The Home Health Care Today Show
Welcome to The Home Health Care Today Show!
What started as an award-winning podcast in 2021 has evolved into Metro Detroit's most trusted health and wellness television program. Airing weekly on WMYD TV 20 Detroit every Saturday at 10:00am, host Dr. Cleamon Moorer brings you compelling guests, powerful storytelling, and the information you need to make confident decisions about your health and the care of those you love.
From chronic disease prevention to navigating home-based care options, every episode delivers real value with warmth and expertise. This is a healthy lifestyle channel.
The Home Health Care Today Show
Latest Episodes
Season 4: Episode 28: Live from Detroit PAL - NFL Legends & Vision Safety!
🔥This episode is PHENOMENAL.We didn't shoot it in a studio. We shot it on the ground—at the Youth Camp of the Century on July 14-15, 2026—surrounded by Detroit's young people, NFL legends, and the community leaders who made it all happe...
Season 4: Episode 27: Summer 2026 Check-In - Top 4 TV Episodes So Far!
We're halfway through the year—and what a year it's been.Since launching on WMYD TV-20 Detroit in January, we've crossed 100,000+ viewer hours, welcomed dozens of extraordinary guests, and tackled the health topics that matter most to our c...
Season 4: Episode 26: June in Review - Men's Health & Family Wellness!
June was a month for the fellas—and the families who love them.We talked about why men are dying younger, skipping checkups, and suffering in silence. We talked about what happens when retired NFL players invest in Detroit's next generat...
Season 4: Episode 25: National Family Health & Fitness Day!
The healthiest families don't do it alone. They do it together.When families prioritize health as a unit, success rates go up. Kids learn habits by watching their parents. Parents stay accountable when their kids are watching them. And ...
Season 4: Episode 24: Men's Health Month - Much Needed Guy Talk!
Men in the United States live five years less than women. They have their first heart attack an average of ten years earlier. They're four times more likely to die by suicide—and twice as likely to overdose.And yet, men are statistically...