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Investment Advisor June 2007 Olivia Mellan |
Turn, Turn, Turn Even when life's changes are good, coping with them can be daunting for you and your financial advisory clients. Here are some examples to help guide you in easing your clients' transition to new ways of life. |
Psychology Today Jul/Aug 2007 A.J.S. Rayl |
The High Price of a Broken Heart The heart is the honorary seat of emotion -- and no wonder. Experience, mood, temperament, and thought style can profoundly alter the ticker. Dispatches from the hidden superhighway between heart and mind. |
AskMen.com Joshua Levine |
Life-Threatening Illnesses A list of what I think are the most significant diseases you should watch out for. |
Reason May 2007 Jacob Sullum |
An Epidemic of Meddling The classic targets of public health were risks imposed on people against their will, communicable diseases being the paradigmatic example. The more recent targets are risks that people voluntarily assume, such as those associated with smoking, drinking, eating junk food, exercising too little, watching TV too much, playing poker, etc. |
AskMen.com March 16, 2003 Mike Davison |
Light Smokers Still Run Cancer Risk Significantly reducing the number of cigarettes you smoke a day may not be as helpful or as healthy as once thought. |
Investment Advisor March 2009 Olivia Mellan |
Power Couple Baby boomers are reaching retirement age, but that doesn't mean they and their spouses will be in sync about how to spend their time -- or their money. It's an advisors role to help guide them through this. |
American Family Physician April 1, 2001 |
Preventing Heart Attacks: What Women Need to Know Heart disease is the leading cause of death in women in the United States. American women are four to six times more likely to die of heart disease than of breast cancer. Here are some ways you can lower your risk of having a heart attack... |
Seasoned Cooking July 2004 Michael Fick |
Women's Heart Health: Part Two Ladies, heart attacks are your primary killer, yet 82% of your heart disease is self-induced by bad habits, and thus avoidable. |
AskMen.com Alex Santoso |
5 Ways To Keep Your Heart Healthy Heart disease kills more men than any other disease. And because you've only got one heart, here are some tips to keep it healthy. |
Financial Planning June 1, 2007 Donald Jay Korn |
Mars and Venus When married clients approach financial planning differently, advisors have problems to solve. |
Health June 2007 Laurel Naversen Geraghty |
Don't Worry so Much About Scary Diseases Want to put your fears in their place? Here's help: We compared women's risks of developing certain illnesses this year to the odds of some quirky scenarios -- and found plenty of good news. |
Psychology Today Mar/Apr 2009 Jay Dixit |
You're Driving Me Crazy! So often it's the pettiest problems that tear couples apart. How small irritants become big issues -- and what to do about them. |
The Motley Fool November 16, 2006 Dan Caplinger |
Second Marriages With Kids: Part 2 Second marriages, and the possible resulting family structure -- with stepchildren potentially on both sides of the family with half-siblings in the middle -- can wreak havoc on conventional financial and estate planning. |
American Family Physician November 1, 2000 Forrest Lang |
Curbside Consultation A Doctor Who Is Blamed for a Patient's Condition... |
American Family Physician December 15, 2000 |
You Have Diabetes--But You Don't Have to Get Heart Disease Too People with diabetes are more likely to get heart disease because diabetes can have a bad effect on your blood vessels. Some of your lifestyle habits may also raise this risk. Here are some things you can do about your lifestyle habits... |
American Family Physician April 15, 2003 |
Coronary Artery Disease: Reducing Your Risk What is coronary artery disease?... What causes CAD?... What can I do to lower my risk of CAD? |
American Family Physician April 1, 2001 Joan Bedinghaus |
Coronary Artery Disease Prevention: What's Different for Women? Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death in women, as well as an important cause of disability, although many women and their physicians underestimate the risk... |
Health November 2007 Linda Formichelli |
Is Alcohol Really Good for You? Just a glass or two raises your risks for some scary diseases and lowers them for others. What's right and wrong with drinking? |
Inc. December 2004 Sarah Bartlett |
What We Didn't Plan For The first shock was learning that my husband was gravely ill. Then came the realization that when the owner or CEO of a small business gets sick, the financial impact is more immediate and far-reaching, both to the business and to the family. |
American Family Physician January 15, 2004 Evans & McNeill |
Quantum Sufficit Where there is depression, there also may be chronic pain... Mortality from prostate cancer is decreasing... New mothers may need to be reminded to take care of themselves... How U.S. medical students will live is affecting what they choose to do... etc. |
Investment Advisor January 2009 Olivia Mellan |
Understanding Overspending Financial advisors Q&As regarding how to discuss spending cutbacks with their clients. |
AskMen.com October 1, 2003 Steve Richer |
How To: Quit Smoking Are you a regular smoker? Have you been trying to kick the habit for a while now? Have you unsuccessfully tried to quit in the past? Whether you're a social or regular smoker, these tips may encourage you to quit smoking today. |
Investment Advisor May 1, 2011 Olivia Mellan |
It's Not Working Retirement is great for some people; for others, not so much |
AskMen.com March 9, 2013 James Fell |
Change Your Life It is an adage of time-management that if everything is a priority, nothing is. If you're not finding time to exercise and focus on healthy eating, then it is not a high enough priority for you. |
Fast Company December 2000 Keith H. Hammonds |
Family Values Thanks to the punishing demands of the new economy, marriage has become more complex, more stressful, and more difficult. These couples have designed marriages that work... |
ifeminists January 24, 2007 Carey Roberts |
First Lady Should Tell the Truth about Heart Disease More than any other disease, heart disease is the reason why men die five years sooner than women. Why has Laura Bush swept heart disease among men under the rug? |
American Family Physician December 15, 2000 |
When You Are the Caregiver You're a caregiver if you give basic care to a person who has a chronic medical condition. How can I tell if caregiving is putting too much stress on me?... Why is caring for someone with dementia (Alzheimer's disease) so hard?... etc. |
AskMen.com Dustin Driver |
8 Cancer Myths The following myths about cancer have been debunked by doctors and scientists the world over. So do yourself and your community a favor: read the facts and spread the word. |
Investment Advisor May 2010 Angela Herbers |
The Fast Track: A Marriage of Inconvenience A spouse in a practice almost always results in more problems than it solves. |
American Family Physician August 1, 2005 Wattendorf & Hadley |
Family History: The Three-Generation Pedigree The three-generation pedigree provides a pictorial representation of diseases within a family and is the most efficient way to assess hereditary influences on disease. |
Financial Planning August 1, 2009 Karen Lee |
A Fine Line If we really want to serve our clients, we have to be willing to dig a little deeper. We must be ready to go beyond the facts and numbers, into our clients' psychology about money, to give them a fighting chance at financial success. |
Financial Advisor June 2011 Roy Diliberto |
Reconciling Couples' Money Differences While financial life planners are not trained as therapists and shouldn't attempt to solve marital problems, it is also true that most of our clients are not having relationship problems, but may be having significant issues about money. |
Investment Advisor August 2007 Olivia Mellan |
Are We Having Fun Yet? Sometimes we forget why we wanted money in the first place. Here's how to help your financial advisory clients enjoy the fruits of their labor. |
ifeminists February 18, 2004 Carey Roberts |
Breaking the Hearts of Men Women are seeing red over the latest program from the American Heart Association, dubbed the "Go Red for Women" campaign. Why would women ever be perturbed about that? Because this one-sided campaign overlooks the fact that men have hearts, too. |
The Motley Fool October 6, 2007 Elizabeth Brokamp |
Is Your Nest Egg Cracked? Be aware that the worst can happen, and prepare your retirement fund accordingly. If you're smart, you'll take steps now to ensure your financial nest egg won't completely crack under the pressure of a setback. |
Salon.com March 28, 2002 Ann Marlowe |
Why do women wed? A new book argues that women put much more work into marriage than men do, and asks why they bother... |
The Motley Fool November 16, 2006 Dan Caplinger |
Second Marriages With Kids: Part 1 When it comes to finances and estate planning, few situations present more difficult challenges than second marriages. |
Investment Advisor April 2010 Olivia Mellan |
Why Women Should Take the Wheel Because women live an average of six years longer than their male counterparts, they are much more likely to get to control the money eventually by themselves. |
Investment Advisor February 2007 Susan L. Hirshman |
Prenups and Protection Although a number of financial planning aspects are key to a marriage, the prenup may be moving higher on some of your wealthier clients' priority lists. |
Investment Advisor August 2005 Olivia Mellan |
The Psychology of Advice: Blindsided Help your financial advisory clients keep life's little ambushes in perspective. |
Financial Advisor April 2007 Marla Brill |
The Couples Dynamic A new study reveals why financial advisors sometimes feel like marriage counselors. |
The Motley Fool March 13, 2007 Dan Caplinger |
3 Ways to Protect Your Spouse Add these financial tips to your wedding vows. 1. Get some insurance... 2. Write a will... etc. |
Investment Advisor April 2009 Olivia Mellan |
The Psychology of Advice: High Anxiety If your heart beats faster when you check the market update, or your throat dries up when you prepare to tell clients about their portfolio, you have what we could call money anxiety. There's a lot of it going around these days. |
Entrepreneur October 2005 Nichole L. Torres |
For Better or Worse Look no further for a business partner. You may already have a perfect match - your spouse. |
Fast Company Christina Farr |
AHA, Alphabet Set Aside $75 Million To Cure Coronary Heart Disease The American Heart Association, Verily (the company formerly known as Google Life Sciences), and European pharmaceutical giant AstraZeneca are investing the funds over a five-year period. |
Financial Advisor July 2007 Dave J. Drucker |
The Financially Illiterate Spouse How can financial advisors plan for a couple when one spouse won't participate? |
Financial Advisor March 2012 Barbara Potter |
Second Chances Sometimes, a corporate trustee is the best choice to manage a trust left to a second spouse, and that eventually benefits children of the first marriage. |
Financial Planning August 1, 2012 Katie Kuehner-Hebert |
One Income, Many Challenges While it's common these days for both adults in a family to be working, the stay-at-home parent is in no danger of becoming extinct. |
The Motley Fool February 14, 2006 Dayana Yochim |
Don't Let Money Kill the Mood First comes love, then comes marriage. Next comes the hard part -- money. But if you can find ways to successfully navigate the money minefield, your relationship has exponentially that much more of a chance of succeeding. |
Registered Rep. September 16, 2014 Alan Lavine |
Sizing Up a Client's Lifespan If you have clients that are, by dint of lifestyle and demographics, bound to break the actuary tables for life expectancy, find additional income streams to ensure they don't also outlive their money. |