Chen cheng po biography of rory
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Chen Yufei
Chinese badminton player (born 1998)
In this Chinese name, the family name is Chen.
Badminton player
Chen Yufei 陈雨菲 | |
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Country | China |
Born | (1998-03-01) 1 March 1998 (age 26) Hangzhou, Zhejiang, China |
Height | 1.71 m (5 ft 7 in) |
Years active | 2013–present |
Handedness | Right |
Coach | Luo Yigang |
Career record | 388 wins, 113 losses |
Highest ranking | 1 (17 December 2019) |
Current ranking | 11 (4 February 2025) |
BWF profile |
Chen Yufei (Chinese: 陈雨菲; pinyin: Chén Yǔfēi; born 1 March 1998) is a Chinese badminton player. She won the gold medal in Badminton singles at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.[1] In her junior career, she won the girls' singles titles at the 2016 Asian and the World Junior Championships.[2][3] At the same year, Chen clinched her first senior title at the Macau Open.[4] She won a bronze medal at the 2017 World Championships[5] and was awarded as the Eddy Choong Most Promising Player of the Year in 2017.[6][7] On 17 December 2019, she reached a career-high BWF World Ranking as world number 1, and finished the year as the year-end no.1.[8] Other achievements include winning the World Tour Finals in 2019 • • Learn how the residents of the Fair Haven Retirement Community in Birmingham receive oral health care from an interprofessional team of dentists, physicians, and other health professionals through a program created by Dr. Lillian M. Mitchell, Director of Geriatric Dentistry at the University of Alabama at Birmingham School of Dentistry. After age 65, millions of Americans go without regular oral health checkups and treatment — even though research has found that oral health problems like periodontal disease are associated with diabetes, cancer, heart and lung diseases, progression of dementia and Alzheimer’s, and other serious illnesses. The problem is growing as Americans age. An estimated 10,000 baby boomers are turning 65 and retiring each day. By 2030, more than 70 million people are expected to be 65 or older. Of this “silver tsunami,” only an estimated 2% will have access to dental insurance benefits, according to State of Decay: Are Older Americans Coming of Age Without Oral Healthcare, a report by Oral Health America’s Wisdom Tooth Project. Factors such as limited income after retirement, the high cost of private dental insurance for older Americans, and the exclusion of dental ca Practice
Over Age 65? Oral Health Care Falls Off the Map
THE NEED