
that
we're
part
of
this
community.
C
B
C
Can
hear
our
voices
sure,
and
so
it's
it's
all
free
you're
all
welcome
to
it.
We
are
so
grateful
to
the
public
for
trusting
us.
We
want
to
reward
that
trust
and
give
back
to
the
community.
C
Than
that,
so
the
the
last
thing
I
want
to
mention
is
memory,
research,
opportunities
and
memory,
research
opportunities-
and
I
say
this-
this
sounds
kind
of
arrogant.
I
don't
want
it
to
be
that
way.
I
don't
mean
I
don't
want
to
sound
like
that
person,
but
I
feel
very
prideful
that
we
bring
world-class
memory
research
to
columbus,
georgia.
C
We
have
the
same
research
and
actually
sometimes
more
research
than
johns
hopkins
mayo
clinic
emory
university
uab,
you
choose
it,
we
offer
the
the
exact
same
trials
and
we
actually
beat
them
all
and
the
reason
why
we
do
is
a
couple
of
things.
One
we
work
hard,
but
so
do
they.
But
number
two
is
that
in
a
community
like
ours,
I
can
touch
everybody
there's
not.
C
Two
degrees
of
separation
between
myself
for
pops,
one
degree
of
separation
between
them,
but
but
we
know
everybody
right
right,
so
we
get
people
and
we
get
them
early
and
we
can
help
them
learn
about
their
brain
health
and
if
they
so
desire
and
want
to
join
our
research
trials,
then
they
have
the
opportunity.
I
will
tell
you
march:
7th
is
a
big
day.
The
first
drug
in
the
history
of
the
world
may
or
may
not.
C
C
March,
7th
we'll
know:
okay,
we
are,
and
we
help
bring
this
drug
to
this
point.
We
have
a
whole
bunch
of
other
drugs
just
like
it
that
we're
working
on
and
rolling
every
day.
And
so,
if
you
have
a
memory
disorder
related
to
alzheimer's
disease,
we
almost
certainly
have
standard
care
plus
research
opportunities
to
do
everything
under
the
sun
that
you
could
get
anywhere
in
the
world
and,
frankly,
here
in
columbus,
more
than
almost
every
other
place
in
the
world
and.
A
A
But
this
is
the
most
important
thing
doctor
that
I
want
you
to
repeat
two
things
and
we're
going
to
close
with
you
giving
you
information
is
I
want
you
to
let
that
the
a
senior
can
ask
for
this
when
they
have
their
regular
physical,
nothing,
intrusive
and
just
ask
for
this
when
you
go
and
we
seniors
have
a
annual
physical,
not
talking
about
every
90
day
thing,
but
you
can
do
that,
then
the
average
senior-
and
I
know
you
know
this
doctor-
goes
to
your
practitioner
every
90
days,
no
more
than
120
days.
A
I
do
as
well
at
any
time
of
those
times.
You
can
say
that
to
your
physician
and
doctor,
I
want
you,
the
verbiage.
I
want
you
just
to
say
again
so
that
they
will
know.
I
know
my
audience.
They
will
write
it
down.
They
tell
me
pops,
I
didn't
understand
what
was
going
on
in
the
morning
around
8
30,
but
at
7
30.
When
the
show
came
on.
I
was
ready
for
it
and
I
wrote
it
down.
So
would
you
just
repeat
what
they
need
to
say
when
they're
getting
their
physical,
they
need.
A
C
C
A
A
C
B
C
C
You
to
know
you
have
a
right
to
ask
any
question
that
you
want
to
ask:
you
have
a
right
to
to
be
fully
informed
and,
and
so
we
just
need
every
community
to
participate.
Otherwise
do
the
results
really
count?
No
we'll
be
skewed.
Yeah.
C
A
Let
me
tell
you,
I
did
not
tell
you,
I
said
it
was
something
I've
never
had.
No,
it's
very
novel.
No,
we
also
had
a
lot
of
fun.
I
I
knew
I've
known
dr
list
for
a
long
time.
I
knew
we
were
going
to
have
some
fun
on
this
program,
but
also
knew
that
we
were
going
to
give
a
lot
of
good
information
out
to
the
community
information
that
you
need
to
know,
and
so
I'm
just
so
thankful,
dr
lisbeth,
I'm.
A
You
I'm
always
like
to
mention,
mr
mike
king,
who
is
producer.
He
is
the
one
that
stopped
me
eight
or
nine
years
ago
saying
why?
Don't
you
do
a
thing
on
health,
so
muslim,
mr
mike
king,
these
are
hughes,
the
lion's
share
of
this
program.
I'd
also
like
to
thank
the
city
manager,
mr
isaiah
hugely,
and,
of
course,
the
mayor,
the
honorable
skip
henderson
until
next
time.
Like
I
always
say,
please
be
good
and
kind
to
yourself
because
god
loves.