Episodios

  • Why You Shouldn't Rush Your Cancer Journey
    Mar 11 2026

    "Don't rush the process." In this episode, we sit down with Kim Burket, Executive Director of Goodness Village, to discuss a side of the cancer journey that often goes overlooked: the need for a true home. Goodness Village provides affordable housing in Little Rock, Arkansas, for patients and families traveling for life-saving medical treatment.


    Kim shares her 20 years of hospitality experience and how she’s applying it to healthcare to ensure families can stay together, cook their own meals, and find a safe haven during their hardest chapters. Whether you are a patient, a caregiver, or a healthcare leader, Kim’s "sage wisdom" on resilience and accepting help is a must-listen.


    In this episode, we discuss:

    🏡 The "Basic" needs that hospitals often miss.

    📉 Why rushing your treatment timeline can cause more angst.

    🤝 How to find your "champions" and actually accept their help.📊 The massive impact of community-based non-profit housing on patient outcomes.

    📍 Timestamps:

    00:00 – The #1 piece of advice for patients: Don’t rush the process.

    01:13 – What is Goodness Village? A unique model for medical housing.

    03:10 – The 30-year history of a grassroots mission.

    04:14 – Why a hotel isn't enough when you're fighting cancer.

    06:50 – The "Little Things": How 26 apartments provided 6,000+ nights of rest.

    10:40 – Gaps in the healthcare system and the power of collaboration.

    13:14 – A story of resilience: Keeping a family of five together.

    15:25 – Advice for Healthcare CEOs and Hospital Leaders.

    18:38 – A checklist for patients traveling for care.


    About Our Guest:

    Kim Burket has served as the Executive Director of Goodness Village for 15 years. Under her leadership, the organization transitioned from a church ministry to an independent 501(c)(3) nonprofit, growing to provide 26 affordable, fully furnished apartments for patients and families traveling to Little Rock for medical care. Kim lives in Little Rock with her husband Jim, where their younger son is a senior at Little Rock Christian Academy, and their oldest son is attending college in Fayetteville.


    🔗 Listen wherever you get your podcasts.


    👉 Subscribe and hit the bell to stay updated on future episodes of Patient from Hell.


    Connect with Us:

    Enjoyed this episode? Make sure to subscribe, rate, and review! Follow us on Instagram, Facebook, or Linkedin @MantaCares and visit our website at MantaCares.com for more episodes and updates.


    Disclaimer:

    All content and information provided in connection with Manta Cares is solely intended for informational and educational purposes only. This content and information is not intended to be a substitute for medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition.

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    25 m
  • Leukemia Survivor on Stem Cell Transplant, Post-Traumatic Growth, and Rebuilding Life After Cancer
    Feb 25 2026

    Rich — a leukemia survivor, nurse practitioner, and longtime oncology clinician — to talk about what it’s really like to survive cancer, rebuild your life after treatment, and live with long-term side effects.


    Rich was diagnosed with leukemia at age 28, underwent an allogeneic stem cell transplant at Dana-Farber / Brigham and Women’s, and is now a 29-year survivor. His experience as both a patient and provider offers a rare, honest look at cancer survivorship, prostate cancer side effects, sexual health, mental health, and post-traumatic growth.


    In this conversation, we cover:

    • What it’s like to be told you have leukemia in your 20s

    • Stem cell transplant and long-term survival

    • Turning cancer into purpose and becoming an oncology NP

    • Common prostate cancer side effects (urination, bowel changes, erectile dysfunction)

    • How doctors actually manage these symptoms

    • Sexual health after cancer treatment

    • Mental health, grief, and post-traumatic growth

    • How to rebuild your life after active treatment


    This episode is for patients, survivors, caregivers, and anyone navigating life after a cancer diagnosis.


    🎧 Listen on Spotify & Apple Podcasts▶️ Watch more episodes on YouTube
    🔔 Subscribe for evidence-based cancer care and survivor stories


    00:00 Life gets hard — and it gets better

    01:00 Meeting Rich

    02:50 Diagnosed with leukemia at 2805:30 Stem cell transplant & early treatment reality

    07:20 Complications and emotional toll

    08:40 Discovering purpose in oncology care

    10:45 From patient to nurse practitioner

    13:00 Building virtual survivorship care

    16:50 Prostate cancer side effects overview

    17:45 Urinary problems after radiation

    21:20 Blood in urine & stool — when to worry

    23:50 Erectile dysfunction after treatment

    26:30 Medications & men’s health options

    28:50 Emotional impact of sexual side effects

    31:00 Quality of life vs quantity of life

    32:10 Post-traumatic growth

    33:00 Marriage, fertility, and family after cancer

    36:00 Advice for rebuilding life after treatment

    38:30 Final thoughts & hope


    🔗 Listen wherever you get your podcasts.

    👉 Subscribe and hit the bell to stay updated on future episodes of Patient from Hell.


    Connect with Us:

    Enjoyed this episode? Make sure to subscribe, rate, and review! Follow us on Instagram, Facebook, or Linkedin @MantaCares and visit our website at MantaCares.com for more episodes and updates.


    Disclaimer:

    All content and information provided in connection with Manta Cares is solely intended for informational and educational purposes only. This content and information is not intended to be a substitute for medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition.

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    48 m
  • AI in Cancer Care: Hype, Hope, & Reality (2026 Update)
    Feb 11 2026

    Is Artificial Intelligence actually helping cancer patients, or is it just noise? In this episode of The Patient From Hell, Samira sits down with Dr. Shadi Nabhan to separate the Hype from the Reality in 2026.

    We discuss the massive evolution in oncology—from the "library days" of 1995 to the AI-driven diagnostics of today.

    Dr. Shadi shares his "Airport Analogy" for navigating a cancer diagnosis, offers a life-changing reframe on how we view advanced disease (it’s not just "curable" vs. "terminal"—it can be "controllable"), and gives his #1 piece of advice for selecting a medical team that will actually show up for you when things get hard.


    Key Topics Discussed:

    AI in 2026: How doctors use AI to simplify complex terms like CAR T-cell therapy and why patients need to "trust but verify" AI-generated medical advice.

    The "Controllable" Reframe: Why treating metastatic cancer like diabetes or hypertension changes the patient experience.

    Navigating the "Airport": Why the healthcare system feels like being dropped in a foreign airport without a map.


    Advice for the Industry:

    What Healthcare Systems and Pharma companies need to change right now regarding clinical trials and drug pricing.


    About Today’s Guest Dr. Chadi Nabhan:

    Dr. Chadi Nabhan is a board-certified hematologist, oncologist, and the Chief Medical Officer at Ryght, Inc., where he leads the integration of Generative AI into clinical research to accelerate the delivery of lifesaving therapies.


    With a career spanning leadership roles at Caris Life Sciences and the University of Chicago, Dr. Nabhan is a prolific researcher with over 300 publications and a prominent author whose work focuses on the intersection of medicine, justice, and technology.


    AI Visionary:

    Leading the charge in using AI to optimize clinical trials and patient outcomes.

    Expert Clinician: Trained at Northwestern and Harvard, with decades of experience in malignant hematology.

    Renowned Author: Published three books with Johns Hopkins University Press, including The Cancer Journey and the forthcoming AI and Cancer Care (2026).


    Podcast Host: Voice of the popular weekly series Healthcare Unfiltered.

    Quotes from the Episode:

    "We cure more patients than we have ever dreamt of... Women who are affected by breast cancer today are more likely to be completely cured."

    "Availability is key. Are they going to really pick up the phone and talk to you when you need them?"


    00:00 - The reality of the cancer journey (It’s not smooth sailing)01:00 - Intro: Dr. Shadi Nabhan & The Fun Factor

    01:25 - AI in Healthcare: Hype, Hope, and Reality

    04:15 - How doctors use AI to explain complex therapies

    06:38 - Warning for patients using AI: "Garbage in, Garbage out"

    08:45 - The Evolution of Medicine: 1995 vs. 2026

    13:00 - The "Airport Analogy": Why patients feel lost

    17:30 - MUST WATCH: Reframing "Terminal" cancer as "Controllable"

    21:30 - Advice for Healthcare Leaders: Agility & Patient Involvement

    23:50 - Advice for Pharma: Drug Pricing & Accelerating Innovation

    26:00 - The #1 criteria for picking your medical team

    28:18 - The importance of Second Opinions

    28:50 - What to expect in late 2026: AI in Cancer Care Book


    🔗 Listen wherever you get your podcasts.

    👉 Subscribe and hit the bell to stay updated on future episodes of Patient from Hell.


    Connect with Us:

    Enjoyed this episode? Make sure to subscribe, rate, and review! Follow us on Instagram, Facebook, or Linkedin @MantaCares and visit our website at MantaCares.com for more episodes and updates.


    Disclaimer:

    All content and information provided in connection with Manta Cares is solely intended for informational and educational purposes only. This content and information is not intended to be a substitute for medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition.

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    30 m
  • Rebuilding Life After Cancer: Viktor Frankl, Resilience, and the “Power of AND” (Harriet Cabelly)
    Jan 21 2026

    Cancer survivorship isn’t about “going back to normal.” It’s about rebuilding—on purpose.


    In this episode of Patient From Hell, host Samira Daswani sits down with Harriet Cabelly, LCSW, a grief therapist and cancer thriver, for a grounded, surprisingly funny, deeply useful conversation on what happens during treatment and in the long tail of survivorship—including fear of recurrence (“scanxiety”), meaning-making, resilience, and the emotional support patients don’t get nearly enough of.


    Harriet shares the moment she was told she had a mass on multiple organs—and her first response: “Put me in hospice.” From there, we unpack how hope returned, why Viktor Frankl’s work matters in cancer care, and practical mindset tools that help patients and caregivers survive the day-to-day without spiraling into the “20-year forecast.


    If you’re newly diagnosed, supporting someone you love, or treating patients clinically, this episode delivers real coping skills—without toxic positivity.


    Chapters / Timestamps

    00:00 — “If you have to go through hell, don’t come out empty-handed”

    01:09 — Harriet’s diagnosis: Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma (large B-cell) and the ER moment

    02:45 — “Put me in hospice”: the shock + numbness after the scan

    04:41 — How hope returned (faith, timing, and a “flipped verdict”)

    07:44 — Why faith and religion can matter in the patient experience

    09:03 — “Miracles” during treatment: staying ahead of nausea + the “Vomit Miracle”

    11:25 — “Miracle of tolerance”: handling meds when you’ve always had a sensitive system

    12:55 — Life before diagnosis: ballroom dancing, family, hiking, private practice

    14:56 — Viktor Frankl + Man’s Search for Meaning: choosing attitude, choosing response

    18:44 — Positive psychology: building strengths, not denying reality

    19:50 — Resilience as a muscle (and how to train it)

    20:33 — Gratitude, “WWW: What’s Working Well,” and the donut-hole metaphor

    23:05 — The “Power of AND”: holding darkness + light at the same time

    26:50 — Shrinking time: one hour, one day, one cycle at a time

    29:59 — Fear of recurrence + “scanxiety”: what helps, what gets easier with time

    33:51 — Rebuilding after cancer: nutrition, fasting windows, exercise, sugar reduction, circadian walks

    35:35 — Mind-body connection + journaling (without pretending it’s all “in your head”)

    37:13 — Rapid-fire advice: newly diagnosed, survivorship, long-term treatment, clinicians, pharma

    43:10 — Favorite quotes + choosing to “make the best of what happens”

    44:00 — Medical disclaimer


    About the Guest

    Harriet Cabelly, LCSW is a grief counselor, therapist, speaker, and author dedicated to helping people navigate loss, life transitions, and rebuilding meaning after trauma. A cancer thriver herself, Harriet blends clinical tools with lived experience to help patients and caregivers reclaim purpose, joy, and resilience.


    Book: Light Through Darkness: Miracles Along My Cancer Journey

    Referenced: Viktor Frankl — Man’s Search for Meaning


    Manta Cares: mantacares.com


    Subscribe to Patient From Hell for evidence-based cancer-care insight, survivorship tools, and the conversations patients wish they’d had sooner.


    Disclaimer: This podcast is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult your healthcare provider.

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    45 m
  • Exercise Is Cancer Side-Effect Medicine (Backed by New Survival Data)
    Jan 7 2026

    Exercise isn’t just “nice to have” during cancer, it can function like treatment for the side effects: fatigue, muscle loss (sarcopenia), joint pain, neuropathy, weakness, and even lymphedema risk reduction.


    In this episode of Patient from Hell, host + cancer survivor Samira Daswani sits down with Sami (exercise + cancer specialist focused on implementation) to break down what the research is finally confirming and what patients can do today, even with low energy, limited time, or zero equipment.We also unpack the headline-grabbing findings from the CHALLENGE Trial in colorectal cancer: a structured, coached exercise program was associated with a 28% lower risk of recurrence or new primary cancer and raises the bigger question: why isn’t exercise prescribed like medicine?


    Key takeaways you’ll learn:

    - Why strength training is the #1 lever for cancer-related fatigue + muscle loss

    - How to reduce joint pain (including hormone-therapy related joint pain)Simple “wake the nerves up” tactics for neuropathy- Lymphedema: prevention vs management + why early assessment matters

    - Chemo brain: why “automation” (classes + follow-alongs) can be the hack

    - The starter protocol: 10–15 minutes, every other day


    Chapter Codes

    00:00 Exercise as “treatment” for cancer side effects (fatigue, sarcopenia, function)

    00:30 Meet Sami: implementation theory (how she got into exercise + cancer)

    02:37 “How I f***ed up into this” — origin story + early patient experiences

    05:20 The headline research: what the CHALLENGE Trial showed

    07:19 The big number: 28% lower recurrence/new primary (structured group)

    08:40 Trial design: education vs coached/supervised exercise

    11:03 Symptom playbook begins: what exercise helps most

    11:35 Fatigue: why strength training rebuilds your “engine”

    14:09 What counts as strength training (real-world examples)

    15:46 Joint pain: lubrication, range of motion, yoga/Tai Chi basics

    17:22 Hormone therapy joint pain: why feet + shoulders show up big

    20:06 Plantar fasciitis: barefoot time + ball rolling + lifestyle traps

    21:47 Neuropathy: “wake the nerves up” + balance + sensation tools

    24:29 Lymphedema: prevention vs management + catch it early

    28:04 Weakness: mitochondria, estradiol, and fast-twitch strength loss

    30:34 Chemo brain: automate workouts so you don’t have to think

    33:59 Safety fear: “If chemo didn’t kill you, a squat won’t” (starting smart)

    38:33 Where to start: 10–15 minutes every other day

    40:17 Two starter moves: sit-to-stands + countertop pushups

    41:14 Just diagnosed? Keep routine—lower intensity + prioritize strength

    42:25 Wrap + the bigger message: independence, quality of life, green light


    About Patient From Hell

    Patient From Hell is hosted by cancer survivor and founder Samira Daswani, who asks the questions most patients are too overwhelmed—or too afraid—to ask.


    The show brings together doctors, researchers, advocates, and survivors to reveal evidence-based answers for patients navigating the chaos of cancer.


    Subscribe for episodes that blend science, compassion, and clarity—without the medical jargon.


    Connect & Follow Samira Daswani

    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/samiradaswani/

    Manta Cares: https://www.mantacares.com


    Disclaimer: This podcast is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute the practice of medicine, nursing or other professional health care services, including the giving of medical advice, and no doctor/patient relationship is formed. The use of information on this podcast or materials linked from this podcast is at the user's own risk. The content of this podcast is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Users should not disregard, or delay in obtaining, medical advice for any medical condition they may have, and should seek the assistance of their health care professionals for any such conditions.

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    45 m
  • Cancer's Impact on Intimacy: A Doctor Explains
    Dec 10 2025

    Up to 90% of breast cancer survivors experience sexual health changes, yet almost no one is talking about it.


    Today on Patient From Hell, host Samira Daswani sits down with Dr. Leila Agarwal, a leading clinician in oncology sexual health, to break the silence around libido loss, vaginal dryness, pain, body-image shifts, dating after cancer, orgasm changes, pelvic floor dysfunction, and how treatment impacts intimacy.


    This episode answers the questions patients wish they could ask, but rarely get time for in an oncology appointment.


    If you've ever wondered:

    “Is sex safe during treatment?”

    “Will my desire ever come back?”

    “Should I use vaginal estrogen?”

    “What’s normal to feel?”

    — you’re in the right place.


    Sexual health concerns in breast cancer are common, treatable, and deeply misunderstood. Dr. Agarwal explains:

    - Why oncologists often avoid sexual health conversations

    - The real reason libido drops during and after treatment

    - The truth about vaginal estrogen and hormone-positive breast cancer

    - How to talk to a partner when desire shifts

    - How single women can navigate dating after cancer


    🧠 Guest: Dr. Laila Agarwal

    Dr. Laila Agarwal is a nationally recognized expert in sexual health for oncology patients. She specializes in survivorship care, menopausal symptoms, pelvic health, pain management, and evidence-based approaches to sexual wellness throughout cancer treatment. She is passionate about removing stigma and giving patients the tools, language, and confidence to advocate for their sexual well-being.


    Chapter Codes

    00:00 – Why sexual health is overlooked in oncology

    01:45 – How many breast cancer patients struggle with sexual health

    03:15 – Why oncologists avoid the sex conversation

    05:02 – Biggest myths about sex during/after treatment

    06:07 – Low libido: what’s actually happening

    08:20 – Responsive desire vs spontaneous desire

    09:50 – Vaginal dryness: causes, range, and treatment

    12:34 – Moisturizers, hyaluronic acid & home remedies

    13:45 – Vaginal estrogen: safety, controversy & guidelines

    15:41 – Menopause, hormone shifts & severity of symptoms

    17:30 – Pain during intercourse & pelvic floor dysfunction

    19:27 – What to do if your cancer center lacks specialists

    20:58 – Body image & sexuality after mastectomy

    22:57 – Body image vs desire — how they interact

    24:42 – When to see a sex therapist vs medical provider

    26:29 – Partner communication and relationship impacts

    28:10 – How to set boundaries without losing intimacy

    29:55 – Dating during or after treatment

    31:19 – How treatment affects ability to orgasm

    33:28 – Is sexual recovery tied to treatment timing?

    34:58 – Should you feel guilty for wanting sex after cancer?

    35:40 – Myth busting: sugar, condoms, recurrence risk & more

    36:37 – Is sex safe with a chemo port?

    37:10 – Best sexual health resources for cancer survivors


    About Patient From Hell

    Patient From Hell is hosted by cancer survivor and founder Samira Daswani, who asks the questions most patients are too overwhelmed, or too afraid, to ask.


    The show brings together doctors, researchers, advocates, and survivors to reveal evidence-based answers for patients navigating the chaos of cancer.


    Subscribe for episodes that blend science, compassion, and clarity without the medical jargon.


    🔔 Connect & Follow Samira Daswani

    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/samiradaswani/

    Manta Cares: https://www.mantacares.com

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    38 m
  • Why Your Mammogram Might Be Lying to You: Leslie Ferris Yerger’s Fight
    Nov 26 2025

    We're joined by women’s health advocate and author Leslie Ferris Yerger, founder & CEO of My Density Matters. Diagnosed with stage IV breast cancer just two months after a “clear” mammogram and ultrasound, Leslie uncovers how dense breast tissue can hide cancer, why current screening standards fail many women, and what you can do to protect yourself.Leslie’s mission: make sure her story doesn’t become someone else’s. Her nonprofit empowers women to check their breast density, ask the right questions, and push for additional screening when needed.


    ✅ Listen to learn:

    What breast density is — and why it matters

    How dense tissue affects mammogram accuracy

    When to ask for MRI or advanced imaging

    Patient advocacy: how and when to push your doctor

    Real steps you can take today


    Chapters:

    00:00 – Intro & background

    01:17 – Clear mammogram → diagnosis journey

    05:13 – Why dense breast tissue matters

    12:58 – Understanding density categories & reports

    18:47 – What to ask your doctor next

    22:15 – Insurance, screening access & advocacy

    26:54 – Leslie’s takeaways & how to take action


    Guest Bio:

    Leslie Ferris Yerger is a Tedx speaker, author of Probably Benign, and a women’s advocate with a laser focused mission. Leslie was diagnosed with Stage IV breast cancer in November 2017 after an ‘all clear’ mammogram and ultrasound, experiencing firsthand the failings of our current breast cancer screening standards.


    As Founder and CEO of the not-for-profit My Density Matters, Leslie is determined to empower women to find out their breast density, learn their options, and advocate for themselves to get the additional breast cancer screening they need, so that her story doesn’t become their story. Leslie lives in Hawthorn Woods, IL with her husband John. She has 3 grown children: Evan, Julia, and Megan.


    Resources:

    My Density Matters → https://mydensitymatters.org/Purchase her book

    “Probably Benign” → https://probablybenign.com/


    Trigger warning: This episode covers breast cancer and screening challenges.


    If you found this helpful, please like, subscribe, and share this with the women in your life. Your next mammogram might just end up different.


    #BreastCancer #BreastDensity #WomenHealth #PatientAdvocacy #ScreeningFailure


    Enjoyed this episode? Make sure to subscribe, rate, and review!


    Follow us on Instagram, Facebook, or Linkedin @MantaCares and visit our website at MantaCares.com for more episodes and updates.


    All content and information provided in connection with Manta Cares is solely intended for informational and educational purposes only.


    This content and information is not intended to be a substitute for medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition.

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    41 m
  • What Your Doctor Isn't Telling You About Breast Cancer | Surgeon Dr. Liz O'Riordan
    Nov 12 2025

    Dr. Liz O’Riordan — a former breast surgeon turned patient, author and speaker — about what really happens behind the scenes of a cancer diagnosis and treatment. We unpack the full spectrum: from surgery to recurrence, from myths to survival, and the long-term “new” life that follows. Dr O’Riordan brings the rare perspective of having been the doctor and the patient. If you or someone you know is navigating this journey, this conversation provides insight, clarity and hope.


    Guest Links

    • Website: http://liz.oriordan.co.uk

    •Podcast “So Now I’ve Got Breast Cancer”

    Book: Under The Knife, The Cancer Roadmap, The Complete Guide to Cancer, and more


    ⏱ Chapter Codes

    00:00 – Introduction: Turning surgeon into survivor

    02:12 – Why she chose breast surgery & what it taught her

    04:17 – My diagnosis: stage 3, mastectomy, radiotherapy & hormone blockers

    07:28 – Life after treatment: coping, identity loss & “new” normal

    10:53 – Side-effects deep dive: chemo brain, fatigue, mental health

    14:39 – Sexual health, body image & life after breast cancer

    20:19 – Bone health, exercise & recurrence risk

    24:53 – Shared decision making: lumpectomy vs mastectomy

    32:37 – Diet myths, sugar & cancer: evidence-based truth

    35:10 – Fasting, alternative medicine & what the research really says

    42:57 – Life after cancer: “It’s not normal—it’s new”

    44:47 – What matters now: strength, confidence & joy


    📌 Why You Should WatchDr O’Riordan breaks down complex medical topics into relatable, actionable insights — from fatigue to sexuality, from diet myths to bone health, and from fear of recurrence to finding joy again. Whether you’re newly diagnosed, supporting someone you love, or simply curious about the patient experience — this episode offers clarity, authenticity and real talk.


    👉 Subscribe and hit the bell to stay updated on future episodes of Patient from Hell.


    Connect with Us:

    Enjoyed this episode? Make sure to subscribe, rate, and review! Follow us on Instagram, Facebook, or Linkedin @MantaCares and visit our website at MantaCares.com for more episodes and updates.


    Disclaimer:

    All content and information provided in connection with Manta Cares is solely intended for informational and educational purposes only. This content and information is not intended to be a substitute for medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition.

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    47 m