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Archive for the ‘Longevity’ Category

The ingredients to longevity – CNN

Tuesday, December 3rd, 2019

A plant-based diet underpins the health of those who live longest according to experts. Beans, legumes and pulses (such as lentils and chickpeas), compared with any other food, are the most important dietary predictor of longevity. They probably offer the best bang for your nutritional buck than any other food out there. David McLain

Wild greens like purslane, dandelion and arugula are a great source of minerals as well as carotenoids the colorful pigments our body converts to vitamin A. David McLain

Mushrooms, particularly shiitake, contain more than 100 compounds with immune-protecting properties. David McLain

Ginger's golden cousin is a powerful anticancer, antioxidant and anti-inflammatory agent. David McLain

Imo is a supercharged purple sweet potato that doesn't cause blood sugar to spike as much as a regular white potato. David McLain

Residents of Nicoya, Costa Rica -- a population more likely to reach a healthy 90 years old than anyone else on the planet -- use small sweet peppers in most of their dishes, and other peppers are also a staple food in longevity-prone Sardinia and Ikaria in Greece. Peppers are rich in vitamins, especially vitamin C. David McLain

Squash, available in several varieties, belongs to the botanical family Cucurbitaceae, known for providing high levels of useful carotenoids. David McLain

Nuts, as well as nut butters, are prominent in the diet of the Seventh-day Adventists, a religious group with a longer than average lifespan when compared to other Americans. One study found that those who ate a handful of nuts at least five times a week lived two to three years longer than those who didn't eat any nuts. David McLain

Ikarians in Greece drink tea brewed from local rosemary, wild sage and dandelion all of which are herbs known to have anti-inflammatory properties. David McLain

Lime-treated ground corn, or nixtamal, is used to make tortillas eaten at breakfast, lunch and dinner. It increases the body's ability to absorb calcium, iron and minerals. David McLain

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Gail Fisher’s ‘Dog Tracks’: Spoiling your dog with extra food could cut short its life – The Union Leader

Tuesday, December 3rd, 2019

HERE IT IS just a few days after Thanksgiving, and Im probably not alone in thinking about the poundage I usually put on (then struggle to lose) in just one extremely treat-filled month. There is no doubt from the many studies on this topic about the relationship between weight and longevity in humans. While there are no studies of longevity in dogs that Im aware of, its likely the same relationship exists.

Longevity in dogs is a problem or rather lack of longevity. The American Veterinary Medical Association claims dogs are living longer. Longer than what? A hundred years ago, sanitation and medical improvements saved infants and the young from early death, greatly affecting human longevity. The claim that dogs are living longer might be related to the reduction and elimination of diseases that kill puppies. At the other end of the spectrum, the sad fact is that dogs do not live as long as they used to.

When I was a child, dogs often lived well into their teens. My next-door-neighbors dog, an Irish setter, was the same age as I. She died when I was a freshman in college. We were both 17. They also had a cocker spaniel that lived to be 20!

Nearly 50 years ago, I interviewed for a job at a Newfoundland kennel with more than 40 dogs, many that were 18 to 20 years old. They fully expected their dogs to live well into their mid-to late teens. Now, a mere 45 years later, a Newfie that lives to be 10 is old hardly an increase in longevity.

While genetics plays a role in longevity, there is a profound message for dog owners in this simple statement: Thin creatures live longer than fat ones.

Could it be that our pets reduced longevity is in part because we feed them too much? There is a lot we dont know about why so few dogs live into their late teens, but certainly one factor could well be excess weight even just a few too many pounds. A 50-pound dog that is just 10 pounds overweight is carrying 20% more weight than its frame and organs are designed for. This is considered to be obesity in humans, but in dogs its considered show weight or proof that we love and spoil our dogs usually said with an apologetic shrug.

If by spoiling our dogs were shortening their lives, wouldnt it be better to be tough (read kind) and cut out fattening snacks? Consider the greyhound, a large, sleek hound with a life expectancy many years beyond large, heavier hounds. Bloodhounds, a similar size, but much heavier dog, live to 10 or 11, while a greyhound often lives to 14 or 15. Greyhounds are one of the only show dogs for whom show weight is not overweight. You can see the ribs of a healthy greyhound, while it is often hard to even feel the ribs on many pet dogs.

I firmly believe that one of the reasons my English mastiffs lived to 13 or 14 (years beyond the life expectancy of the breed) was in part because I keep my dogs thin anathema for many mastiff people. For many giant breed owners, bigger is better. Theyll proudly exclaim, My Mastiff weighed 250 pounds! He might have died at the age of 6 and could barely walk because he was grossly overweight, but, by golly, he was huge!

Veterinarians we talk to almost universally agree that most pet dogs are too fat. In many cases, they have given up fighting that battle. Despite recommendations that the dog needs to lose weight, many owners seem to have a hard time cutting back on their dogs food and seem to believe theyre punishing their dog if they provide low-fat snacks. Youre not! Youre being kinder to your dog.

So in this holiday season, consider not sharing your turkey skin and leftover gravy with your dog. Or if you do, cut back on your dogs food that day. Your dog wont hate you for it, and you might well have him around a few extra months or years.

Gail Fisher, author of The Thinking Dog and a dog behavior consultant, runs All Dogs Gym & Inn in Manchester. To suggest a topic for this column, which appears every other Sunday, email gail@alldogsgym.com or write c/o All Dogs Gym, 505 Sheffield Road, Manchester, NH 03103. Past columns are on her website.

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Gail Fisher's 'Dog Tracks': Spoiling your dog with extra food could cut short its life - The Union Leader

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5 Foods to Boost Brain Health and Longevity – Newsmax

Tuesday, December 3rd, 2019

With the rise of fad diets, so-called superfoods, and a growing range of dietary supplements on the market, it's hard to know what to eat to prevent dementia and increase our lifespan. But there is solid science behind the power of certain foods to protect your brain from oxidative damage and improve cognition and memory.

More and more studies are pointing to lifestyle changes to protect our brains from diseases including Alzheimer's. Noted expert Dr. Gary Small, author of "2 Weeks to a Younger Brain" and editor of The Mind-Body Health Report, tells Newsmax that according to researchers at the University of California at San Francisco, up to half the Alzheimer's cases are potentially attributable to "modifiable risk factors."

"In our book we focus on nutrition as well as stress management, physical exercise, and mental stimulation to keep the brain healthy and potentially delay the symptoms of dementia," says Small. In fact, studies have shown that sticking to the MIND diet is associated with 30 to 35 percent lower risk of cognitive impairment in older adults. The MIND diet, which stands for the Mediterranean-DASH Intervention for Neurodegenerative Delay, is a hybrid of both the famous Mediterranean and DASH diets.

As we age, our metabolism becomes less efficient and is less able to get rid of compounds generated from what is termed "oxidative stress." The toxic compounds generated by oxidative stress steadily build up, slowly damaging the brain and eventually leading to symptoms of Alzheimer's disease.

"Antioxidant fruits and vegetables protect the brain from oxidative stress, which causes wear and tear on our neurons as we age," notes Small. "Omega-3 fats from fish fight brain inflammation, helping us reduce the risk for age-related cognitive decline. Minimizing consumption of processed foods and refined sugars reduces the risk for diabetes, which further protects brain health throughout life."

Here are the five top foods to boost brain power:

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Increasing Longevity by Decreasing Oxidization – Nanalyze

Tuesday, December 3rd, 2019

Somewhere in a coffee shop in America, some green-haired millennial is typing away feverishly on their brand new Macbook Air, broadcasting to their Twitter followers about how evil capitalism is. As they pour a dab of pasture-grazed New Zealand cows milk into their freshly roasted cup of Guatemalan organic free-trade coffee, they lament their woes to the world. Whycant society give me more? Why cant I enjoy success without hard work? On the other side of the globe, some hard workers in New Zealand are pulling off some prettymajor feats to put that delicious milk on the table.

It all starts at LIC, a New Zealand cooperative whose core business is dairy genetics. (Theyre responsible for inseminating 80% of New Zealands national dairy herd.) Next to LICs headquarters in Hamilton sit the prized bulls whove sired tens of thousands of calves. When the time comes, the bull is loaded into a custom tractor-trailer and taken to a building thats been there for decades. (The bull is transported this way so it doesnt stub its toe while walking over and consequently produce less sperm.) The bull is led up to an attractive cow who stands waiting while a human handler watches and waits. Once the bull convinces the cow that hes not just another player interested in a one-night stand, he mountsher, and this is where all the fun begins.

Collecting a jump Source: Livestock Improvement Corporation (LIC)

The human handler then needs to manipulate the bull with a device that collects the prized semen or a jump as its called in dairy lexicon. Once collected, some of the semen is frozen and shipped to various parts of the world. Its where life starts, and its a fitting place for a longevity company to start as well.

Founded in 2015, Hamilton, New Zealand startup Synthase Biotech has taken in$3.36 millionin funding and contributions to develop a platform technology that seems to have limitless promise. The technology behind the company came about as somewhat of an accident while researchers were looking for an alternative to latex when the Japanese were constraining supply. In an Arizona desert exists a shrub that contains latex that also contains an enzyme that prevents the latex from oxidizing. (Oxidization ishow a substance reacts to oxygen, and in some instances its not good like rust.) Its this plant enzyme that may, eventually, be used to increase longevity in humans.

Turns out that humans dont react well to prolonged exposure to oxygen over time. While oxygen is what you need to live, its also what can ultimately take you out in the end.Youve probably all heard of antioxidants which can prevent oxidative damage to cells and tissues by scavenging unconstrained radicals. Its damage that arises from unconstrained free radicals that can eventually be fatal. Synthase Biotech hasan enzyme that it calls Aloxsyn which has extraordinary specificity and rates of reaction against toxic lipid peroxides. In other words, this enzyme can be used to halt and even repair much of the damage that aspects of oxidization can do to mammalian cells, andthe company has developed a way to produce the enzymeusinga fermentation process.

We sat down to talk with Dr. Andrew West of Synthase Biotech, which has IP protection around the use of this enzyme, Aloxsyn, in their first product applications for frozen bull semen and cattle embryos.

Given how much work happens in Hamilton around frozen bull semen, it was a likely place to start. If a cow isnt fertile, its not producing milk. Consequently, you want to maximize cow fertility in order to maximize milk production. Keeping a cow that doesnt produce milk is uneconomic and produces unnecessary greenhouse emissions from its belching, or whatever it is theyre supposed to be doing thats wrecking the planet.

Ideally, fresh semen works best for artificial insemination, but there are many use cases where frozen semen is needed.You may need to transport the semen long distances, or you may want to preserve some semen from a prized bull to be used next year. When using frozen semen instead of fresh semen, fertility rates can drop as you might expect. However, when adding some Aloxsyn to the mix, you can get a better outcome. Thats based on a major trial that Synthase Biotech recently conducted.

If youre talking cattle, the final customer is always the farmer. Thats who Aloxsyn is helping. But its just one of many potential applications for this technology.

Synthases proprietary bioactive, Aloxsyn, may have a positive impact anywhere inflammationcan be found. Dr. West believes that the number of potential applications for the companys enzyme are very large. One application Synthase is looking at is storage of blood platelets, which will require some trial testing, but which represents a huge potential market. Then, there are more sperm applications.

Once a bull has a jump, that sperm dies almost immediately if it doesnt end up inside the cow where it belongs. Whilst working on frozen sperm, it looks like Aloxsyn also extendsthelife of fresh cattle sperm by five days. (LIC scientistsshowed us a proprietary solution theyre using that increases the life of cattle sperm by three days.) Why stop at cattle sperm? Fertility of pigs and horses could also be of interest as well, not to mention human fertility.

Source: Synthase Biotech

All of these fertility applications are higher margin, but there are also lower margin applications that can be considered such as increasing the shelf life of food. With around 30% of food waste in developed markets attributed to food spoilage, its another way that we may be able to help feed all the billions of mouths coming online. (Seems like a fitting application considering that theyre about increasing human fertility.) In order to address high-volume applications like this, production would need to be scaled and costs would need to be driven down. It all requires investment and partnerships with interested parties who want to collaborate.

No longevity companyis without some grand visions of what the future might hold. In some preliminary experiments, a rats heart was stopped from beating for 30 minutes and then blood applied with the enzyme. The rat heart recovered 100% of its function. A rat with a severe stroke could fully recover if Aloxsyn was applied within 45 minutes of that stroke. The implication here is an interesting one. Perhaps lipid peroxides in all thatbacked up blood behind the clot serve to damage the brain when the clot is overcome, and Aloxsyn cleans up those toxins? Its a promising example of what the future might hold, and if you have about $100,000 to pony up, Dr. West says Synthase Biotech will work to create a mouse that produces its own Aloxsyn, a mouse that just might live longer. Its a drop in the bucket forthe many billionairesout thereseeking the fountain of youth. For New Zealand investors, however, that sort of work is pretty risky.

The New Zealand Herald published a pretty comprehensive articleon Synthase Biotech last year which contains some relevant information about the state of biotech in New Zealand. Its dismal. Investorsdont look favorably on life sciences companies and that could be because the New Zealand stock exchange isnt of a size that would support them. (The entire New Zealand stock exchange has a market cap of just $142 billion. To put that number in perspective, Johnson & Johnson is over twice that size with a market cap of $363 billion.)

On the other hand, Australia is much more accepting towards biotechs with about 200 listings on the ASX. Synthase is not pursuing an ASX listing, but if the company moves into development of a human drug based on Aloxsyn, it will need millions of dollars for clinical trials. Significant investments over time will allow Synthase to add a range of human applications to complement its livestock ones. After a few years of selling animal products, their manufacturing operation will have all the kinks sorted out, andthats half the battle before embarking on some human trials.

The more we know about the world, the more we realize how little we know. Thats obvious when you consider how some of the worlds greatest inventions penicillin, X-rays, the microwave, LSD were all discovered by accident. The Peter Thiel types out there who are willing to sink large sums into theburgeoning longevity industrymight find the capital requirements for companies like Synthase Biotech to be more economical. According to a talk by Finistere Ventures a few years back, agtech valuations in the United Statesare half of fintech valuations, while New Zealand agtech valuations are half of that. If the fountain of youth exists inThe Land of the Long White Cloud, its likely to be selling at bargain-basement prices.

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Column: The rich are getting a windfall from Social Security – Los Angeles Times

Tuesday, December 3rd, 2019

In a world where the rich always seem to get richer whatever the game, Social Security has always seemed to be one program that was truly progressive it benefited the working class more than the moneyed class. Right?

Sadly, no.

In reality, despite painstaking efforts to ensure that Social Security benefits are distributed fairly, the wealthy are receiving disproportionately large payouts after all. Thats the finding of a new study by Alicia H. Munnell and Anqi Chen of the authoritative Center for Retirement Research at Boston College.

Munnell and Chen, Boston College

The mismatch lurks within the adjustments made both when workers claim Social Security benefits early that is, before their full retirement age and late. Claim early, and monthly benefits will be reduced; claim late, and theyll be raised. These adjustments aim to make the timing decision actuarially neutral: On average, total lifetime benefits should remain equivalent whether one claims before ones full retirement age or later.

Munnell and Chen calculate that the actuarial adjustments are out of whack and favor late claiming. As a result, they increasingly favor higher earners, they write.

Sigh.

Munnell and Chen identify two culprits in throwing off the math: One is interest rates, which have been lower than experts at the Social Security Administration and on Capitol Hill anticipated when they set the differentials. (The early-retirement option was made available for women in 1956 and for men in 1961. The credit for delaying retirement was introduced in 1972 and recalculated in 1983, according to the authors.)

The second factor may be more significant: Average life expectancy is rising. As a result, retirees are collecting benefits for longer than the designers expected. Longevity is rising faster for wealthier individuals than middle- and lower-income workers, however, which is what makes late claiming more of a boon for the wealthy.

In the six decades since retirement options were broadened, Munnell and Chen write, Much has changed.... Interest rates have declined; life expectancy has increased; and longevity improvements have been much greater for higher earners.

Munnell and Chen assert that because of these two factors the penalty for early retirement is now too high. The bump up for delayed retirement is about right on average, they say, but because of the demographics favoring the wealthy, its too large for those who delay.

Before exploring the ramifications of these findings, lets look at how early and late retirement affect Social Security benefits.

Life expectancy has been rising for the wealthy faster than everyone else and the gap has broadened since the turn of the century.

(Boston College)

A Social Security reform measure in 1983 raised the full retirement age from the traditional 65 in incremental steps. For those born in 1943-54, including those reaching 65 this year, the full retirement age is 66. For those reaching 65 next year, it will be 66 and 2 months. The change tops out at age 67 for those born in 1960 or later.

Workers can start claiming benefits as early as 62, though monthly benefits are reduced by about 6.7% for every year prior to their full retirement. At the other end of the spectrum, workers can defer benefits until age 70, for a roughly 8% bump in monthly benefits for every year deferred.

Consider workers reaching 66 this year, when the average retirement benefit is $1,474.77 per month. Early retirement at 62 would reduce the monthly stipend by about 23%, while deferring until 70 would raise it by about 32%. So if those workers had started taking benefits four years ago, at age 62, theyd be entitled to only about $1,135.57 per month. If they hold out until 70, theyll get more than $1,947 a month. That means a reduction of about $4,000 a year for early retirement, and a gain of $5,667 a year for waiting.

For those expecting to collect the maximum benefit of $2,861 a month at full retirement age this year, early retirement at 62 would have reduced that to $2,209 a month, and deferral to 70 will raise it to $3,770.

Those figures explain the common advice to retirees is to wait as long as possible to start claiming. Of course, the advice isnt right for everyone. It does take more than 12 years of the higher maximum payouts after reaching age 70 to make up for the four years of skipped benefits after age 66, so retirees would need to factor their health expectations into the decision to wait.

More to the point, deferring Social Security isnt practical for many working people. Some are in jobs that are too physically taxing to continue too far into their 60s. Some dont have savings, pensions or other sources of income to live on. Indeed, among the top 20% of earners, just over half claim their retirement benefits at or after their full retirement age. Among the bottom 20%, however, nearly two-thirds claim early.

The salient point is that deferring Social Security tends to become a more inviting option the higher ones income and larger the nest egg. That advantage is compounded by such recipients longer average lifespans.

Wealthier workers are able to wait longer after their full retirement age (FRA) to start claiming Social Security benefits.

(Boston College)

As a research team led by economist Raj Chetty of Stanford reported in 2016, among the top 1% of earners (average household income of about $2 million), the average life expectancy is about 89 for women and 87.3 for men. Among the bottom 20% (average household income of about $25,000), the average life expectancy is about 83 for women and 78 for men.

The differential is based not only on income. Average life expectancy is higher for whites than for African Americans and rise with educational attainment.

As weve reported before, the longevity gap between rich and poor has been widening, largely because life expectancy for those in the bottom 20% has stagnated or even moved backward, while it has soared for those at the top.

The National Academy of Sciences calculated in 2015 that for those born in 1930, males in the bottom 20% who reached age 50 had a life expectancy of 76.6; those with the same characteristics born in 1960 could expect to live only to 76.1. Among the top 20% of income earners, males born in 1930 could expect to live to 81.7, while those born in 1960 could expect to live to 88.8. In other words, a longevity gap of just over five years between rich and poor born in 1930 widened to nearly 13 years for those born in 1960. A similar pattern can be found among women.

That trend line in itself made Social Security less progressive less advantageous for lower-income workers than for the better-off. It also undermined the argument that Social Security could be made fiscally healthier by continuing to raise the retirement age. It would, but at the expense of the working class. The National Academy of Sciences reckoned that raising the official retirement age to 70 would reduce the benefits of those in the lowest fifth of income earners by 25%, but by only 20% for those in the top fifth.

Munnell and Chen dont make specific recommendations about what adjustments should be made in the early- and late-retirement differentials, beyond stating that theyre outdated. Curiously this aspect of Social Security benefits is seldom, if ever, addressed by reform proposals from either left or right. (Progressives generally advocate expanding and raising benefits, while conservatives want to cut them or turn the entire program over to the private sector.)

Redressing the imbalance may not be that difficult. The early-retirement penalty should be recalculated -- that is, reduced -- based on the recent history of interest rates and changes in expectations for their future course.

Reducing the late-retirement credit, currently 8% per year of deferral, is somewhat more complicated. For the individual with average life expectancy, the reduction for early claiming is too large and the delayed retirement credit is about right, Munnell and Chen observe. The problem with the credit is that its right on average but too good for those who actually tend to receive it, i.e., the wealthy.

Finding a way to make the credit fair across the entire income spectrum may require some imagination. But the options could include increasing the income tax on Social Security benefits for high-income taxpayers. Currently, up to 85% of benefits are taxable for those with income of more than $34,000 for individuals or $44,000 for couples. (In other words, a taxpayers tax rate is applied to 85% of benefits, not that 85% of benefits is taxed away.) Tweaking that formula, say by making 100% of the benefits claimed by richer retirees subject to tax might help bring the credit effectively back into line.

The report by Munnell and Chen underscores the inequity bequeathed to Social Security by demographics. The wealthy not only live longer than their poorer colleagues, but they also get an additional windfall from outdated math. Thats how the world works, but that doesnt make it right.

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Column: The rich are getting a windfall from Social Security - Los Angeles Times

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Alistair Overeem discusses the keys to his longevity – BJPenn.com

Tuesday, December 3rd, 2019

Alistair Overeem has been around for a long, long time. Of the course of a 20-year combat sports career, the Dutchman has picked up titles in Strikeforce, Dream, and K-1 and hes still not done yet.

Ahead of his upcoming showdown with Jairzinho Rozenstruik, which will top the UFCs December 7 return to Washington, D.C., Overeem sat down with UFC.com and opened up on the mindset that has kept him competing at the highest level for so long.

Part of it, he says, is simply being hard-wired with a fighters mentality a mentality hes always had.

I think Ive always been a fighter, Overeem said (via MMA Junkie). Ive always kicked ass even before I was professionally a fighter. Id have fights in the street and it even got me in trouble a couple of times.

Some people will never be fighters, and then some people are born fighters.

Overeem also attributes his longevity to his love for fighting.

I think us fighters go for amazing stories, Overeem said. My career in particular has been a long adventure. I think I was built for it. Ive been all over the world. Ive fought in 89 fights, kickboxing and MMA. Im just doing my thing. Im following my passion. Its been a great adventure and Im still going strong.

If Overeem is able to defeat Rozenstruik an undefeated fighter and one of the hottest prospects in the heavyweight division hell once again be close to a UFC heavyweight title shot. The Dutch legend says winning a UFC title would be the icing on the cake of his incredible career.

I have my own goals of course: UFC gold, Overeem said. To win the title would be a great close on my career.

Do you think Alistair Overeem will come out on top in Washington D.C.?

This article first appeared onBJPENN.comon 11/29/2019.

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Increasing longevity allows maximized sow milk production – mySteinbach.ca

Tuesday, December 3rd, 2019

A Research Scientist with Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada says, by extending the longevity of sows in the breeding herd, pork producers can take greater advantage of their increased milk production in later parities.

Mothers milk is the only source of nutrients and energy available to the piglet at birth but, over the years, as the result of increased liter sizes, the amount of milk available to each piglet has decreased.

Improving Sow Lactational Performance was among the topics discussed in Saskatoon as part of Saskatchewan Pork Industry Symposium 2019.

Dr. Chantal Farmer, a Research Scientist in Sow Lactation Biology with Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada in Sherbrooke, says the amount of milk a sow will produce will increase in later parities.

The multiparous animal, so parity two and onward will produce 25 percent more milk than primiparous animals and the maximum amount of milk yield is in parities two to four. So really we should keep our sows up till four parities if we want to maximize the milk yield of the sows but, I know in Quebec anyway and Im quite sure its the same here, we dont keep sows for that long.

We have culling problems and longevity problems so thats something we need to work on because keeping the sows in the herd for four parties would maximize the milking capacity of those sows. The peak in milk yield is in parties two to four so what its telling us is that we need to keep our animals in the herd long enough to be able to take advantage of that peak in milk yields. So any management procedure you can have to make sure you extend longevity of these animals, avoid leg problems and anything you can do to have a good body condition, make sure theyre not too thin, its a good thing to keep these animals for the fourth first lactations.

~ Dr. Chantal Farmer, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

Dr. Farmer says the more milk the piglet consumes the faster it will grow and the less time it will take to reach market weight and the more colostrum, the piglet receives the more resistant it will be to disease.

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Maha Vikas Aghadi | With numbers on its side, longevity is the challenge – Moneycontrol.com

Tuesday, December 3rd, 2019

Shekhar Iyer

The Common Minimum Programme (CMP) that supposedly lists out key priorities for the new government opened with a preamble emphasising on secularism rather than propounding a grand political vision for Maharashtra.

Ironically, the Congress spent too much time hammering out the CMP until the early morning shock and awe type of swearing-in of Bharatiya Janata Partys (BJPs) Devendra Fadnavis as chief minister on November 23. This robbed the Opposition of its slumber and forced it to knock on the doors of the Supreme Court, whose intervention for an early floor test saved the alliance.

Soon, strategy managers were busy in herding their numbers and wooing the rebel, NCPs Ajith Pawar who was sworn-in as deputy chief minister under Fadnavis, back to the fold. The political drama ended on November 26, a day before the apex court-ordered floor test was to be conducted. This has left the numbers versus longevity game to be settled for another day.

For grabbing an opportunity of heading the government after 20 years, the Shiv Sena dumped a 30-year-old alliance with the BJP and shed initial disagreements on using the word secular in CMP, where now the word appears twice in the first paragraph itself. Reports were that the Sena was against the word appearing in the coalitions or Maha Vikas Aghadis CMP.

A day after he won the confidence vote, Shiv Sena chief and Maharashtras Chief Minister Uddhav Thackeray could not help saying that the Hindutva ideology is indispensable to the Shiv Sena and the party will not leave it. I am still with the ideology of 'Hindutva' and won't ever leave it," he said in the state assembly.

They rely on his averments that he would not allow anything that makes the common man feel terrorised. Therefore, the CMP would serve as a tool that will bridge the ideological and temperamental gulf between the Congress and the Sena by focusing on some pressing issues faced by the commoners, particularly farmers.

Other key focus areas in the CMP were hardly contentions issues as most parties agreed on tackling them on a priority basis: farm distress, unemployment, health, industry, social justice, women, education and urban development. Similarly, a law to ensure 80 per cent reservation in jobs for local/domicile youth (which is seen as the Senas plank) should not bother the ruling partners in terms of their ideologies.

However, observers feel that the sore-spot for the alliance is not in the new-found Shiv Sena-Congress relationship it is the equations within NCP leader Sharad Pawars family where his prodigy Ajit Pawar has returned to the NCP fold and where tension is brewing. It is said that the junior Pawar has still not reconciled to Thackeray being allowed a full five-year term as CM.

On the other side, the Congress is wary of Ajit Pawar after he joined hands with the BJP. That said, Congress interim President Sonia Gandhi and her aides realise that he is too important for the NCP and cannot be stopped from becoming deputy chief minister. Without him in the government, the NCP may well disintegrate.

Importantly, the Congress decision to nominate a former BJP MP Nana Patole for the assembly Speakers post is not exactly an expression of friendship towards the NCP. Patole, a fourth-term MLA from Sakoli, won Bhandara Lok Sabha seat as a BJP candidate, defeating former Union minister Praful Patel in 2014. Patole quit the BJP and joined the Congress following his disappointment with the top BJP leaders, citing their friendship with Patel and for refusing to act against his acts of commission and omission during the UPA regime. Patel remains a very influential leader in the NCP as he is close of the Pawars. Patel has never been averse to the NCP doing business with the BJP and wont take kindly to the Congress decision on Patole.

Be as it may, the Thackeray-led Cabinet will be expanded this week. The buzz is that, besides the post of deputy CM, the NCP is all set to emerge as the biggest gainer by getting high-profile portfolios such as revenue, home and the public works department. It is also likely that the NCP may get one more ministry than the Shiv Sena. Given these complexities, the BJPs wait may be longer than it thinks, but are there enough reasons for the Aghadi to come unstuck a year from now?

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Maha Vikas Aghadi | With numbers on its side, longevity is the challenge - Moneycontrol.com

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Longevity And Anti-Senescence Therap Market Analysis 2023 Leading Manufacturers & Regions, Application & Types – Guru Online News

Tuesday, December 3rd, 2019

The global longevity and anti-senescence therapies market should grow from $329.8 million in 2018 to $644.4 million by 2023 with a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 14.3% during 2018-2023.

Report Scope:

The scope of this report is broad and covers various therapies currently under trials in the global longevity and anti-senescence therapy market. The market estimation has been performed with consideration for revenue generation in the forecast years 2018-2023 after the expected availability of products in the market by 2023. The global longevity and anti-senescence therapy market has been segmented by the following therapies: Senolytic drug therapy, Gene therapy, Immunotherapy and Other therapies which includes stem cell-based therapies, etc.

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Revenue forecasts from 2028 to 2023 are given for each therapy and application, with estimated values derived from the expected revenue generation in the first year of launch.

The report also includes a discussion of the major players performing research or the potential players across each regional longevity and anti-senescence therapy market. Further, it explains the major drivers and regional dynamics of the global longevity and anti-senescence therapy market and current trends within the industry.

The report concludes with a special focus on the vendor landscape and includes detailed profiles of the major vendors and potential entrants in the global longevity and anti-senescence therapy market.

Report Includes:

71 data tables and 40 additional tables An overview of the global longevity and anti-senescence therapy market Analyses of global market trends, with data from 2017 and 2018, and projections of compound annual growth rates (CAGRs) through 2023 Country specific data and analysis for the United States, Canada, Japan, China, India, U.K., France, Germany, Spain, Australia, Middle East and Africa Detailed description of various anti-senescence therapies, such as senolytic drug therapy, gene therapy, immunotherapy and other stem cell therapies, and their influence in slowing down aging or reverse aging process Coverage of various therapeutic drugs, devices and technologies and information on compounds used for the development of anti-ageing therapeutics A look at the clinical trials and expected launch of anti-senescence products Detailed profiles of the market leading companies and potential entrants in the global longevity and anti-senescence therapy market, including AgeX Therapeutics, CohBar Inc., PowerVision Inc., T.A. Sciences and Unity Biotechnology

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Summary

Global longevity and anti-senescence therapy market deals in the adoption of different therapies and treatment options used to extend human longevity and lifespan. Human longevity is typically used to describe the length of an individuals lifetime and is sometimes used as a synonym for life expectancy in the demography. Anti-senescence is the process by which cells stop dividing irreversibly and enter a stage of permanent growth arrest, eliminating cell death. Anti-senescence therapy is used in the treatment of senescence induced through unrepaired DNA damage or other cellular stresses.

Global longevity and anti-senescence market will witness rapid growth over the forecast period (2018-2023) owing to an increasing emphasis on Stem Cell Research and an increasing demand for cell-based assays in research and development.

An increasing geriatric population across the globe and a rising awareness of antiaging products among generation Y and later generations are the major factors expected to promote the growth of global longevity and anti-senescence market. Factors such as a surging level of disposable income and increasing advancements in anti-senescence technologies are also providing traction to the global longevity and anti-senescence market growth over the forecast period (2018-2023).

According to the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the total geriatric population across the globe in 2016 was over REDACTED. By 2022, the global geriatric population (65 years and above) is anticipated to reach over REDACTED. An increasing geriatric population across the globe will generate huge growth prospectus to the market.

Senolytics, placenta stem cells and blood transfusions are some of the hot technologies picking up pace in the longevity and anti-anti-senescence market. Companies and start-ups across the globe such as Unity Biotechnology, Human Longevity Inc., Calico Life Sciences, Acorda Therapeutics, etc. are working extensively in this field for the extension of human longevity by focusing on study of genomics, microbiome, bioinformatics and stem cell therapies, etc. These factors are poised to drive market growth over the forecast period.

Global longevity and anti-senescence market is projected to rise at a CAGR of REDACTED during the forecast period of 2018 through 2023. In 2023, total revenues are expected to reach REDACTED, registering REDACTED in growth from REDACTED in 2018.

The report provides analysis based on each market segment including therapies and application. The therapies segment is further sub-segmented into Senolytic drug therapy, Gene therapy, Immunotherapy and Others. Senolytic drug therapy held the largest market revenue share of REDACTED in 2017. By 2023, total revenue from senolytic drug therapy is expected to reach REDACTED. Gene therapy segment is estimated to rise at the highest CAGR of REDACTED till 2023. The fastest growth of the gene therapy segment is due to the Large investments in genomics. For Instance; The National Human Genome Research Institute (U.S.) had a budget grant of REDACTED for REDACTED research projects in 2015, thus increasing funding to REDACTED for approximately REDACTED projects in 2016.

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Longevity And Anti-Senescence Therap Market Analysis 2023 Leading Manufacturers & Regions, Application & Types - Guru Online News

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Andy Murray hopes to be inspired by Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal longevity at top – Tennis365

Tuesday, December 3rd, 2019

Andy Murray says he still believes he can compete against Rafael Nadal, Roger Federer, and Novak Djokovic despite now having to play with a metal hip.

Federer, Nadal, and Djokovic have controlled mens tennis, winning 51 of the last 59 Grand Slam titles between them.

Murray, though, was able to break the trios dominance for a spell, winning three Grand Slams and climbing above them all to become world number one a few years ago.

They finished as the worlds top three again this year, as well as sharing 2019s four Slams between them, and Murray believes he can use the example of 38-year-old Federer in particular.

I honestly havent really thought much about [it], he said, when asked at the premiere of his new Amazon Prime Video documentary if the longevity at the top of Federer, Nadal, and Djokovic gives him hope he can return to their level.

But I guess seeing guys playing in their late 30s is a positive thing that you can look at and go it is possible to keep doing it and play at that level.

But if I was still playing at 38, Id be very surprised with that.

RELATED:Andy Murray has X Factor to pull off another Grand Slam win

Youd expect Roger to finish first as he is six years older than me and Novak and five years older than Rafa.

Seeing what they are still doing is fantastic and hopefully I can try and get back on the court and have the chance to compete against them again before I finish.

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Missing Link To Longevity Discovered In The Plant Kingdom – Texas A&M University

Friday, November 22nd, 2019

lead researcher Dorothy Shippen, Ph.D., (left), graduate student Jiarui Song, first author (center) and postdoctoral fellow Claudia Castillo-Gonzlez, second author (right).

Texas A&M AgriLife

A breakthrough discovery by Texas A&M University and Arizona State University professors could provide a key component in understanding the human aging process and even aid in the battle against cancer.

Dorothy Shippen, Ph.D., is a University Distinguished Professor and Regents Fellow in Texas A&MsDepartment of Biochemistry and Biophysicsand withTexas A&M AgriLife Research, College Station.

Shippen co-led a study with Julian Chen, Ph.D., professor of biochemistry, Arizona State Universitys School of Molecular Sciences. First author, Jiarui Song, is a graduate student with Shippen.

Their study, The conserved structure of plant telomerase RNA provides the missing link for an evolutionary pathway from ciliates to humans, is being published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Our discovery of this key component of the telomerase enzyme in the plant kingdom provides an evolutionary bridge, and a novel path forward, for understanding how humans keep their DNA safe and enable cells to divide indefinitely, Shippen said.

Moreover, since plants often evolve interesting solutions to fundamental biological problems, some of the lessons we learn from plant telomerases may provide new ways for addressing stem cell disease and cancer.

We found a core component of the telomerase enzyme that had been missing all these years, Shippen said. And by finding this component in plants, we not only learn new lessons about how telomerase evolved, but we also open the door to learn new things about the human enzyme.

Back in 2001, Shippen published a paper outlining the discovery of the catalytic subunit of the telomerase enzyme from plants. The catalytic component is one of two absolutely critical parts of the enzyme, and it is now very well understood.

However, the second component, the RNA subunit, that provides the enzyme with information about what to do with chromosome ends, was missing.

Our new discovery is the RNA subunit of telomerase from the plant kingdom. In the plant telomerase RNA, we can now see the signatures for the human telomerase and telomerase from simple organisms like bakers yeast and the microbes in pond scum.

The missing piece always was this subunit. Now that we have found the correct one, its opened up a lot of interesting insights.

Plants have different, innovative solutions to so many biological challenges, and insight into these may provide important clues on how human telomerase is regulated, she said.

We can study the telomerase enzyme more deeply and see so much more now, and it can help us understand how the human enzyme is going to work. It really is this missing middle ground.

In the 1930s, Barbara McClintockwas studying the behavior of chromosomes in maize and was one of the first scientists to appreciate the importance of telomeres.The Shippen Labin the 1990s followed up on the pioneering work of McClintock in model plant systems and discovered the telomerase enzyme, which is required for maintaining these structures on the ends of chromosomes.

Shippens longtime studies on telomerase, which play an essential role in chromosome stability and cell proliferation capacity, has led her to be considered the worlds expert in plant telomere research.

The telomere is like a biological clock. There is a certain amount of telomeric DNA at the end of chromosomes. As cells divide, they lose part of this DNA.

She has likened telomeres to the plastic tip on the end of a shoelace they form a protective seal on the ends of chromosomes in plants and animals. Like the plastic tip that wears out, allowing the shoelace to fray and become hard to use, so does the telomere break down in most cells in the human body over time.

The telomerase enzyme is capable of replenishing the lost DNA at chromosome ends and it is available in cells that are immortal, Shippen said. Its active in the stem cells, but not active in other places of the body normally.

Theres a whole connection between immortality and telomerase that needs to be studied.

Why is telomerase only active in stem cells, turned off in other cells and why does it get reactivated in cancer cells? Shippen said. Weve learned a lot about the human telomerase from pond scum, but plants can provide still more clues because their growth and development is so plastic. If you cut a flower from a plant growing in the garden, it will grow another flower. But if you cut off the tip of your finger, you wont be growing a new one.

Its a big mystery.

But Shippen said the plant telomerase is still very similar to the human telomerase.

It is remarkable that even in plants, telomerase is active only in cells that need to divide many times.

She expects that what is learned in the plant system will ultimately be translatable and have significant impact in human medicine.

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The New Face of Longevity: Dwayne Clark’s Solution to America’s Silver Tsunami Crisis and How Living on Stolen Potatoes Made It All Possible -…

Friday, November 22nd, 2019

November21, 201910 min read

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

If you ask Dwayne Clark, founder and CEO of the senior care company Aegis Living, what he is most thankful for in life, he will unabashedly tell you growing up poor.

For Clark, a childhood spent in poverty instilled a compassion-first mentality and a burning desire to help others lead lives of dignity.

Today, Clark is seen as a change-maker in his industry. Aegis opened its 32nd location this year and has eight more facilities in development. The company is on track to have operating revenues of over $300 million in 2020, with real estate holdings approaching $3 billion.

Clark is the youngest of four children raised by a single mother in Walla Walla, Washington. When he was 16, his mother told him they were completely broke and had no money for food.

The youngest of four children, Clark was raised by a single mother who struggled to feed her family.

Image credit: Dwayne Clark

To feed her family, she made potato soup from a bag of potatoes shed stolen from the restaurant where she worked as a line cook. She vowed to replace the potatoes when she had money again. While Clark felt powerless to help his mother, he remembers being in awe of her strength and resilience.

My background truly is a gift to me, he says. It helps me relate to the dishwasher and has given me an affinity for struggling immigrants, for the poor kid, whoever needs help. If I hadnt grown up knowing what being hungry is really like, I would not have created the business I run today.

By the time he was 26 years old, Clark had worked his way up from a correctional officer to shift commander at Washington States Department of Corrections. He was good at it, but he hated the job. He wanted to go back to college (hed dropped out in his junior year) and then to law school, but his sister interrupted these plans with a call out of the blue. She insisted he read a new study about aging in America.

This was before we had the internet and I could just pull it up on a computer; so I went to the library to look up the study, says Clark. It was around 400 pages. I didnt particularly want to read it, but it seemed important to her. So I read the whole thing and realized there was a silver tsunami coming fast.

He learned that life expectancy was on the rise and the elderly population was expected to double. His takeaway: eldercare was going to be a booming industry. Clarks sister was on the advisory board of one of Leisure Cares communities, so he asked her to help get him an interview.

I didn't want this to be a courtesy 10- to 15-minute interview. So when they asked if I could come in for an interview that next week, I said I could come in 30 days, says Dwayne. I wanted to do my research on the company, their competitors, and the industry. I wanted to be the best interview theyd had in 10 years.

Thirty days later, Dwayne went in for the interview, and, as expected, they asked a few cursory questions, spent no more than 10 minutes with him, and thanked him for coming in. Before they could shoo him out the door, Dwayne reached into his backpack and pulled out a three-ring binder and dropped it on the desk in front of him.

Id like to talk to you about where I think the aging industry is going and how I think I could contribute, he told them. Clark says they spent the next 90 minutes going over his manual, and they made him a job offer within the week.

Leisure Care hired Clark as the marketing director in Colorado. Forty-five days later he was put in a manager training program, and two years later he was named VP of Operations.

At age 33, Clark was recruited by Sunrise Senior Living, which would the biggest senior housing company in the world. In less than five years he helped grow Sunrise from an $18 million company to a company with a $3 billion market cap.

Despite his seemingly overnight success in the eldercare industry, Clark wasnt satisfied working for a public company. He decided to quit and make his own way.

It wasnt in my personality, and I didnt like what Wall Street did to the culture of the companies, says Dwayne. I thought I needed to just do it on my own.

You need a significant amount of money to do well in the senior care industry, and I dont mean $10 million; I mean tens of millions of dollars, he says. Today you would need $150 million to start a company like Aegis.

Dwayne spent much of 1996 looking for partners and capital sources and eventually found the right person: a developer in California named Bill Gallaher, whom Clark had built a relationship with during his time at Sunrise.

Together they founded Aegis, were able to raise $10 million, and built their first property in Pleasant Hill, California, in 1998. But it wasnt all smooth sailing.

I underestimated just how capital intensive the process was, says Clark. We burned through that first $10 million in six to nine months.

After two more rounds of capital financing, which yielded another $12.5 million, Gallaher called and told him they were out of money. By this point, Clark had exhausted all his resources except his sons college fund.

My son had just committed to UCLA, his dream school, says Clark. I needed the college money to cover payroll or Aegis could not stay afloat. I had to go to my son and have a tough conversation. I said, You know, that in-state tuition at the University of Washington looks really good.

Thankfully, his son understood and never felt bitter about the decision to abandon UCLA. Clark credits the college fund for saving the company.

In 2007, Clark says he bought out Gallaher due to a difference in philosophies. He took full control of Aegis and set out to grow it into the premier assisted living community on the West Coast.

As the company expanded, Clark became an expert on how to care for people with Alzheimers and dementia. He believed hed learned everything there was to know about how to manage this type of care facility until the day he received a massive blow that challenged him as a CEO and son: his mother was diagnosed with Alzheimers.

Image credit: Dwayne Clark

Imagine the feeling of being the guy leading the industry in this type of care but I couldnt help my own mother, admits Dwayne.

She moved into one of his memory-care communities, and Clark began to have a major shift in perspective. It was a game changer, he says.

His mother loved music; so Clark read studies on the positive effects of music on patients with dementia and Alzheimers and expanded the music programs in his Alzheimers wing.

She also loved doing her hair and make-up, which became harder as her illness worsened. As a result, Clark brought traveling salons to his senior health communities to give all the residents makeovers. This started a long list of improvements throughout his facilities that werent always good for his companys bottom line but he believes improved the lives of the residents. Clark says he created hundreds of longevity aids, including aromatherapy to improve mental clarity, spring-loaded chairs to allow seniors to stand without assistance, and shorter hallways to facilitate walking.

Clark also took action to create a culture where employees feel genuinely invested in and cared about.

I want to be an employee-first company because I truly believe culture is everything, says Clark. We are a service-oriented company that aims to do our part in treating the Alzheimers epidemic by serving the high-risk communities of senior health.

Clark created a program called E.P.I.C. (Empowering People Inspiring Consciousness) to transform Aegis Livings annual meeting from a traditional year-end review to a three-day celebration of the human spirit. It is a seminar for self-improvement with the primary agenda to ignite personal development among the employees. E.P.I.C. attracts celebrities like Michael J. Fox, Carlos Santana, and Dr. Deepak Chopra to teach and inspire his employees.

Clark says one of his lifelong obsessions has been the pursuit of health understanding it and attaining it. As a young adult, he lost sight of that passion and burned the proverbial candle at both ends. He worked long hours, lived on a junk-food diet, partied late into the night, and slept very little.

Everything came to a head one Labor Day weekend with his wife, when he began to experience the most acute abdominal pain of his life. It was so bad that he ended up in the hospital where he was diagnosed with severe gastritis.

Clark says the experience was a wake-up call. Hed learned so much caring for people well into their 100s, but ironically, hed never consciously applied those lessons to himself.

My health crisis inspired me to seek out longevity, study it, achieve more of it, and share my findings with a broader audience, says Clark. While Id been living and breathing questions about the health and longevity of my Aegis residents, Id separated myself from what Id learned. Overnight, my commitment changed.

Dwayne became a longevity explorer, traveling to over 80 countries to interview hundreds of people on what it means to age well into their 80s, 90s and 100s. His obsession with health and longevity led him on a journey of research into finding every conceivable way to live a more vibrant, healthier, and more fulfilled life.

In his latest book, 30 Summers More, Dwayne takes what he has learned about longevity by caring for more than 60,000 residents and writes a new plan for aging in America. He challenges the status quo for people over age 60, using the wisdom of Aegis residents.

Clark, far right, with former Secretary of State Hilary Clinton, former President Bill Clinton, and Clarks wife, Terese, after a lunch where the couples discussed politics, business, and longevity.

Image credit: Dwayne Clark

Hes also taken an interest in exploring what makes successful people tick, and Clarks recently launched podcast, Walk This Way, discusses the journey of CEOs, athletes, and celebrities and how they made their way to hit mega-success by not following the traditional path.

Clarks own path was no doubt untraditional.

I have never had a woe is me mentality or seen my background as a drawback, says Clark. Entrepreneurs share one thing: theyre trying to run as fast as they can away from poverty. It creates rocket fuel for them to be successful.

Follow Dwayne Clark on Instagram, Facebook, and LinkedIn, or visit his website.

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The New Face of Longevity: Dwayne Clark's Solution to America's Silver Tsunami Crisis and How Living on Stolen Potatoes Made It All Possible -...

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How to live longer: Five diet tips to prevent disease and boost life expectancy – Express

Friday, November 22nd, 2019

Long life expectancy can be achieved through eating the right food and drink. Some foods have been found to have a positive impact on blood pressure, inflammation, blood sugar and heart health, while others have been found to increase the risk of serious health conditions developing.

While genes play a role in life expectancy, environmental factors like diet are key.

Here are five diet changes recommended by experts to help keep health in check and achieve longevity.

Both drinks have been found to decrease the risk of chronic disease.

The polyphenols and catechins found in green tea may decrease a persons risk of cancer, diabetes and heart disease.

READ MORE:Prostate cancer: How you sleep may increase risk of developing the deadly disease

And coffee has been linked to a lower risk of type 2 diabetes, heart disease, certain cancers and brain ailments like Alzheimers disease.

Studies have also suggested both coffee and tea drinkers benefits from a 20 to 30 percent lower risk of early disease compared to non-drinkers.

But the NHS does advises: It's fine to drink tea and coffee as part of a balanced diet.

If you drink tea or coffee with sugar or you have flavoured syrups in your coffee-shop drinks, you could be unwittingly damaging your teeth and adding unhelpful calories to your diet.

DON'T MISS

A number of studies have shown nuts have beneficial effects on heart disease, high blood pressure, inflammation, diabetes and belly fat levels.

One study found participants who consumed at least three servings of nuts per week had a 39 percent lower risk of premature death.

Turmeric is renowned for its anti-inflammatory properties.

Curcumin, found in turmeric, is believed to give the yellow spice its health properties, and studies have linked it to improved brain function, lower risk of heart disease and even cancer prevention.

Curcumin has also been linked to an increased lifespan in both insects and mice.

Many studies have linked a plat-rich diet to a lower risk of premature death, as well as a reduced risk of cancer, metabolic syndrome, heart disease, depression and brain deterioration.

Plant foods are believed to hold such properties because of their nutrients, antioxidants, polyphenols carotenoids, folate and vitamin C.

Several studies have linked vegetarian and vegan diets, which involve higher plant food consumption, with a 12 to 15 percent lower risk of premature death.

Research has also suggested the risk of premature death and certain diseases increases with greater meat consumption. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19307518

Heavy alcohol consumption has been linked to liver, heart and pancreatic disease, as well as an overall increased risk of early death.

But moderate consumption has been associated with a reduced risk of developing several diseases, as well as a 17 to 18 percent decreased risk of premature death.

The results of a 29-year study showed men who preferred wine were 34 percent less likely to die early than those who preferred beer or spirits.

Men and women are advised not to drink more than 14 units of alcohol a week on a regular basis.

Drinking should also be spread over three or more days if you regularly drink as much as 14 units a week.

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2nd Annual Innovation Summit Focuses on Needs of Older Adults and Longevity Economy – PRNewswire

Friday, November 22nd, 2019

WASHINGTON, Nov. 20, 2019 /PRNewswire/ -- The Washington Innovation in Longevity Summit, produced by Mary Furlong & Associates and the Centre for Aging + Brain Health Innovation, kicks off its second annual event on December 9th & 10th at the National Press Club. The successful inaugural event featured government agencies, nonprofits, investors, thought leaders in aging, media, and private companies focused on the needs of older adults and the burgeoning longevity economy.

Keynote speakers for the 2019 Summit include Nancy LeaMond, Executive Vice President, Chief Advocacy and Engagement Officer for AARP; and George Vradenburg, Co-founder and Chairman for UsAgainstAlzheimer's.

Jean Accius, PhD, Senior Vice President, AARP Thought Leadership and International Affairs, AARP International, and Jim Firman, EdD, President and CEO, National Council on Aging (NCOA)will open the Summit to share their unique perspectives on the unmet needs and market opportunities in serving the needs of millions of older people in the US and globally.The two-day summit focuses on the themes of Mobility, Money, Memory, Military and Media.

"Last year's Summit in Washington surpassed our expectations in terms of thought leadership, attendees, and the partnerships that were created," said Mary Furlong, Executive Producer and CEO of Mary Furlong & Associates. "We are excited to bring the Washington Innovation in Longevity Summit to our nation's capital. Our goal is to foster a learning community and network for entrepreneurs, investors, regulators, NGOs and the media, all focused on the growth of the longevity economy and serving the needs of older adults. This conference is the epicenter."

The Washington Innovation in Longevity Summit Day 1 Agenda focuses on the collaborative power of nonprofits, media, and government regulators, working in concert with entrepreneurs and investors. Day 2 is dedicated to global health partnerships in brain health, understanding go to market strategies worldwide, and helping entrepreneurs from other countries navigate the U.S. and Canadian markets.

The full agenda and summit details are here. Summit registration is available here. Key sponsors for the Summit include:

Platinum: AARP, Center for Aging + Brain Health InnovationGold: Ageless Innovation, CareLinx, Sodexo, Thrive Alliance, Posit Science

About Mary Furlong & AssociatesFor 17 years, Mary Furlong & Associates (MFA), headquartered in the San Francisco Bay area, has developed strategies for marketing and business development for companies focused on opportunities with the senior and baby boomer markets and the longevity economy. Dr. Furlong is the executive producer of three conferences annually: What's Next Boomer Business Summit, Silicon Valley Boomer Venture Summit, and Washington Innovation in Longevity Summit. She also co-produces What's Next Canada and is scheduled to add a fourth conference in Paris, France, focused on international aging.

INFORMATION:Ben Adkins 229649@email4pr.com502.619.4267

SOURCE Mary Furlong & Associates

http://www.maryfurlong.com

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Longevity Project explores the nuanced implications of longer life – PRNewswire

Friday, November 22nd, 2019

WASHINGTON, Nov. 19, 2019 /PRNewswire/ -- As longer life expectancy brings about substantial changes in the make-up of American society, Americans are still grappling with the implications of longer life on how we work, live and learn, according to a poll fielded by the Longevity Project, a new initiative developed in collaboration with the Stanford Center on Longevity (SCL). The mission of the Longevity Project is to generate research and foster public dialogue on the far-reaching impact of increased longevity.

Some key results of the Longevity Project Morning Consult poll include:

By 2034, Americans over the age of 65 will outnumber children under 18 for the first time in history a change more frequently viewed as a negative outcome than a positive one.

And as people over the age of 55 are poised to become the largest segment of the U.S. workforce, nearly a quarter (23%) of Americans think the retirement age should be lowered to make room for younger workers.

"With Americans living longer and healthier, we have a unique opportunity to reimagine healthy, successful century long lives," said Laura Carstensen, Professor of Psychology at Stanford and the founding director of SCL. "But we can't achieve what we can't imagine, and we are pleased to help launch this initiative to foster public understanding and engagement on longevity."

Through research, conferences and events at Stanford and around the country, the Longevity Project will engage with government and business leaders on the policies and methods for supporting longer life. Conferences will include the Century Summit and Longevity Next, the first longevity conference focused on engaging millennials and Generation X about the implications of longer life.

"We are proud to work with a growing coalition of organizations including the Stanford Center on Longevity, the Urban Institute, Morning Consult, the National Academy of Medicine, and a group of forward thinking companies comprised of Principal Financial Group, Wells Fargo, and Instructure to launch this important initiative, said Ken Stern, co-chair of the Longevity Project."

The project's first poll underscores a disconnect between public perceptions of aging and the real influence of longer lifespan. A decade ago, a Pew Research Center poll put the beginning of "old age" at 68. The Longevity Project's respondents pegged the answer at a younger age, 66 -- a surprising change in an era in which many people in their 60s and 70s continue to play a significant role in public life.

Other key findings of the Longevity Project Morning Consult poll include:

View the full research findings and additional project information at http://www.longevity-project.com.

The Longevity Project, in partnership with Morning Consult, will release a larger study of longevity issues in January, and will be convening multiple forums in the coming months to explore the best approaches to promoting an effective and beneficial longer life.

Contact; Kaila Lewis kaila.lewis@palisadesmv.com443-433-6113

SOURCE Longevity Project

https://www.longevity-project.com

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On British royalty and the longevity of the institution – Hurriyet Daily News

Friday, November 22nd, 2019

When I moved to England in the late 70s, the first thing that struck me was the popularity of the royal family. I was there when Queen Elizabeth II celebrated her Silver Jubilee in 1977, after 25 years on the throne.

For a young married woman and a mother who had to take up the duties of a monarch at the age of just 25, this was a difficult task. But she performed well and won the approval of the society still recovering after the traumas of the Second World War. A young queen became a symbol of unity and optimism for the future.

Millions of special jubilee mugs with the picture of Elizabeth II were distributed to the schoolchildren all over the country who proudly brought them home to decorate their bedrooms. Coming from Greece where royalty was something of an anathema, synonymous with continuous interference in the democratic will of the people, I was surprised. In Greece, by then, we had finished with a nasty period of military rule and a long period of the monarchy.

I had difficulty in explaining that unchallenged respect across the whole political spectrum towards the British monarchy. In vain, I tried opening the subject to my British friends about their antiquated hereditary class system. The standard answer I received was that the queen symbolizes the nation and our cultural and historic continuation and that the British monarchy is like our national flag.

No one would have imagined, though, that the certainty that the British royal family is a rock-hard institution to last forever would have been turned upside down, just a few years later.

Marking her 40th anniversary on the British throne, Elizabeth II looked back on that year as an annus horribilis (a terrible year). Her second son, Prince Andrew, divorced from his wife following a series of scandals exposed by British tabloids.

Her daughter, Anne divorced, and her daughter-in-law Princess Diana published Her True Story, revealing her husband Prince Charles infidelity with Camilla, who was married to another man at the time. She now is Charles wife. Everything was overexposed in the media. As if all that was not enough, a terrible fire nearly destroyed the historic Windsor Castle, the official residence of the queen. The year ended as badly as it started.

Prince Charles, heir to the throne, separated from his wife, Princess Diana. That terrible year caused a grave blow to the image of the British monarchy, and I remember that some friends, whose children had kept the queens silver jubilee mugs as precious memorabilia, had second thoughts about the usefulness of the institution.

By now, Elizabeth II, who was born in 1926, has celebrated several more anniversaries. In 2002, her Golden Jubilee for half a century on the throne, in 2012 the Diamond Jubilee for the 60th year on the throne and the Sapphire Jubilee in 2017 for the 65th year on the throne. Already preparations have started for the Platinum Jubilee in 2023 for the 70th year by which the queen will be 96 years old.

The queen may indeed celebrate her Platinum Jubilee. But will the British monarch last that long? Todays Britain is very different from what it was even a few years ago. Polarization has split the society with the Brexit affair being the latest symptom. Traditions and institutions are at stake or are being discredited. Parliament, government and British political parties are not having good days.

So, when the terrible story about the Duke of Yorks association with the late convicted pedophile Jeffrey Epstein hit the news, the reaction of the British media was as if nothing had changed since 1992. The duke of York, the second royal son, was labeled as outcast, and the press said that the palace is in crisis.

Unlike 1992, this time, the palace establishment who consults the British monarchs on what to do in moments of crisis reacted speedily. The duke was forced to step back from public life for the foreseeable future, which is expected to be quite long. Still, is this affair going to shake the trust in the British monarchy?

Probably not, at least for as long as the strong-willed Queen remains at the helm. Figures confirm that. According to last years official poll, seven out of 10 Britons support having a monarchy, and 62 percent believe that Britain will have a hereditary monarchy in 100 years.

That was why, perhaps, Boris Johnson in this weeks TV debate with Jeremy Corbyn, stated that the royal family is beyond reproach.

Read the original here:
On British royalty and the longevity of the institution - Hurriyet Daily News

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LeBron’s triple-double record a testament to longevity, versatility – The Athletic

Friday, November 22nd, 2019

LOS ANGELES LeBron James was trying to figure out how impressed he should be by his latest feat. With 25 points, 11 rebounds and 10 assists against the Thunder, he became the first player in NBA history to record a triple-double against all 30 teams.

I really dont know what to really think about it, he said. Its a pretty cool stat to know. Im glad it happened in a win.

Magic never did that. Neither did the Big O. But that had more to do with era than anything. They played in a pre-expansion NBA. Pace has picked up. Triple-doubles are commonplace. Russell Westbrook is stuck at 29 teams, but he spent his whole career before this season in Oklahoma City and is a virtual lock to join James in short order.

[ Listen to The Forum Club for more Lakers coverage ]

But then again, James achieved the record a month before his 35th birthday, just shy of 15 years since his first triple-double. That came on Jan.

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LeBron's triple-double record a testament to longevity, versatility - The Athletic

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Red Angus winner comes from long line of longevity genes – Western Producer

Friday, November 22nd, 2019

EDMONTON The public face of Cinder Angus is changing from one generation to the next.

With eight head at Farmfair International, 16-year-old Brynne Yoder led out the grand champion Red Angus female with Red Cinder Freyja 29E.

A home-raised cow registered in Yoders name, it is owned with Brian and Sherrie McKenzie of Brylor Ranch at Pincher Creek, Alta.

She is out of an 18-year-old dam, Brynne said.

Nicknamed Tude, her daughters have the same longevity.

She produces some of our most elite females. She has got a beautiful disposition and she raises some of our best calves every year, Yoder said.

Freyja 29E made it to the Supreme at Farmfair for the second year in a row, and Yoder entered her at Summer Synergy in Olds, Alta., where she was grand champion Red Angus. This female has also been recognized at Canadian Western Agribition and the First Lady Classic.

She has been one heck of a marketing strategy for us, she said.

Well spoken and friendly, Yoder admits her favourite part of the business is showing cattle over the other skills she has learned such as marketing and judging.

I love to show more, she said.

I would rather not stand and talk in front of a bunch of people. I like the quiet. There is more of an adrenalin rush to show cattle.

She has made time to play competitive fastball, but working on the farm with her parents, Brad and Nicoll, is her first love. To make time for farm work, she and her sister, Tavianne, are home schooled. Her goal is to attend a post-secondary school on a livestock judging scholarship in the United States.

The rest is here:
Red Angus winner comes from long line of longevity genes - Western Producer

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Why Ikarian honey could be the key to longevity – Greek City Times

Friday, November 22nd, 2019

In Ikaria honey is used to treat everything from wounds to stomach issues, influenza, and the common cold. Ikarians start their day with a simple spoonful of raw local honey, which has a high antioxidant level. This may reduce inflammation and also contains amino acids and vitamin C which are known to speed the growth of healthy tissue in the body.

This famous Greek island is a part of Blue Zones a name given to 5 places in the world- Ikaria, Sardinia in Italy, Okinawa of Japan, Nicoya of Costa Rica and Loma Linda of California, USA, whose inhabitants surpass the life expectancy and reach over the age of 90 years.

A new television report by CBS has taken a close look at whyIkarian honey could be one of the main keys as to why the locals here keep healthy and strong well into old age.

Up the winding mountain roads of this isolated isle, youre likely to notice brightly-painted boxes dotting the landscape. And whats happening inside those boxes is generating some buzz: Bees busy making a rare honey that locals believe is one of the secrets to a long life, notes CBS.

Ikarian beekeeper Andoni Karimalis explained to CBS correspondent Jonathan Vigliotti that people on the island have been eating the honey for generations, to keep healthy and strong well into old age.

At work in her weaving studio, 109-year-old Yiayia Ioanna from Ikaria agrees there is something special about it.

So does 87-year-old-beekeeper Giorgos Stenos. He eats the honey every single day.

For centuries humans have valued honey for its medicinal properties. And in Ikaria, known in ancient times as the healing island, the honey is different from that found on most supermarket shelves.

As a result, the pollen and nectar collected by the bees are free of chemicals and pesticides normally found in commercial or private farming. And unlike most honey sold in the other parts of the world, Ikarian honey is also unheated, unfiltered, and unpasteurized all processes which can destroy the natural vitamins and minerals.

Although this has been one of Ikarias best-kept secrets, after the CBS report aired live on American television, there has been a huge response with people all over the world wanting to get their hands on some on this Ikarian gem!

Read the original:
Why Ikarian honey could be the key to longevity - Greek City Times

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When longevity is the biggest achievement: on Shinzo Abe – The Hindu

Friday, November 22nd, 2019

On November 20, Shinzo Abe will become the longest- serving Prime Minister of Japan, overtaking Taro Katsuras record of 2,886 days in office.

Mr. Abe has been in power for two different spells: a short-lived one, between July 2006 and September 2007, and the current stretch since 2012. Over the last seven years, he has brought stability to a political landscape that had been fractured, honing the image of a strong, conservative leader readying Japan for a newly muscular role in a shifting geopolitical landscape.

Mr. Abe has steered the economy out of deflation and decline, if not into growth. He has presided over a significant increase in the countrys military capabilities and attempted to expand Japans strategic options beyond its traditional reliance on the United States.

And yet, his legacy might not be as long-lasting as his time in office. Critics say the only reason Mr. Abe is still in power is because of a weak and uninspiring Opposition. In other words, the TINA (there is no alternative) factor that voters around the world are all too familiar with.

When Mr. Abe returned to power in 2012, Japan had been through five Prime Ministers in as many years. His immediate order of business was implementing a set of economic reforms to stimulate the economy, popularly dubbed Abenomics. The three pillars of this stimulus included monetary easing, fiscal spending and deregulation to promote private investment. He also vowed to bring more women into the workforce, an attempt nicknamed womenomics. More recently, Mr. Abe has reinvented Japan, from a recalcitrant participant in trade liberalisation to a leader of the Trans-Pacific Partnership bloc, after the U.S. withdrew from it in 2017.

Under him, Japan has boosted defence spending and enhanced its ability to project power outside of its borders. In a historic shift in 2014, Mr. Abes government reinterpreted (without amending) the Constitution to permit Japanese troops to fight overseas for the first time since the Second World War. A five-year defence programme announced in 2018 allocated 25.5 trillion yen ($233.7 billion) in spending, a 6.4% rise over the previous five years.

On the diplomatic front, Mr. Abe has reached out to traditional partners like the U.S. (he was the first foreign leader to meet with Donald Trump after the Presidents election), while keeping ties with rival China on an even keel. Mr. Abe made an official visit to Beijing last October (the first such visit in nearly seven years) and President Xi Jinping is expected in Japan next year. For Japan, it has been a difficult balancing act, to avoid excessive dependence on the U.S., while anticipating the dangers associated with a more assertive China. Mr. Abe has demonstrated considerable tactical pragmatism in walking this tightrope.

Mr. Abe has also reached out to strengthen alliances with regional powers like India and floated the idea of a Free and Open Indo-Pacific for which he has gained the backing, to varying degrees, of the U.S., Australia and India.

But, despite this smorgasbord of initiatives, Mr. Abes tenure has not been entirely rosy. The Japanese economy remains limp and Japanese corporations have so far proved unable to transform themselves into 21st century technology leaders. Though, during his tenure, Japan has benefited from periods of economic growth and low unemployment, the country remains mired in a slow-growth, high-debt deflationary trap. The government recently downgraded its 2019 growth forecast to 0.9% from an earlier prediction of 1.3%.

Domestically, Mr. Abes vision of a less pacifist Japan remains deeply contested. His most cherished policy goal is the amendment of Article 9 in the Constitution: the clause that restricts Japans ability to maintain a military deterrent. But it is looking no closer to fulfilment than it did at the beginning of his reign. The Prime Minister wants to write the existence of Japans Self-Defense Forces, as the military is known, into Article 9, giving constitutional standing to de facto reality. However, a survey conducted by the Asahi Shimbun newspaper earlier this year showed that 64% of respondents opposed even this modest revision. While Mr. Abe continues to reiterate his pledge to push through the revision by 2020, it is looking increasingly unlikely that he will prove successful.

It is also not clear how effectively, or if at all, Japan can meet the challenge of Chinas increasing heft. Relations with neighbour and potential ally, South Korea, are worse than ever. Under Mr. Abe, Japan has made little progress in facing up to its historical responsibility for the widespread atrocities of the Japanese Imperial Army in the Second World War. The recent deterioration in relations with Seoul were prompted by unresolved grievances involving Koreans who were forced to work in Japans mines and factories during the war, as well as comfort women who were made to service the militarys brothels. Far from helping heal the historical wounds inflicted by Japan, Mr. Abes nationalistic stance is seen as unrepentant at best and provocative at worst.

Finally, for all his cosying up to the U.S. President, Mr. Abe has failed to insulate Japan from Mr. Trumps transactional approach to international relations. The U.S. administration has recently asked Tokyo to pay roughly four times as much as it currently does to offset the costs of stationing American troops in Japan. The White House also threatened Japan with punitive tariffs on Japanese vehicles even as it was negotiating a bilateral trade deal with Tokyo. The administration had earlier raised tariffs on Japanese steel and aluminium.

Barring any major upheavals, Mr. Abes long reign will come to an end in September 2021 when his term as leader of the Liberal Democratic Party finishes. At the current juncture it looks as though he will get a pass in the history books, though not with distinction. A for longevity, but a B, at most, for everything else.

Pallavi Aiyar is a writer and journalist based in Tokyo

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When longevity is the biggest achievement: on Shinzo Abe - The Hindu

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