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The Latest on Aging

Friday Jun 19 2009

The New York office of the International Longevity Center held their 10th annual Age Boom Academy earlier this month. Interesting tidbits picked up from this year's event include:

  • According to George Martin, professor of pathology at the University of Washington's School of Medicine, a botanist defines aging as "everything that happens from the beginning of development until death" and a biologist defines it as "the decline that starts after organisms reach maturity".
  • According to Steven Austad, a biology professor at the University of Texas's Health Science Centre, researchers use tiny worms, fruit flies and mice for approximately 90% of aging research.
  • According to Niz Barzilai, director of research at the Institute for Aging's Albert Einstein College of Medicine, only about one in 10,000 people lives to be a centenarian.
  • According to John Rowe, professor of public health at Columbia University, an 'aging society' is one in which there are more old people than young.
[Read More]

Written by eldering at News

Tagged with: aging aging_research longevity

Longevity

Tuesday Nov 18 2008

   By Jim Selman | Bio
I never thought longevity was the point to living, although as I grow older I am a lot more interested in the subject that when I was young. I haven’t met Dan Buettner but would like to. He’s written an article in the November issue of the AARP magazine called “Find Purpose, Live Longer”. He has done research in 4 areas of the world called ‘Blue Zones’ that have a large percentage of people who have lived past 100 (Okinawa, Costa Rica, Sardinia, and Loma Linda, California). For the Blue Zones Project, Buettner looked for common practices and, while I have not studied his research, I like his conclusions. Along with having a purpose, he sees four common lifestyle patterns contributing to increased longevity:[Read More]

Written by eldering at Fearless Aging

Tagged with: blue_zones dan_buettner longevity relationships

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