loader image
Monday, September 16, 2024
85.9 F
McAllen
We Welcome your Press Release
- Advertisement -

STHS Clinics Spotlight Chronic Lung Disease on ‘South Texas Healthy Living’ TV Show

Translate to Spanish or other 102 languages!

Photo Used for Illustration Purposes. By Pressmaster
- Advertisement -

Airing Saturday, July 20 & Sunday, July 30, on KGBT 4.1, the 30-minute program will highlight the common causes, risk factors, and warning signs of chronic lung diseases while offering prevention advice aimed at preventing or delaying their onset

The lungs are essential to life and the respiratory system’s centerpiece. The main function of the pair of spongy, pinkish-gray organs is to transfer life-giving oxygen into the blood supply while moving waste products like carbon dioxide out of your body. It’s a process that happens with every breath you take.

Poor lung function can lead to respiratory failure, which can lead to a multitude of symptoms. Depending on the cause and the levels of oxygen and carbon dioxide in the blood, they may include shortness of breath, air hunger, rapid breathing, confusion, and bluish skin, lips, and fingernails.

- Advertisement -

Unfortunately, more than 34 million people in the United States currently live with those symptoms due to chronic lung diseases, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and health experts say the situation is worsening across the country.

Over time, chronic lung diseases, such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), can lead to the need for a lung transplant, even death, if left untreated. 

“When chronic lung diseases like COPD advance, they don’t just affect how we breathe. They begin to impact other organs like the heart and nervous system. Many of these lung conditions can be life-altering or life-ending,” says pulmonologist Adolfo Kaplan, MD, a critical care medicine specialist affiliated with STHS McAllen. “That underlines the importance of early detection, treatment and prevention of chronic lung disease.”   

To help raise awareness about the dangers of lung-related health issues among residents of the Rio Grande Valley, South Texas Health System (STHS) and South Texas Health System Clinics (STHS Clinics) will devote the latest episode of their monthly “South Texas Healthy Living” television program to chronic lung diseases. 

- Advertisement -

Broadcast live on Saturday, July 20, and Sunday, July 21, at 11:00 a.m. on KGBT 4.1, the program will feature an interview with Dr. Kaplan, who will highlight the common causes, risk factors, and early warning signs of chronic lung diseases, as well as highlight how doctors diagnose and treat them. 

Additionally, STHS System Director of Marketing & Public Relations and South Texas Healthy Living host Tom Castañeda sits down with an 82-year-old Edinburg man who, after nearly 50 years, decided to quit smoking – one of the biggest risk factors for chronic lung diseases – but not before the damage to his lungs and heart had been done. Along with discussing the impact smoking had on his health, he’ll share his advice for those struggling to kick the habit.

The program will also feature a cooking segment led by Patrick Woodin, South Texas Health System McAllen’s director of dietary & nutrition services, on lung-friendly foods, a demonstration of improving lung health with a member of the STHS McAllen Outpatient Rehabilitation Center, and important advice on preventing chronic lung diseases.

- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -

- Advertisement -

More Articles

STHS & STHS Clinics Latest Episode of “South Texas Healthy Living”, Sept. 21st & 22nd

Mega Doctor News Airing Saturday, September 21 & Sunday, September 22 on KGBT 4.1, the 30-minute program will highlight...

DHR Health Welcomes Dr. Eduardo Martinez del Campo

Mega Doctor News EdEDINBURG, Texas - DHR Health, the largest physician-owned hospital in...

STHS Children’s Fall Festival, Oct. 25th

Mega Doctor News This Halloween, South Texas Health System Children’s invites you...

STHS: Helping Elderly Valley Residents Prevent, Treat & Beat Heart Disease, Sept. 20th

Mega Doctor News Heart disease is the leading cause of death for men...
- Advertisement -
×