Dentists also saw improvements in patients’ cholesterol and fatty acid levels, both associated with heart health

If a looming root canal treatment is putting a dampener on the week, take heart: having the procedure can drive health benefits that are felt throughout the body, according to research.

Patients who were successfully treated for root canal infections saw their blood sugar levels fall significantly over two years, suggesting that ridding the body of the problematic bacteria could help protect against type 2 diabetes.

Dentists also saw improvements in patients’ blood cholesterol and fatty acid levels, both of which are associated with heart health. Yet more benefits were seen around inflammation, a driver for cardiovascular disease and other chronic conditions.

  • DSN9@lemmy.ml
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    2 months ago

    Bro emmigration is the only escape from that hellhole. It’s simply not worth it for the middle class, they’re getting sucked high and dry, and the Dems only response will be corporate subsidiaries vs billionaires, and “we’re not trump” while nothing meaningful actually gets done and costs rise across the board, and quality of life goes to shit for the average folks. The headlines say it all, either continual infighting leading to nothing, the fall of democracy, or an actual civil war that will be bloody.

    Get the fuck out while you still can. A few years into living in another country, you will despise your new home. Then you might visit your family in the USA, and realize holy hell, things actually got worse and your new home is exponentially better, even with all its failings.

    • Gary Ghost@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Which countries are we able to gain Citizenship? I know some people gained Canadian citizenship through their job. We can’t all move to Canada.

      I’m waiting for the next 90 day fiance where some white dude from Florida is trying to marry a south American girl for a green card.

    • Jorn@sh.itjust.works
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      2 months ago

      Agreed. Wife and I have been in Germany for a year and a half and we love it. When we were unemployed and taking language courses, health insurance was 100€ per month for both of us. And our coverage was way better than our mid tier insurance in the US at $600 a month.

      • DSN9@lemmy.ml
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        2 months ago

        I’m curious, what have you noticed as large improvements? Less time going between providers, insurance hospitals and doctors? Less paperwork 😂(Germany 😋). Or what about excluded services, or included with the insurances?

        • Jorn@sh.itjust.works
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          2 months ago

          I’m no stranger to the bureaucratic paperwork nightmares of Germany but this hasn’t really applied to us with healthcare related stuff. Wait times at walk-in clinics has been relatively short and the care has been thorough and good. We have more coverage, prescriptions and overall out of pocket expenses are way cheaper. We are getting older and my wife was having some anxiety about her health so I told her get all the testing you want, we’ll submit it all for reimbursement and just pay out of pocket for what they wont cover. She got a full physical, blood/stool/urine work, and a full body ultrasound. All of it was reimbursed(we are on private insurance, but we go to facilities that also provide care for public insurance). That’s just a bit about my limited experience in Frankfurt but overall we have been much happier with it.

            • Jorn@sh.itjust.works
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              2 months ago

              Not always. We have a private insurance plan that is reimbursement on certain things. Public option plans for example, the insurance providers are billed directly by the health care provider.

              • DSN9@lemmy.ml
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                2 months ago

                Just curious, what is the one thing you love about living abroad/ Germany, and the one thing you hate, or miss?

                Do you think you could, or would move back to the USA?

                • Jorn@sh.itjust.works
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                  2 months ago

                  I love not having to drive anymore. Public transit is sometimes a little longer than driving but it’s so low stress and if you do have to drive, the massive public transit infrastructure helps alleviate traffic on the roads and thus speeds things up. Win/win. I realize it’s not for everyone but for me it’s a huge reduction in stress, anxiety, and the extra walking was a contributing factor to losing 25 lbs in my first year here.

                  I hate that government stuff is painfully slow here. I lived in one of the big cities before I got a job. I booked an appointment with the immigration office in the middle of January and the earliest they could see me was mid July. 2 Months after my visa expired. It took 2 months to get an appointment for my german driver’s license. We’re in a smaller city now and it seems a lot faster but I haven’t been here long enough to get a good idea of how much faster it is for everything.

                  Something that I really miss is mexican food. If you are from an area of the US with good mexican food, you’ll be missing out on that here. There are some decent taco places around but otherwise I think most “mexican restaurants” here have just seen pictures of mexican food and guessed how to make it. But Döner is awesome and everywhere, so I suppose I traded Burritos for Döner.