Senior Living
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Toni Says: Beware of claims about a $2,400 Social Security increase for 2026 — it's a scam!
Hello Toni:
Since you deal with Social Security matters related to Medicare, maybe you can help me, because on April 20, I received an email stating that I am to receive a $200 monthly increase in my Social Security check, which will be $2,400 for the year. I am hesitant to reply to the current emails that I am receiving because ...Read more
Social Security and You: Why Are There So Many Rules?
People frequently ask me one of two rhetorical questions. Sometimes they will say, usually out of frustration, "Why is Social Security so complicated?" Even though they were probably not looking for an answer, I give them one anyway. I point out that Social Security is complicated because life is complicated. If we all lived simple lives, got ...Read more
Blood test said to predict dementia in women 25 years before symptoms
LONDON — A blood test can predict the risk of dementia in women up to 25 years before symptoms appear, researchers say.
Experts in the U.S. found that higher levels of a protein called p-tau217 – which is linked to the brain changes seen in Alzheimer’s disease – were an accurate predictor of people developing cognitive problems and ...Read more
Study: Taking a daily multivitamin may slow down biological aging
LONDON — Taking a daily multivitamin may slow down biological aging, a study has suggested.
Experts calculated that two years of daily vitamins cut biological aging by about four months on average.
Biological aging refers to how old the body is in terms of health and function rather than the number of years a person has lived.
Previous ...Read more
‘A nightmare to think about.’ Driving behavior may be early warning sign of dementia
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. -- When the red light turned green, Christine Burger found herself unsure what to do next.
Burger, 73, had driven the streets of Delray Beach for many years, and had traveled often through the intersection where she was now stopped. Yet she was unsure which direction to take.
It wasn’t the first time.
“There are ...Read more
'A nightmare to think about.' Driving behavior may be early warning sign of dementia
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. -- When the red light turned green, Christine Burger found herself unsure what to do next.
Burger, 73, had driven the streets of Delray Beach for many years, and had traveled often through the intersection where she was now stopped. Yet she was unsure which direction to take.
It wasn’t the first time.
“There are ...Read more
A new Medicare option for weight loss drugs: What older Americans should know
Starting in July, Medicare beneficiaries may be able to get a GLP-1 prescription for weight loss for $50 a month. It’s a notable shift for Medicare, which has long been barred from covering weight loss treatments.
The drugs, such as Wegovy and Zepbound, are effective but can be expensive without insurance coverage. They’re available in ...Read more
A new Medicare option for weight loss drugs: What older Americans should know
Starting in July, Medicare beneficiaries may be able to get a GLP-1 prescription for weight loss for $50 a month. It’s a notable shift for Medicare, which has long been barred from covering weight loss treatments.
The drugs, such as Wegovy and Zepbound, are effective but can be expensive without insurance coverage. They’re available in ...Read more
Toni Says: Help, I’m stuck in a Medicare Supplement that is too expensive!
Hello Toni:
My question is: I understand that I am not able to change to a Medicare Advantage plan and have to wait until the enrollment time in the fall. I have a Medicare Supplement Plan F that renewed in March for $422 a month and am searching on medicare.gov for a Medicare Advantage plan that covers my ...Read more
Social Security and You: Forbes Column Full of Holes
A recent edition of Forbes Magazine included an article called "Seven Ways Social Security Benefits are Unfair." It went on to list various ways that Social Security payouts are supposedly actuarially indefensible and unjust. Sadly, many of them were not well thought out. In today's column, I have enough space to cover only a few.
Forbes ...Read more
This 75-year-old has worked at Temple for 44 years. On Wednesday, she graduated
PHILADELPHIA — At age 75, Peggy E. Moore officially became “Temple Made” on Wednesday.
That’s what the university calls its graduates, and Moore collected her bachelor’s degree in general studies during this week’s commencement.
But Moore’s history with the North Philadelphia-based university is much longer than that of the ...Read more
Toni Says: Why is the nurse’s visit for home healthcare only 20 minutes once a week ?
Dear Toni:
My mother, Doris, had a heart attack in February and was in the hospital for over a week, with a short stay in a skilled nursing facility until she regained her strength. She needed additional care at home, and her cardiologist ordered home health with a nurse who comes to her apartment at the assisted living facility only once a ...Read more
Travel Trending with Kathy Witt: Exploring Japan aboard Holland America’s Volendam
Stepping aboard Holland America Line’s Volendam in Taipei, Taiwan, felt less like joining a cruise and more like slipping into a story already in motion. The 2026 Grand World Voyage had been underway for weeks by the time I arrived in early April for my 10-day Japan segment, which concluded in Tokyo. But with both passengers and crew greeting ...Read more
Social Security and You: The Good Old Days at a Social Security Office Were Not Necessarily So!
I sometimes find myself waxing nostalgic about the "good old days" of working for the Social Security Administration. Even though when I started working for the SSA in 1973, the agency was already almost 40 years old, I still think of that time period as the good "old" days.
But then sometimes I wonder if those days were really all that good. ...Read more
Streets not ready for the Bay Area’s fast growing population — seniors
SAN JOSE, Calif. -- Melissa Quilter has quit crossing the intersection of The Alameda and Marin Avenue in Berkeley when she’s walking her dog.
“My dog is older. I’m older. We don’t take risks anymore,” said Quilter, 66, who has been living by the intersection for 27 years. Without a protected left-turn signal, drivers can turn through...Read more
The help that many older Americans need most
On a recent Monday, Sandy Guzman, a community health worker in rural Oregon, drove to visit a patient in her 60s in a small city called The Dalles.
The patient lived alone, and “really struggles with social isolation,” Guzman said. After a serious fall and subsequent surgery, the woman was using a wheelchair. She confided that she would ...Read more
Hand-stitched memory bears help grieving maker and recipients
PITTSBURGH — Shirley Whitlinger knows all too well the profound, existential loneliness that follows a spouse’s death.
When David, her husband of 50 years, died from prostate cancer in 2021, after two years of chemotherapy and trials at Hillman Cancer Center, it was almost impossible not to lose herself in grief.
The couple had spent ...Read more
Trump touts 'golden age' for seniors in the friendly territory of The Villages
THE VILLAGES, Fla. — President Donald Trump came to the friendly territory of Florida’s retirement haven Friday for his first public event since an alleged assassination attempt against him, touting tax cuts for seniors and parading Dr. Phil on stage.
Trump quipped he wasn’t afraid for his safety at The Villages, a GOP stronghold where he...Read more
Hand-stitched memory bears help grieving maker and recipients
PITTSBURGH — Shirley Whitlinger knows all too well the profound, existential loneliness that follows a spouse’s death.
When David, her husband of 50 years, died from prostate cancer in 2021, after two years of chemotherapy and trials at Hillman Cancer Center, it was almost impossible not to lose herself in grief.
The couple had spent ...Read more
Toni Says: Why am I being charged an extra $565 a month to enroll in Medicare?
Toni,
I am not sure if I have enrolled in Medicare the right way because I am being charged a Medicare premium of $768 a month beginning June 1 since I turn 65 on June 14. My friend Sue told me that I am being overcharged because she is paying $202.90 a month. I followed how she enrolled in Medicare by going online...Read more






















