A growing body of evidence suggests that when older people's brains have to work harder to see, declines in language, memory, attention and more could follow

Medical practice tends to divide its clients — you and me — into specialties defined by body parts: ophthalmology, neurology, gastroenterology, psychiatry and the like. But in fact, the human body doesn’t function in silos. Rather, it works as an integrated whole, and what goes awry in one part of the body can affect several others.
I’ve written about the potential harm of hearing loss to brain health, as well as to the health of our bones, hearts and emotional well-being.
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