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Jen Lupo Reese

By Hollie Deese, AARP Bulletin
By Jean Setzfand, Vice President, Financial Security, AARP Education & Outreach
Ruth Joy Bryant wants to get back to the active life she had before a recent fall fractured her ankle, putting the 92-year-old Austinite in the hospital and into daily physical rehabilitation sessions.
An ailing woman in her 80s was removed from a nursing home by her son, who said he would assume her caretaking duties.
As a 19-year-old nursing student with a sky blue Chevrolet sitting in her Lansdale driveway, B.J. Riley wasn't thinking about automobile safety.
Rhonda and Rudolph Barton downsized two years ago, trading a vintage 1907 bungalow — their home for 35 years — for a condo.
A year after the state slashed spending on the Elderly Pharmaceutical Insurance Coverage (EPIC) program, it will restore funding — at least for the first three months of 2013.
Penny Corum learned to drive from her father, John Henderson, when she was a teenager. She learned the rules of the road and the importance of vehicle maintenance: Take good care of your car, and it will take good care of you.
A strong majority of Missouri residents who weighed in on the future of Medicare and Social Security say some changes to benefits and revenue are needed so the programs will be available to their children and grandchildren.
In a state taking a close look at older drivers and safety issues, Ted Peterkin and nearly 100 volunteer instructors are providing the tools to help those over 50 stay safely on the road and recognize when it might be time to give up the keys.
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