Skip to main content RSS Info Close Search Facebook Twitter
Location
Category
Providers / Vacancies
Feedback

Advice on improving quality of life for elderly

Engaging in more sex, natural breathing, and other simple strategies could save the 40 plus population millions in health care costs, according to Australian based health educator Michael Coleman.

His new e-book, Keep Your God Waiting, promotes a unique approach, that anyone can take advantage of with no money, pill popping, strenuous workouts or surgery. 

“Preventing the onset of illness by simply doing what comes naturally, may provide an effective way to save millions of dollars in health care costs and cut hospital waiting lists,” Coleman says.

According to his book, anyone, regardless of their age, can have dynamic health, great sex and a super sharp mind.

And the step-by-step techniques revealed in the book are free and easy to use. “There’s nothing to buy, no pills, no endless pounding the pavement, pumping iron or anything like that,” Coleman says.

In his e-book, Coleman includes simple, no cost methods that can help people:

  • Reduce stress
  • Build brain power and improve memory
  • Breathe for health and vitality
  • Boost their immune system
  • Enhance their sexual health
  • Achieve their natural weight without dieting

Coleman feels that society and medical practitioners should reject the health paradigm that treatment is king.

“In its place, we should invest heavily in promoting prevention, so it is seen as an attractive, preferred pathway to vibrant health.

“Presently, developed countries spend on average, just three cents in the health dollar on preventive measures” he says.

 

Share this article

Read next

Subscribe

Subscribe to our Talking Aged Care newsletter to get our latest articles, delivered straight to your inbox
  1. Eighty years after getting married, this couple lives together...
  2. Who says your age should limit your dreams?
  3. Data from a recently released report highlights a concerning...
  4. With an ageing and growing population, data from the...
  5. Approximately 411,000 Australians are estimated to be living...
  6. How could you benefit from attending university as an older...

Recent articles

  1. Are there options for older Australians to live in the same...
  2. The new initiative brings older Aussies together to see the...
  3. A collaboration between Dementia Australia and VistaPrint...
  4. How can you look after yourself during the expected heatwaves...
  5. How is an interactive app being used in aged care settings to...
  6. How could the upcoming strengthening of super standards save...
  7. Brother Thomas Oliver Pickett, a Western Australian volunteer,...
  8. Why is an illegal website targeting older Australians?
  9. Eighty years after getting married, this couple lives together...
  10. How does heart health impact your risk of dementia?
  11. Instead of going to the hospital, could older Australians...
  12. Recent data indicates changes in the current COVID-19...
  1. {{ result.posted_at | timeago }}

Sorry, no results were found
Perhaps you misspelled your search query, or need to try using broader search terms.
Please type a topic to search
Some frequently searched topics are "dementia", "elderly" etc
Close