
I'm a doctor — the habit I have after every meal because I'm terrified of having a heart attack or dementia
A super speedy habit you're probably skipping could reduce your changes of heart attack, stroke and dementia.
But a naturopathic doctor who goes by Dr. Mac says she does it multiple times a day — and the science backs her up.
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Dr. Mac says she flosses after every meal to reduce her heart attack and dementia risk.
Tiktok/@drtoohey
'If you see me flossing after every meal, it's because I am terrified of having a heart attack and terrified of getting dementia when I'm older,' she said in a viral TikTok video (@drtoohey) with nearly 70,000 views.
Though the American Dental Association recommends flossing at least once a day, only about 32% say they do. In the same 2019 study, nearly 32% of Americans admitted they don't floss at all.
Good oral hygiene has been tied to a bunch of health benefits, and not just for your mouth. That because the bacteria that causes gingivitis, or gum disease, doesn't just stay around your teeth.
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In 2019, researchers in Norway found DNA evidence that 'bacteria causing gingivitis can move from the mouth to the brain,' said Piotr Mydel of Broegelmanns Research Laboratory at the University of Bergen (UiB).
There, it makes a protein that destroys brain cells, which can lead to memory loss and dementia. In their study of 53 perople with Alzheimer's, 96% of them tested positive for this enzyme.
'The public needs to be more aware of the correlation between oral health and cognitive abilities,' Chia-Shu Lin, a professor in dentistry at National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University in Taiwan, previously told Newsweek.
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Oral hygiene has been linked to lots of health conditions.
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Oral hygiene issues can also increase your odds of developing heart disease. It's no small difference, either: People with gum disease are 28% more likely to suffer a heart attack.
'Studies show that people who brush their teeth regularly, along with getting dental cleanings, tend to have healthier hearts and a lower risk of heart disease,' gastroenterologist Dr. Saurabh Sethi said in one viral TikTok.
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Your stroke risk is also influenced by your brushing and flossing habits. One study piblished this year linked flossing teeth at least once a week to a 22% lower risk of ischemic stroke, 44% lower risk of cardioembolic stroke and 12% lower risk of AFib.
'Oral health behaviors are linked to inflammation and artery hardening,' said the study's lead author, Dr. Souvik Sen. 'Flossing may reduce stroke risk by lowering oral infections and inflammation and encouraging other healthy habits.
'Many people have expressed that dental care is costly,' he continued. 'Flossing is a healthy habit that is easy to adopt, affordable and accessible everywhere.'
That's not all: Recent research has linked oral bacteria to head and neck cancers as well.
Though Dr. Mac admitted that it might seem 'crazy' that flossing could have such an enormous health impact, she also said it 'makes sense because everything's so connected.'
'But you best believe if you invite me out to a restaurant, I will be flossing after that meal. Respectfully, I will walk away and go to the bathroom or step outside, but I am getting in there. Because those are two ways I'm not gonna go,' she said.
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New York Post
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Psychiatrists have concocted labels that leave millions of Americans at their mercy. The American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) lists more than 300 mental illnesses, five times as many as it specified in the 1960s. Even caffeine withdrawal is certified as a mental disorder. Dr. Allen Frances, writing in Psychiatric Times, warned that the latest DSM contains 'many changes that seem clearly unsafe and scientifically unsound' and is 'likely to lead to massive over-diagnosis and harmful over-medication.' 'Mental-health interventions' are probably derailing more lives than ever before. The New York Times last year showcased psychiatric 'prevalence inflation' — a vast increase in reported mental illness among teenagers who are encouraged to view normal feelings as grave maladies. Oxford University psychologist Lucy Foulkes observed school programs are 'creating this message that teenagers are vulnerable, they're likely to have problems, and the solution is to outsource them to a professional.' Foulkes explained in a paper she coauthored that 'awareness efforts' spur young people 'to interpret and report milder forms of distress as mental health problems.' Filing such complaints 'leads some individuals to experience a genuine increase in symptoms, because labeling distress as a mental health problem can affect an individual's self-concept and behavior in a way that is ultimately self-fulfilling.' Psychiatric labels can become a ball and chain that people drag behind them. Endless classroom presentations on mental health spur 'co-rumination' — excessively talking about one's problems — which evokes memories of first dates from hell. 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The Affordable Care Act kept the individual health insurance market from falling apart completely by providing subsidies to low-income enrollees. But individuals earning more than $62,600 in 2025 would have faced full premiums without any assistance. Those unsubsidized enrollees felt the full pain of the Affordable Care Act's premium hikes. The legislation allows insurers to charge older enrollees up to three times what they do the youngest, and so unsubsidized premiums for near-retirees can be huge. This year, the benchmark unsubsidized premium for a 61-year-old individual in Washington, D.C., is $15,402 per year. Rather than fix ObamaCare's structure, the newly-elected Democratic Congress in 2021 threw money at the problem with the American Rescue Plan Act. By expanding eligibility for subsidies to higher earners, the act reduced the cost of health insurance for a 61-year-old earning $70,000 from $15,402 to $5,950 — with federal taxpayers covering the difference. 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35 Fast Problem-Solving Products For No-Nonsense Humans
A delightfully affordable instant foot peeling spray so you can go full YEEHAW!! on an at-home pedicure without the big salon price tag. This not only helps gently remove dead skin, but moisturizes dry and cracked heels, so you'll really get some refreshing bang for your buck. A teensy two-in-one nausea relief inhaler designed to help with spontaneous nausea, motion sickness, morning sickness, and general queasiness (having a human body is hard). You can either use it as a scent inhaler or rub it directly on the tip of your nose for relief. Summer road trips and cruises just got a HECK of a lot more bearable. A "spray and go" enzyme-based laundry stain remover — all you do is spray the offending spot, rub it into the fabric, and leave it in your hamper until the next wash. It'll get the stain out during the washer cycle with NO other effort from you, and works on everything from discolored dried sweat to oil stains to grass stains to mud. 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