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						 Punching 
						against Parkinson's, a grandmother boxer fights for her 
						health
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		[March 03, 2021]  
		ANTALYA, Turkey (Reuters) - Donning shiny 
		gloves and purple sneakers, 75-year-old Nancy Van Der Stracten hops into 
		the boxing ring and starts punching in a fight against severe symptoms 
		of Parkinson's disease. | 
        
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			 Six years after her diagnosis, the Belgian woman who lives in Turkey 
			discovered the benefits of non-contact boxing by chance while 
			researching the disease. Ever since, she has been perfecting her 
			punching by going to a gym three times a week. 
 "It does not stop your Parkinson's. Parkinson's is a degenerative 
			disease. It never stops but you can...slow it down," Van Der 
			Stracten said at a gym in the Mediterranean province of Antalya 
			where she has lived for 15 years.
 
 Non-contact boxing does not involve taking any punches, so there is 
			no risk of head trauma.
 
			
			 
			Known affectionately by the locals as "Auntie Naciye", she said when 
			she first stepped into the boxing ring, people watched the 
			grandmother of eight with their mouths agape as they were not used 
			to seeing women of her age in the ring.
 "If you are more than 50 years old they really look at you like 
			this: 'What are you coming to do here?' But they are gentle from the 
			heart, the Turks. So they let me do it," she told Reuters.
 
 Parkinson's, a progressive disease that affects millions of people 
			worldwide, produces tremors and stiffness as well as problems 
			walking and speaking. Despite limited research, intense exercise has 
			been associated with improving patients' lives.
 
			
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			 "Studies have shown that 
								non-contact boxing is good for the brain so it 
								is good for the Parkinson's disease. Will it 
								cure Parkinson's disease? Probably not because 
								it is a neuro-degenerative disorder... but it 
								does improve the quality of life for patients," 
								said Geysu Karlikaya, a neurologist at Medicana 
								Hospital in Istanbul.
 A furniture designer and painter, Van Der Van 
								Der Stracten said it has been easier to do 
								housework since she began boxing.
 
 "My doctor said one day, it is forbidden to you 
								to sit down. Go on, go on, go on. And that is my 
								counsel to everybody," she said. "Go out to 
								sport and do something that you like."
 
 (Reporting by Yesim Dikmen; Editing by Dominic 
								Evans and Emelia Sithole-Matarise)
 
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