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Sue Burness

Women's Health Evening Features "Aging Backwards" Author Jackie Silver

EVENT: Women’s Health Evening
“Hormone Balance, Health and Breast Cancer Prevention”
Featuring International presenter and hormone therapy expert Rebecca Glaser, MD and
Radio/TV Host and author of “Aging Backwards” Jackie Silver

WHEN: Wednesday, July 8th 6:30 p.m. – 9 p.m.

WHERE: Embassy Suites Dublin, 5100 Upper Metro Place, Dublin, OH 43017

WHO: Women between 30-90 years of age (interested partners welcome too)

COST: $10 pre-registration, $15 at the door

Contact: Melanie at Millennium Wellness in Dublin
937-478-0469 or audmelparsons@aol.com
www.millenniumwellnessusa.com


Dr. Rebecca Glaser, a retired breast cancer surgeon, is currently involved with bioidentical hormone replacement therapy and its impact on healthcare. She has evaluated and treated over two thousand breast cancer patients and over fifteen hundred patients with hormone imbalances. She continues to treat patients and lectures on ‘Bioidentical Hormone Balance and Health’ and evidence based anti-aging therapies. She established the website, http://www.hormonebalance.org/ as a nonprofit, educational website for patients and health care providers.

Jackie Silver is Aging Backwards and she shares her secrets, tips and shortcuts for looking and feeling young in her book, Aging Backwards: Secrets to Staying Young, and on her Web site www.agingbackwards.com.

She does numerous news segments as the Aging Backwards Beauty Expert and she's also the beauty editor for Clear Channel's Mix 100.7 Nancy & Chris Mornings in Tampa Bay. Silver is a weekly contributor to the midlife Web site LifeTwo.com, editorial consultant to Total Health Breakthroughs and a sought-after speaker.

Silver founded Aging Backwards, LLC, in 2006 to educate the public about the latest innovations in the anti-aging industry. She has more than 25 years of experience in broadcasting and she combines her natural reporter's curiosity with her desire to help people look and feel younger.

Silver is a member of the American Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine, the American Heart Association Community Board, Screen Actors Guild and the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists. She holds a B.A. degree in Mass Communications from the University of South Florida.

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    Dublin history lesson

    Peter and Benjamin Sells came to the area around 1801 from Huntington County, Pa., to buy land. Old Dublin was first platted in 1810 by their brother, John. Surveyor John Shields named the town after his birthplace in Ireland. The town developed the usual assortment of mills, shops and churches, with settlers coexisting peacefully with Wyandot Indians, who camped on Indian Run. The town gained notoriety in the mid-19th century, when a surplus of taverns and rowdy Civil War veterans gave the village a tough reputation. Columbus' growth and the construction of I-270 made expansion inevitable. Dublin achieved city status in 1987.
    Source: Columbus Dispatch library research

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