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Financial Problems May Start Earlier in Dementia Than Many Think, Duke Study Finds

By Stacey Burlilng — 2019

The study also found that financial problems were correlated with changes in the brain that are a sign of Alzheimer's disease.

Read on www.inquirer.com

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4 Ways ‘Strong Black Woman Syndrome’ Keeps Us Poor

The Strong Black Women Syndrome demands that Black women never buckle, never feel vulnerable and, most important, never, ever put their own needs above anyone else’s—not their children’s, not their community’s, not the people for whom they work—no matter how detrimental it is to their...

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I Know Keeping Some Savings in Cash Doesn't Make the Most Mathematical Sense, but It's the Only Thing that Helps Me Feel Safe

Because I experienced so much financial instability in my early 20s, I work hard every single day on building a healthy relationship with money. No one really talks about how demoralizing it is to scrounge up quarters from your couch so you can afford a bacon egg and cheese sandwich at the bodega.

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Dementia