More information : http://www.agingresearch.org/
Aging for both populations and individuals is on the verge of a new era. Humans are approaching old age in unprecedented numbers as a result of large baby boom cohorts born in the middle of the 20th century that are approaching traditional retirement ages.
Increases in the prevalence of age-related disease, frailty, and disability are visible harbingers of the potential costs and social burdens arising from this historic demographic shift. Advances in the scientific knowledge of aging, however, have now created new opportunities that may allow us and those that follow to live healthier and longer lives than our predecessors. We have reached a historical moment as scientists learn enough about aging to allow us to postpone a wide range of fatal and disabling diseases expressed throughout the lifespan, the result of which would be health and economic benefits for current and all future generations.
Why are we so optimistic now? The primary reason is that science has revealed that aging is not the immutable process it was once thought to be. Interventions at a variety of genetic, cellular, physiological, nutritional, and behavioral levels not only increase longevity in laboratory organisms, but also dramatically increase the duration of disease-free life. The realization that some humans retain their physical and mental functioning for more than a century suggests that genes associated with the extension of healthy life already exist within the human genome.
Biogerontologists have now gone from merely describing cellular aging and cell death to manipulating the mechanisms responsible for these phenomena. Important strides have also been made toward understanding the effects of hormones on cellular pathways that influence the rate of aging. Since these pathways have similar effects in both humans and laboratory organisms, intervention strategies can be evaluated quickly, in short-lived animals, to find the ones most likely to work in humans. In short, we now believe that extending the duration of healthy life in humans by slowing down the processes of aging is a scientifically plausible goal, and adequate funding in this area might well lead to dramatic advances in preventive medicine and public health within the next few decades.
Even a minor deceleration in the rate of human aging could have profound benefits for individuals and societies. Because prolonged, chronic illness is a powerful driver of medical costs, enormous cost savings would be achieved if mortality and morbidity could be compressed within a shorter duration of time at the end of life. At least some of the manipulations that appear to slow aging in animal models do just this, maintaining excellent physical and cognitive function well beyond the usual ages at which illness and disability start to affect most untreated individuals. In fact, aging interventions have the potential to do what no surgical procedure, behavior modification or cure for any one major fatal disease can do; namely, extend youthful vigor throughout the lifespan. Extending the duration of physical and mental capacity would permit people to remain in the labor force longer, amass more income and savings, and thereby lessen the effect of shifting demographics on age-based entitlement programs, with a net benefit to national economies. The combined social, economic, and health bonuses accruing from a slowing of the rate of aging is what we call the Longevity Dividend – benefits that might begin with those now alive, and then continue for all generations that follow.
We now have good reasons to think that slowing aging in humans is scientifically plausible, and given sufficient research investment might prove to be within our technical grasp in the foreseeable future. There are a number of compelling reasons why this effort should now be aggressively pursued:
1. the costs, to individuals and to society, of ebilitating late life illnesses are already increasing in many countries as the population of elderly people mounts to unprecedented levels, leading to escalating health care costs;
2. compressing mortality and morbidity into a shorter duration of time at the end of life will pay substantial health and financial dividends for members of the first generation to which they can be applied, dividends that will be compounded as new generations benefit from existing and expanding technological advances; and
3. a modest deceleration in the rate of biological aging would produce the equivalent of simultaneous major breakthroughs against every single fatal and non-fatal disease and disorder associated with growing older. The time has arrived for governments and national and international health care organizations to make research into healthy aging a major research priority, exploiting new discoveries towards the goal of manipulating aging rate to prevent or postpone multiple forms of late life illnesses and disabilities. We look forward to developing a national and international strategy that will lead to the permanent extension of healthy life that would result from a successful effort to slow the rate of aging.
Endorsers
[alphabetical order, partial list]
Tomoko Adachi, M.A., Ph.D candidate in Physics, Catholic University of America
David Allison, Ph.D., University of Alabama at Birmingham
Robert Arking, Ph.D. Wayne State University
Steven N. Austad, Ph.D., University of Texas Health Science Center
Mark Azbel, Ph.D. Tel-Aviv University
Jane Barratt, Ph.D., Secretary General, International Federation on Ageing
Anthony E. Bell, Ph.D., OHSU and OGI Electrical Engineering Department
Debra Bemben, Ph.D., FACSM, University of Oklahoma
Michael G. Bemben, Ph.D., C.B. Hudson Presidential Professor, University of Oklahoma
Elliot Bergman, Ph.D, ChemLifeSciences
Marie A. Bernard, M.D., University of Oklahoma College of Medicine
Russell Blackford, Ph.D., Monash University, IEET Fellow
Monica Bock, MFA, University of Connecticut
Nick Bostrom, PhD, Director of the Future of Humanity Institute, Oxford University, IEET Chair
Jacob A. Brody, M.D., University of Illinois at Chicago
Dan Buettner, Executive Director, Blue Zones
Robert A. Burt, J.D., Alexander M. Bickel Professor of Law, Yale Law School
Robert N. Butler, M.D., International Longevity Center
John Cacioppo, Ph.D., University of Chicago
Arthur L. Caplan, Ph.D., Director, Center for Bioethics, University of Pennsylvania
Bruce A. Carnes, Ph.D., The University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center
Piu Chan, M.D., Ph.D., President, Chinese Association of Gerontology, Director of the Beijing Institute of Geriatrics
Jung-Bong Choi, Ph.D., New York University
Nicholas A. Christakis, MD, PhD, MPH, Harvard University
A. Mark Clarfield M.D., FRCPC, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel
James Clement, J.D., LL.M., President, The MaxLife Fund
L. Stephen Coles, M.D., Ph.D., Supercentenarian Research Foundation and UCLA
T. Michael Cooper, Ph.D., MSEE, Southern Methodist University
Lia Susana Daichman, M.D., President, International Longevity Center, Argentina
Christopher Allen Dowling M.D., Spectrum Medical Group, Maine Medical Center
Aubrey D.N.J. de Grey, Ph.D., Methuselah Foundation, IEET Fellow
Gregory M. Fahy, Ph.D., 21st Century Medicine, Inc.
Colin Farrelly, Ph.D. University of Waterloo, Canada
Monica Ferreira, D.Phil., University of Cape Town
Alfred J. Franusiszin, B.S., UNC, Chapel Hill, Nuclear Reactor Operator - USS Nautilus
Robert A. Freitas Jr., J.D., Institute for Molecular Manufacturing
Cyrus Gitonga Kamichi, Masters candidate, University of Nairobi
Terry Grossman, M.D., Medical Director, Frontier Medical Institute Golden CO
Gloria M. Gutman, Ph.D., Past-President, International Association of Gerontology & Geriatrics, Simon Fraser University
Roberto Ham-Chande, Ph.D., El Colegio de la Frontera Norte, Tijuana, BC, Mexico
Robin Hanson, Ph.D. George Mason University
S. Mitchell Harman, M.D., Ph.D. Kronos Longevity Research Institute
Henry R. Hirsch, Ph.D.
Dr. Reinhard Hittich, GreenPower B.V.
Douglas A. Hosack, M.S., J.D.
Irene Hoskins, Ph.D., President, International Federation on Ageing
James J. Hughes Ph.D., Executive Director, Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies
Donald K. Ingram, Ph.D., National Institute on Aging and Louisiana State University
David A. Kekich, Maximum Life Foundation
Kevin Kinsella, International Programs Center, U.S. Census Bureau
Gunther Kletetschka, Ph.D., Catholic University of America and NASA
Ray Kurzweil, CEO Kurzweil Technologies
Simon D. Levy, Ph.D., Washington & Lee University
David Ludwig, M.D., Harvard University
George M. Martin, M.D., University of Washington
Nuno Ricardo Barbosa Martins; Ph.D. candidate, University of Minho
Roger McCarter,Ph.D., Penn State University, President-Elect, Gerontological Society of America
Calvin Mercer, Ph.D. East Carolina University
J. Meyerhoff, Ph.D., Tel Aviv University
Richard A. Miller, M.D., Ph.D., University of Michigan
Shigeo Morioka, President, International Longevity Center, Japan
Timothy F. Murphy, Ph.D., University of Illinois College of Medicine
William D. Novelli, M.A., Chief Executive Officer, AARP
S. Jay Olshansky, Ph.D., University of Illinois at Chicago
Sang Chul Park, MD,PhD, Director, Seoul National University Institute on Aging
Graham Pawelec, M.A., Ph.D., University of Tübingen Medical School
Kevin Perrott, Ph.D. Candidate, University of Alberta
Daniel Perry, Alliance for Aging Research
Stanley R. Primmer, M.A., Supercentenarian Research Foundation
Peter S. Rabinovitch, M.D., Ph.D. University of Washington
Suresh I. S. Rattan, Ph.D., D.Sc., University of Aarhus
Neal R. Reisman, M.D., J.D., F.A.C.S., Baylor College of Medicine
Bill Sardi, Knowledge of Health, Inc.
John Schloendorn, Arizona State University
Jacob S. Siegel, M.A., Georgetown University, former president of the PAA
Richard L. Sprott, Ph.D.
Pablo Stafforini, Ph.D. candidate, University of Oxford
Ilia Stambler, M.A., Bar-Ilan University, Israel
Leslie Stayner, Ph.D., University of Illinois at Chicago
Melecio F. Turao, poet, fictionist, The Philippines
Karlis Ullis, M.D., Medical Director, Sports Medicine and Preventive Medical Group
Derya Unutmaz, M.D., Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
Natasha Vita-More, BFA, MS, PhD Candidate University of Plymouth, Extropy Institute
Mark Walker, Ph.D., McMaster University, Canada, IEET Board of Directors
Richard F. Walker, Ph.D., R.Ph., Society for Applied Research in Aging
Huber Warner, Ph.D., University of Minnesota
Andrew Weil, M.D., Program in Integrative Medicine, University of Arizona
Noah J. Weller, International Research Centre for Healthy Ageing and Longevity, Australia
Michael D. West, Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley
Georg Wick, M.D., Medical University of Innsbruck, Austria
Bradley J. Willcox. M.D., MSc, University of Hawaii
D. Craig Willcox Ph.D., Okinawa Prefectural University-College of Nursing
More information : http://www.agingresearch.org/