She is animated now, in full lecture mode. Patients, she says, should have access to therapists and trainers as soon as they’re diagnosed with Parkinson’s, not just after a fall or injury or when symptoms become debilitating. Insurance companies should pay for it, she says. Studies show that exercise is good for patients — for Parkinson’s symptoms, yes, and maybe for the progress of the disease itself, but also to help stave off problems and comorbidities that come when people stop moving much, like heart disease and diabetes.
Trending
- Transfer rumors, news: Man City eye Semenyo move in January
- Zelenskyy to meet Macron, as US negotiators Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner head to Moscow – Europe live | Ukraine
- ChatGPT launched three years ago today
- Lost for over 400 years, Rubens painting sells for $2.7 million at auction : NPR
- Treylon Burks’ one-handed miracle catch draws comparisons to Odell Beckham’s Giants grab | NFL
- The Wiggles don’t condone drugs, spokesperson says after controversial TikTok video set to Ecstasy song | The Wiggles
- Varda says it has proven space manufacturing works — now it wants to make it boring
- Santa Clara hands Wahine third straight hoops loss
