Trees Have the Potential to Live Indefinitely – Scientific American

Christmas trees aredead or dying. But some conifers and other trees theoretically could live forever, according to a recent essay that reviews accumulating evidence on extremely long-lived treesand calls for more scientifically rigorous methods to determine their age and study their longevity.

Across the board, trees do not die so much as they are killed, write the authors of the review essay, entitled On Tree Longevity. Their killers are external physical or biological factors rather than old age alone. That is, there is no evidence that harmful genetic mutations pile up over time or that trees lose their ability to produce new tissue.

Trees can indeed live indefinitely, but this does not happen, says co-author Franco Biondi, an ecoclimatologist and tree-ring scientist at the University of Nevada, Reno. Because eventually an external agent, biotic or abiotic [a living thing or a nonliving one such as a physical condition], ends up killing them.

Tree killers include environmental threats such as droughts, wildfires, harsh weather and pestsas well as human threats such as logging and fires set to clear forests for hunting or pastureland, write Biondi and his co-author Gianluca Piovesan of the University of Tuscia in Italy. Their essay was published in the August issue of New Phytologist.

Tree longevity interests researchers in part because trees and other plants remove carbon from the atmosphere for photosynthesis, and older trees are thought to store more carbon than younger ones. The persistence of trees could thus play a role in slowing climate change (although rising temperatures caused by global warming also can put a strain on trees, making them more vulnerable to environmental threats). The rings of old trees can also serve as an invaluable record of climate history, with wider rings indicating better years.

Scientific models designed to study tree longevity have made incorrect assumptions, including the idea that highly shade-tolerant late-successional trees, which are found in older ecosystems that have developed larger trees and a lot of shrub cover, are longer-lived, the essay also notes. For example, extremely long-lived bristlecone pine trees are known to live in wide-open landscapes of the West and in ecosystems that have not changed much for thousands of years.

David Stahle, a geographer and tree longevity researcher at the University of Arkansas, who was not involved in the review essay, used words such as excellent and comprehensive to describe it. But he takes issue with the assertion that trees can potentially live forever. The likelihood, all things being equal, that trees are immortal seems improbable to me, he says. I love the idea. Its a romantic idea, but, I mean, come on.

The hypothesis of tree immortality has grown popular in the past 20 years as researchers continue to report having found little to no genetic evidence of aging in extremely old trees meristem (tissue that generates new cells), Stahle says. And this is one of the review essays most important points, he adds. But evidence of aging could be out there and just not yet found.

Adverse conditions, including the harsh, rockylandscapes populated by stands of bristlecone pines, can kill trees. But not all disturbances are bad for trees in the long run, the essays authors write. Many extremely old trees occur in mountain regions with limited soil and tough climate conditions. Biondi says it is as if trees that live a long time, up to thousands of years, abide by the axiom that which doesnt kill you makes you stronger. Many long-lived trees grew up in environments in which they had to compete for resources, such as water in dry stands of trees or sunlight in dense forests with leafy treetops or crowns, Biondi says.

Earlier in this century, an individual Great Basin bristlecone pine (Pinus longaeva) in Californias White Mountains was dated using tree-ring analysis, or dendrochronology, and found to be more than 5,000 years old. That would make it the oldest known living organism on Earth that reproduces sexually, according to various sources. The age determination was made by the late Tom Harlan of the University of Arizona, who performed detailed analysis on a core sample taken from the tree in 1957. That estimate has not been confirmed by other researchers, according to a list of extremely old trees created by Rocky Mountain Tree-Ring Research, a nonprofit organization in Fort Collins, Colo. If we set aside that individual, the oldest living tree would be an around 4,850-year-old Great Basin bristlecone pine known as Methuselah, which is also located in the White Mountains, according to the nonprofits list.

The uncertainty about the oldest living tree perhaps illustrates larger questions about nailing down tree agesa point that the review essay tackles. Some scientists estimates of tree ages draw on unreliable data and methods, including anecdotal reports, Piovesan and Biondi write. The most reliable age-determination methods are analyses of tree rings, with help from radiocarbon dating when necessary, they add. Stahle agrees.

Some popular tree species chopped down for sale as Christmas trees, such as Colorado blue spruces, can live for hundreds of years, Stahle says. But commercial forestry requires neither cutting short the lives of ancient and culturally valued trees nor practicing clear-cutting or other forms of deforestation. More sustainable practices include harvesting only individual trees in a stand or forest while maintaining the cover each tree provides, the water quality it protects and the carbon it sequesters. We can do all these things, and we are, Stahle says. There are good actors and bad actors in the production of forest timber for society.

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Trees Have the Potential to Live Indefinitely - Scientific American

What if marmosets lived on the Moon? – The Economist

Jul 3rd 2021

CAIRD COLLECTIVE, LUNA

Editors note: This year What If?, our annual collection of scenarios, considers the future of health. Each of these stories is ction, but grounded in historical fact, current speculation and real science. They do not present a unied narrative but are set in dierent possible futures

THEY CAN, at times, look somewhat sinister, their faces oddly small for their heads, their white ear tufts jutting out almost aggressively. Their ability to throw themselves at people across seemingly unfeasible distances can be unsettling, and their buzzing and shrieking takes a lot of getting used to, as does their smell. But the members of the Caird collective will not hear a word spoken against the marmosets with whom they share their spaces at the Moons South Pole. As they sit in their insulated caves hoovering moondust out of the animals tails, few of the Cairders can imagine their life on the rim of Shackleton crater without themand none wants to. The marmosets of the Moon are the first and best example of what has turned out to be a fundamental fact of space flight: that the further humans get from Earth, the more they benefit from the companionship of other Earthly animals.

The marmosets were originally brought to the Moon as unwilling participants in a vital research project. Marmosets are lighteven under Earth gravityand reasonably easy to care for, but they have placentas much more like those of humans than any other animal their size, and reasonably short gestation periods. That made them ideal for looking at a fundamental question: can humans have healthy pregnancies in the low gravity of the Moon, where things weigh only one-sixth what they do on Earth?

In the 2020s and 2030s, the years of what the novelist Wil McCarthy called the Rich Mans Sky, questions of obstetrics and gynaecology received remarkably little attention. For many, the idea of staying in space long enough for such things to matter made little sensespace stations in Earth orbit and bases on the Moon were places for fixed-length work contracts and research sojourns, or for tourism. Babies were no more of an issue than they were in isolated 20th-century Antarctic research outposts.

There were, as it happens, a few babies born in Antarctica even back then, when its ice cover was all but intact. The Argentine and Chilean governments both saw the creation of natives on the continent as a way to establish sovereignty and arranged births to that end. But there was no reason to think that Antarctica was inimical to pregnancy and infancy. The long-term health effects of low gravity and microgravitywhich for those in orbit include brittle bones, muscle wasting and eye diseasewere something else. Adults could counter some of these effects with treadmills and tension cords. But as the title of an early paper on the subject succinctly put it, The fetus cannot exercise like an astronaut.

Even those, like Elon Musk, who talked of permanent settlements on Mars spent little time working on the question. It was left to a small team of scientists in the Japanese modules of the Artemis base founded in 2029 by America and its allies to explore the question experimentally with the help of marmosets, gene-splicing technology, intra-uterine monitoring devices and a giant centrifuge.

They had some success. Like human fetuses, marmoset fetuses spend most of their gestation with a density equal to that of the amniotic fluid around them, a neutral buoyancy that leaves them indifferent to local gravity; only relatively late on do differences due to gravity start to crop up. After a few years of trial and error, and some dainty gene-editing to rebalance the rate at which bones grow when not stressed through use, the researchers developed a regime involving hormone treatments for the mothers and regular late-pregnancy sessions in their custom-made room-sized centrifuge, known as the marmo-go-round. This reliably produced pups with strong-enough bones and muscles and little by way of deformity, though their tails were impressively long even by marmoset standards.

Unfortunately, in 2038 that research was interrupted by the geopolitical meltdown of the wolf-and-wimp war and then by the 26 months of the Great Grounding. With all powered flight within or through the Earths atmosphere prohibited, the various Moon bases seemed doomed even after they agreed to pool their resources to create what became known as the Polynational James Caird Collective. With all the groups biotech know-how turned to increasing food production and nutrient recycling, the marmosets were at first ignored and then freed to roam within the bases. Their effect on morale was instantaneous and profound.

The importance of companion animals to the mental health of people engaged in a homeless lifestyle was well documented in pre-war societies. It has been suggested that the effect of the marmosets on the Caird collective was similar; cut off from Earth, the humans were more homeless than any group of people had ever been before. Caring for, playing with and grooming marmosets also became a basis for bonding between humans, many of whom had not known each other before the Grounding, and some of whose countries had been adversaries in the war. By the time the mysterious entity responsible for the Great Grounding finally abandoned its control of the Earths air-traffic-control and missile-defence systems, allowing traffic with the Moon to resume, the marmosets had become an indispensable part of the settlers new identity and society. Few believe that a lack of companion animals was, in itself, the reason that the Mars base failed during the Grounding. But it surely did not help.

The bond between the Moons larger and smaller primates persisted even as the rigours of separation came to an end. Almost all Cairders still dislike spending any significant time deprived of marmoset company. They cuddle them and relish their low-gravity acrobatics. In a joking way that seems, at some level, not to be a joke, they treat the abnormally long tails of the Moon-born marmosets as a sign of providence, holding the tail-fur to be particularly good at picking up moondust. The dust, which can cause lung disease, infiltrates their habitats despite all the airlock precautions; its suppression is a constant battle. Whether hoovering it out of tails which accumulate it in the manner of a feather duster is in fact more effective than the settlements electrostatic air-filtration systems is open to question. But it is clearly more therapeutic. And the marmosets enjoy the attention.

The oldest Earth-born marmoset, New Mrs Chippy (who is, despite his name, male) enjoys an honorary seat on the collectives council. He has now reached the age of 31 with no obvious signs of ageing other than a pelt almost as white as his ear tufts. This is seen as a good omen for human longevity among those Cairders who refuse to countenance a return to Earth. In Japan, by contrast, laboratory marmosets rarely make it past their 21st birthday.

The most salient biological, as opposed to sociological, novelty among Moon-born marmosets is a very high prevalence of adolescent-onset blindness. The constellation of eyesight problems known as Spaceflight Associated Neuro-ocular Syndrome (SANS) has been studied since early this century. In adult humans SANS normally develops only during long stays in the microgravity conditions of space stations; it is rare and mild among humans on the Moon. But in marmosets born in low gravity it develops swiftly and severely at the onset of puberty and leads to almost complete loss of vision.

There is as yet no agreed explanation for this pathology. Some researchers believe it is not in fact gravity-related but the result of an off-target effect of the gene editing which realigned the calcium pathways used in bone growth, but it is hard to square this with the similarity to SANS as experienced by genotypical adult humans. Others think its onset could be avoided if newborn pups were required to spend more, or all, of their time in the simulated Earth-normal gravity of the centrifuge. But it has proved hard to test this hypothesis. Infants that have spent any time at all in lunar gravity are greatly distressed by the rigours of the centrifuge and will not suckle when put into it. And Cairders are unanimous in their opposition to anything that causes marmosets distress.

The blind marmosets are not badly off. Their sibling groups and human companions provide what little practical support they need. And they are happier than sighted marmosets to travel in the pouches which many Cairders have incorporated into the suits they use for working on the lunar surface. Sighted marmosets are clearly disturbed by the harsh monochrome landscape, even when emotionally supported with the amplified sound of their companions heartbeat.

Sudden-onset SANS leaves the question of whether human children can be born and raised on the Moon unanswered. It is sometimes suggested that a blind woman happy with the idea of a child who might also be blind could choose to join the collective and explore the issue. But bringing a child to term would require a centrifuge capable of holding a grown human, rather than a 250-gram marmoset. There is no appetite among Cairders for devoting resources to such a project, and their juche ethic of self-sufficiency will not let them accept funding for such experiments from Earth. Thus how well humans may eventually be able to breed on alien worlds remains unknown, even today.

That they will take animal companions with them, though, now seems certain. And some of those companions will surely have shocking-white ear tufts, odd little faces and very long tails.

Full contents of this What If?Freedom to tinker, October 2029: What if biohackers injected themselves with mRNA?The other epidemic, June 2025: What if America tackled its opioid crisis?A tale of two cities, June 2041: What if a deadly heat wave hit India?You are what you eat, January 2035: What if everyones nutrition was personalised?iHealthy, September 2028: What if smartphones become personal health assistants?Mrs Chippys benediction, February 2055: What if marmosets lived on the Moon?*Novel treatments, August 2050: What if dementia was preventable and treatable?Rage against the machine, December 2036: What if an AI wins the Nobel prize for medicine?Germ of an idea: What if germ theory had caught on sooner?

This article appeared in the What If? section of the print edition under the headline "Mrs Chippys benediction"

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What if marmosets lived on the Moon? - The Economist

Letters to the editor – December 12, 2021 – Times of Malta

Japanese longevity

The feature about ikigai and Japanese longevity (in particular Okinawa, December 5) is most interesting and useful. Ikigai is essentially about maintaining a positive mental attitude, physical and mental activity and avoiding overeating.

Japan remains at the top of human longevity league while Sardinia is said to be home to the highest percentage of European centenarians. A recent British study of this Sardinian phenomenon claims these long-lived individuals live in hilltop villages, are active most of the day, do not make much use of cars, their diet is mainly vegetables and goat cheese based, and are free from chronic disputes and anger.

Japanese longevity is not just related to ikigai but also to their traditional diet of fish, vegetables, green tea and no animal meats and dairy produce. Several decades ago, US medical statistics identified that, whereas Japanese living in Japan had low rates of heart disease, breast and prostate cancer, compared to the US, Japanese residents in America acquired similar disease patterns to other Americans within two generations. This suggested the diet in Japan was an important factor in Japan residents longevity.

Two important dietary factors contributing to Japanese longevity are thought to be fish and a fermented soya product. Fish, particularly from cold waters, is rich in omega-3 fat, which has anti-inflammatory and anti-coagulant properties besides lowering blood triglycerides levels (the worst factor in cholesterol tests). Fermented soya, which the Japanese call natto, has blood clot loosening properties.

The dietary combination of fish and natto would, therefore, be expected to be just as an effective (if not superior and safer) alternative to aspirin and cholesterol-lowering pharmaceuticals (statins). In the West, if one is not eating fish on a daily basis, one can replicate this Japanese dietary pattern with pure fish oil (marine omega-3) and nattokinase capsules.

Nattokinase is natto in capsule form and, if not available locally, can be purchased online from European suppliers.

In the 1970s and 1980s, US laboratory animal studies and a combined US and Chinese university field study in China produced evidence incriminating excessive animal-derived foods as the main promoter of cancer.

The traditional Japanese diet, containing little or no animal-derived food, probably also contributes to their longevity by lowering cancer risk. Furthermore, soya beans (and all beans and lentils) contain substances which lower breast and prostate cancer risk.

ALBERT CILIA-VINCENTI former European Medicines Agency scientific delegate, Attard

In the run-up to the Christmas season, or holiday festivities, if you will, a shadow has been cast that temporarily diminished the sparkle of led lights and Christmas cheer. The European Commissioner for Equality, Helena Dalli sought to issue some sugar-coated equality guidelines which were, fortunately, withdrawn following scathing criticism from various quarters within the European Union.

This move coming from Dalli takes me to revisit one of my favourite movies, The Nightmare Before Christmas. In Tim Burtons stop-motion animated masterpiece, the grotesque but charismatic character Jack Skellington naively tries to fuse Halloween with Christmas, going so far as to send his minions to capture Father Christmas and replacing presents with Halloween versions, which shock and terrify children and parents.

After realising his folly, Jack the Pumpkin King sets things right by reversing his actions and restores Christmas to its normal state.

Dalli has, likewise, attempted to distort the meaning of Christmas and its symbolism to suit her vision of equality but retracted her steps because of the negative backlash. However, while Skellingtons motivations may have been comical and well-intentioned, those of the commissioner could be different.

I distinctly recall, a few years back, the first draft of the Equality Bill, issued when Dalli was a minister for equality in Malta, which included a rather sinister definition of pregnancy: the state of a person who has within the ovary or womb an implanted embryo, which gradually becomes developed in the latter receptacle.

After the social partners protested against this mad scientist definition of pregnancy, which, underhandedly, attempted to separate the mother from the child, the definition was later changed to a more humane woman with child. Yet, the attempt to strip the concept of a pregnancy of any human element was evident, understood and exposed.

More recently, Dalli bragged about how she deceived the electorate by disguising the true intentions of the Labour Party electoral manifesto through the use of obscure terminology. It seems to me that Dalli harbours opinions to which she is perfectly entitled but would go to any lengths to see these ideas imposed on the rest of society, even by stealth and Macchiavellian tactics.

The proposed guidelines by the European Commission also tried to dissuade the use of names like Mary because of their Christian connotations, under the guise of promoting multiculturalism. Why my mothers name, which Leonard Bernstein in the classic West Side Story describes as all the beautiful sounds of the world in a single word, should have the effect of brandishing a crucifix to a vampire on some people eludes me.

Multiculturalism should be all-embracing. If Frank Zappa chose to name his daughter Moon Unit, I love his music no less, though I still prefer the name Mary to Moon Unit.

The EU has to grapple with striking a balance between its historical and cultural roots and a rapidly changing sociocultural environment. Yet, there is no need to resort to a sledgehammer approach to accept the new by obscuring the history and traditions that unite the countries within the Union.

The branding of the Union its flag is also an affirmation of predominantly Christian culture and values, even if the Union and member states are secular. The blue background and yellow stars are a direct reference to the biblical Mary, not Moon Unit.

In time, this may be challenged by the likes of Commissioner Dalli. Who knows, in future, we may remove the 12 yellow stars that can represent the apostles, the zodiac or the 12 labours of Hercules and replace them with a deconstructed foetus as a symbol of equality!

JOSEPH FARRUGIA Attard

Letters to the editor should be sent to editor@timesofmalta.com. Please include your full name, address and ID card number. The editor may disclose personal information to any person or entity seeking legal action on the basis of a published letter.

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Letters to the editor - December 12, 2021 - Times of Malta

The hidden lives of trees – Angelus News

Peter Wohlleben manages a forest in the Eifel Mountains of Germany. Hes most familiar with the struggles and strategies of beeches and oaks. And from decades of observing, studying, living, breathing, and walking among the trees, he has come to discover a parallel world that is invisible to most of us.

Modern forestry is principally concerned with producing lumber. It was Wohllebens job to size up hundreds of trees a day with an eye toward the marketplace. It was only when, in the mid-90s, he began to organize survival training and log-cabin experiences for tourists that he began to wake up to the mystery, variety, complexity, and wonder of trees.

He wrote about that awakening in the 2015 bestseller The Hidden Life of Trees: What They Feel, How They Communicate: Discoveries from a Secret World (Greystone Books, $17).

The Foreword by scientist, explorer, and conservationist Tim Flannery sets the tone:

One reason that many of us fail to understand trees is that they live on a different time scale than us. One of the oldest trees on Earth, [Old Tjikko], a spruce in Sweden, is more than 9,500 years old. Thats 115 times longer than the average human lifetime.

Trees, it turns out, are social. Theyre sophisticated communicators. They experience pain, have memories, and live with their children.

Trees can taste and smell. Certain trees release chemicals to alert their neighbors that a threat in the form, for example, of a leaf-eating giraffe is at hand. Others, when under attack by insects, send out chemical signals to attract predators that will eat the insects.

Trees exchange nutrients through their root systems, including with their competitors. The system is to everyones advantage, because a grouping of trees creates an ecosystem that, among other things, can regulate temperature, store water, and generate humidity.

Sick members of the community are nursed and nourished; its as if trees, too, exist as part of a Mystical Body. So strong is the instinct toward collective health that a kind of equalization principle is at work, whereby more robust trees work to strengthen the weak.

As with humans, trees that grow in isolation generally fail to thrive. And as in the human world, hierarchies exist certain trees are favored. A tree will voluntarily curtail the growth of branches that would otherwise impinge upon the light needed by a neighboring friend, but have no problem in crowding out a nonfriend. Roots of friends become intertwined to such an extent that they sometimes even die together.

Trees register pain by means of electrical signals at the site of the wound. Chemical signals are also transmitted through fungal networks that form around the root tips.

Trees know how to conserve energy: They can go through periods where they sleep, then, possibly after several years, wake. Mother trees purposely limit the amount of light available to their children, as slow growth makes for longevity.

Trees store water in order to survive hot summers and drought. Wohlleben considers the mystery of how that water makes its way from the trees roots all the way up to their leaves.

Insects, butterflies, bees, foraging animals, birds: all depend upon and, in a kind of complex, intricate dance, interact with the trees pollen, seeds, leaves, nuts, and flowers.

Old Tjikko is a tree in Fulufjll in Sweden which is claimed to be the oldest tree in the world, by age of its root system. (Wikimedia Commons)

Over time, Wohlleben developed a new way of managing forests that is both more productive and more profitable: more humane, you could say.

He goes so far as to speak of love among trees.

Some may object to such anthropomorphization but universally acclaimed childrens author Hans Christian Andersen took things a step further.

In fact, this is the perfect time of year to read, or re-read his short story The Fir Tree.

Andersens young tree lived in a beautiful forest. The sun shone, the soft air fluttered its leaves, and the little peasant children passed by, prattling merrily, but the fir tree heeded them not.

The tree was so restless, in fact, that it took no pleasure in the warm sunshine, the birds, or the rosy clouds that floated over it every morning and evening. Sound familiar?

In winter, when the snow glittered on the ground, the fir saw that other, bigger, trees were chosen to be cut down and carried away by laughing bands of revelers. Oh, if I could but keep on growing tall and old! the fir tree thought. There is nothing else worth caring for in the world!

After several years, the trees fondest wish is granted. On Christmas Eve, it finds itself in a lavish home, decorated with golden apples, figs, toys, and glowing candles. For one night, the children enjoy their orgy of food and gifts. The next day the tree is relegated to a dark corner of the attic, where it yellows, dries, and is at last hauled out, unceremoniously chopped into tiny pieces, and burned.

Moral: Lets enjoy that warm sunshine, those rosy clouds, and the friends and family with whom the good Lord has graced us now! Wishing one and all a blessed Christmas.

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The hidden lives of trees - Angelus News

PerkinElmer’s Horizon Discovery CHOSOURCE Cell Line Supports Trinomab Biotech’s Development of the World-First, Tetanus Toxin mAb Drug for Clinical…

WALTHAM, Mass.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--PerkinElmer, a global leader committed to innovating for a healthier world, today announced that its Horizon Discovery CHOSOURCE CHO-K1GS knockout cell line licensed by Trinomab Biotech. Co., Ltd. (www.trinomab.com), of Guangzhou, China was used to help produce and bring to clinical trial the worlds first, fully native human monoclonal neutralizing antibody (mAb) drug candidate to fight tetanus toxin.

Officially approved by the Australian Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) and Human Research Ethics Committee (HREC), the phase I clinical trial in Australia is expected to be completed in August 2021. Leveraging Horizons CHOSOURCE cell line, which includes a gene-edited Glutamine Synthetase (GS) knockout Chinese Hamster Ovary (CHO) K1 cell line and well-established GS expression system, Trinomab was able to get its drug candidate from DNA sequence to clinical manufacturing more quickly and easily.

Trinomab Biotech explained: Since implementing the CHOSOURCE CHO-K1 knockout cell line in our drug development workflow in March 2019, we have been able to hit the ground running and develop this mAb drug candidate against different diseases including the first in-human mAb in phase I trial in Australia against tetanus toxin. These efforts have shown how easy and effective the Horizon cell line was to implement and adapt to our processes. We are pleased with the results and continue to build our drug pipeline using the CHOSOURCE CHO-K1 cell line.

We are delighted that the CHOSOURCE cell line has been part of Trinomabs pioneering efforts to combat disease and are pleased to be working with other organizations in China and around the globe to move drug science and new therapeutic candidates forward, commented Jess Zurdo, Global Head Bioproduction in PerkinElmers Horizon business.

The CHOSOURCE platform, designed for pharmaceutical, biotechnology and biosimilar companies of all sizes, is recognized by the industry and regulators as optimized for high yield bioproduction and is licensed by more than 80 organizations globally. More than nine biotherapeutics expressed in these cell lines, including Trinomabs, have progressed to investigational new drug (IND) filings.

For further information on PerkinElmers Horizon Discovery CHOSOURCE technology please visit: https://horizondiscovery.com/en/chosource.

About PerkinElmer

PerkinElmer enables scientists, researchers, and clinicians to address their most critical challenges across science and healthcare. With a mission focused on innovating for a healthier world, we deliver unique solutions to serve the diagnostics, life sciences, food, and applied markets. We strategically partner with customers to enable earlier and more accurate insights supported by deep market knowledge and technical expertise. Our dedicated team of about 14,000 employees worldwide is passionate about helping customers work to create healthier families, improve the quality of life, and sustain the wellbeing and longevity of people globally. The Company reported revenue of approximately $3.8 billion in 2020, serves customers in 190 countries, and is a component of the S&P 500 index. Additional information is available through 1-877-PKI-NYSE, or at http://www.perkinelmer.com.

About Trinomab

Trinomab is a biopharmaceutical start-up focused on the research and development of new, fully native human antibody drugs to fight infectious, autoimmune, and other diseases as well as malignant tumors. The core technology of the company is a fourth-generation antibody HitmAb, a proprietary technology platform. Additional information is available at http://www.trinomab.com.

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PerkinElmer's Horizon Discovery CHOSOURCE Cell Line Supports Trinomab Biotech's Development of the World-First, Tetanus Toxin mAb Drug for Clinical...

Would you really like to live to be 200? – Telegraph.co.uk

Wearing a dark polo-shirt, his jovial, unlined features are a good advertisement for the medicine he is peddling. His dark hair has only the odd streak of grey. He looks relaxed but then perhaps a holiday in Tuscany, from where he is calling, will do that for anyone.

As he waves his arms, another possible reason for his youthful demeanour becomes clear: he is plastered in wearable devices smart watches and rings which track his heart rate and sleep patterns. I just took out my continuous glucose monitor. His latest health check-up was just a couple of months ago. I didnt even have the colonoscopy, he says, deadly serious. The combination of full-body MRI and colo guard [an at-home colon cancer screening kit] was enough

I nod sagely as though I too have just pooed into a sample bucket and sent it off to a lab.

But hes not wrong that such tests do form part of an ongoing medical revolution. Early diagnostics prevention not cure are increasingly hardwired into healthcare provision, if only because stopping people becoming sick is vastly cheaper for governments than treating them once they do.

Many of us will already be surfing this wave of consumer health tech gadgets, from trackers in smartwatches to fingertip oxygen monitors deployed during Covid. In Youngs book they are producing a wealth of data which, when allied with growing computing power to crunch through it, form the first great pillar of how life will be extended in the near time. How can he be wrong? Personalised, predictive medicine is already with us.

Gene editing, organ regeneration and what he calls longevity in a pill are his other great hopes. The first of these, too, is here today. A renegade Chinese scientist has already created the first gene-edited humans twins born in 2018 whose DNA was tweaked to confer resistance to HIV. And I remain marked by an interview in 2019 with Sophie Wheldon, then a 21-year-old student from Birmingham whose life was saved by Car-T, a novel therapy which genetically modified her own white blood cells to attack her otherwise untreatable leukaemia.

Organ regeneration is more far-fetched, more far-off, even if Young has put his money where his mouth is, investing in Lygenesis, a company trying to grow functioning new organs (to replace failing old ones) using a patients own lymph nodes. So far the company is working on growing livers, but Young says they have many more organs in the pipeline. Human trials start in November.

As for longevity in a pill, such hopes are pinned on drugs like metformin, usually administered for diabetes, which in some patients can have a beneficial effect on other body systems too. But despite thousands of ongoing trials, its still far from being released as a regulated anti-ageing drug. That doesnt deter Young. When we perfect such processes, he believes, living to 150 or 200 years old will become as simple as getting vaccinated today. For the moment, however, and as Young himself admits, regular exercise is, for most of us, safer and more effective.

Indeed, there is no getting around the boring, unchanging truths of staying well longer. Young is most proud of the books final chapter, which offers 10 top tips to take advantage of the longevity revolution. Quit smoking is second on the list. Dont drink too much is there, too. Sleep and eat well. This is hardly revolutionary, though he is also a keen advocate of fasting (Every week Im fasting 36 hours from Monday evening to Wednesday morning), and plant-based diets. (I eat meat probably once every two or three weeks).

He thinks that such steps will help him overcome the cancer barrier, and the heart disease barrier, which is somewhere around 60 and 65 years. But he knows that hurdling those only means crashing into the neurodegenerative diseases barrier, which is around 80 or 90 years.

But there is a tech solution to dementia too, he thinks. And this is where things get more outlandish. If we want to help people to fight Alzheimers or neurodegenerative diseases, he says, integration between human brain and computer is the only way to solve it. He talks of Elon Musk, whose company Neuralink is working on just such a brain-machine interface with the goal of enabling people with paralysis to directly use their neural activity to operate digital devices. He mentions digital representations of the elderly avatars which could continue, compos mentis, as the physical persons dementia deteriorates, or even live on after they die. It sounds loopy, until he talks movingly of his grandfather, who died in 1995 and to whom he was close. He was instrumental for me. I would love to have the opportunity to have 30 minutes with a [digital copy] of him in the virtual world. Theres so many questions I would still like to ask.

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Would you really like to live to be 200? - Telegraph.co.uk

How can Indians live longer? We need the Blue Zone diet – ThePrint

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The World Health Organizationreportedthelife expectancy of an Indian to be 70.8 yearsin its 2019-20 report. Over the lasttwocenturies, Indias life expectancy has increased consistently but is still lower than the global averageof73.4 years.

Human life expectancy depends on multiple factors.A 2018review studyassessing life expectancy in low and medium human development index countries investigated health indicators of83 nations from the World Bank, WHO, United Nation Development Fund and UNICEFdatabases. The authors reported socio-economic status, healthcare system, adult literacy rate, disease burden, andthe interaction of these factorsas major determinants of life expectancy.

Unhealthy food choicesand associated risks are among the leading causes of death globally.According totheWHOs latestfactsheet(13 April 2021), noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) contribute to 71per centof global deaths. Annually, around 15 million peoplebetween30and60 years ofagedie prematurely from NCDs85per centofthese deathsare from lower and middle-income countries. Cardiovascular diseases are the most prevalent cause of death acrossthe world, followed by cancers, respiratory diseases, and diabetes. These four groups alone are responsible for 80per centof all premature deaths. Potential risk factors for NCD include lack of physical activity, poor dietary choices, excessive consumption of alcohol, tobacco, stress, etc.

Also read: Women in India live longer than men but dont have healthier lives, finds new report

A2020 studyby Manika Sharma and colleagues comparingtheIndian diet with the EAT-LancetCommissionreference diet included samples from1.02 lakhhouseholdsinIndia and found that whole grains were contributing significantly more calories than the EAT-Lancet recommendations, whereas the consumption of fruits, vegetables, legumes, meat, fish and eggs were much lower. Protein share was only 6-8per cent,compared tothe 29 per cent recommendation.These outcomes were independent of the socio-economic status of Indian households.Even the rich Indians werenot found to consume optimum amounts of fruits, vegetables, and proteins in their diet. In fact, an average Indian household consumesmore calories from processed foods than fruits. Authors concluded the average Indian diet as unhealthy, lacking essential food groups.

Another national-levelcross-sectional surveyin2017-18 bythe National NCD Monitoring Surveystudiedthe prevalence of risk factors in 12,000 Indianadults.Itrevealedthat32.8per cent of respondentsused tobacco, 15.9per centconsumed alcohol, 41.3per centwere not physically active, 98.4per centconsumed less thanfiveservings of fruits and vegetables per day. The study also reported an elevated risk of blood glucose and cardiovascular diseases among participants.

Also read: In Indias booming junk food market, there is little room for nutrition

Blue Zones, aconceptdeveloped by National Geographic Fellow and author Dan Buettner, are thefiveregions of the world where people live longer, lead physically and mentally healthy lives,and aremore active compared to the rest of the world. Tolive longer, the Blue Zones adoptednineevidence-based lifestyle modalities that arethought to slowthe ageing process, diet being one of the most importantcomponents.

The Blue zone diet is wholeandmostly plant-based.Ninety five per centof the daily Blue zone diet is composed of vegetables, fruits, whole grains, beans, legumes, nuts, olive oil, berries, oats, and barley. The diet recommends avoiding meat and dairy, sugary drinks, with no room for processed foods.

In contrast to the standard diet composition,Sardinia, one of five Blue Zones,followsa variation of the Mediterranean diet that includes all Blue Zone food groups along with moderate intake of fish and fewer intake of dairy, alcohol, and red meat.

Plant-based Blue Zone diets are rich in antioxidantsandanti-inflammatory polyphenols, which are reported topreventchronicillnessessuch as obesity, diabetes, cancer, and cardiovascular disease.

A 2015reviewby G.M. Pes and colleagues mapped historical evidence linked to male longevity among the Sardinian population and found that an inter-community nutrition transition to consuming more fruits and vegetablesandmoderate consumptions of meat led to significant health benefits to the ageing population by reducing mortality risk.

However, a wholesome, nutritious, antioxidant-rich diet isnt the only secret behind the Blue Zone longevity. Thepeopleliving therealso engagein high levels of physical activity, have low-stress levels, more social engagement, and a sense of well-being.

Eating like a Mediterranean is recommended as a part of longevity diet for the Indian population that includes more raw fruits and vegetables in salads; whole grains instead of polished rice; legumes, pulses, and beans in form of sprouts, salads, less spicy curry; healthy fats from nuts, seeds, olive oil, coconut, and avocado; along with limited intake of meat and sweets.

All processed foods like refined sugar, refined wheat flour, biscuits, instant noodlesshouldbe gradually eliminated from the daily diet.

Also read: Two-third Indians with non-communicable diseases fall in 26-59 age group, survey finds

Include these elements of the Mediterranean diet in your meals:

-Oats, barley, jowar, bajra, ragi, kodo millets, quinoa

-Dark green leafy vegetables like spinach, lettuce, drumstick leaves

-Nutslikealmonds, walnuts, figs

-Seedslikeflax, chia, pumpkin, sunflower, beans

-Legumeslikenavy beans, fava beans, chickpeas, lentils

-Dairyproducts likelow-fat cheese, yogurt, milk

-Fishlikesardines, salmon, trout, sea fishes

-Herbs and spiceslikemint, rosemary, sage, garlic, thyme, basil, and oregano.

To summarise, a vibrant, nutritious eating plan along with regular physical activity, sound sleep, and stress-free life is the key to acquiringa disease-free, long life.

Indians can start practising this one day at a time.

Dr Subhasree Ray is Doctoral Scholar (Ketogenic Diet), certified diabetes educator, and a clinical and public health nutritionist. She tweets @DrSubhasree. Views are personal.

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How can Indians live longer? We need the Blue Zone diet - ThePrint

Meet the Human Design Coaches to watch in 2021 – GlobeNewswire

London, Feb. 1, 2021 // As human beings, each and every one of us is unique yet so many of us rely on universal methods to thrive in our lives and businesses, and feel disheartened when things dont go as wed hoped.

Human Design allows us to understand ourselves on a deep level and shines a light on the simple and bespoke strategies we can use to embrace our magical uniqueness and flourish at work and at home.

According to Bloom Communications, finding expert guidance and support on your journey of self-discovery and transformation is of the utmost importance take a look at our top Human Design coaches leading the way.

Danielle Eyman (@hdbydanielle)

California-based Danielle Eyman launched her business after living according to her design for 3 years a process that saw her wean herself off antidepressants, narcissistic men and friendships, leave a toxic job as a Registered Nurse and repair her relationship with her children.

She said: Ive seen the power of Human Design at work in my own life and its a privilege to see so many of my clients experience these huge shifts too. At the beginning of our journey together, many of them are at rock bottom often with no idea how they got there and they know they need to do something different if life is ever going to feel successful.

Working and experimenting with Human Design means gaining control of your mind and managing your thoughts and thats exactly what we do together with unbiased support and accountability. I help my clients align to and trust their own authority in just three weeks and I have seen results from business transformations to quitting drinking alcohol and boosting self-confidence it truly is incredible to see what we can achieve when we realign to the truth of who we really are.

Danielle is committed to making Human Design more accessible to all and works with her clients through monthly masterclasses, individual chart readings and 1:1 coaching support for women looking to truly embody and integrate the practice into their lives.

Victoria Jane (@victoriajane.hd)

Victoria Jane is a 6/2 Splenic Projector and non-specific manifestor in Human Design. Her mission is to empower growth-oriented folks to live with less hustle and more flow.

The Human Design coach and educator said: Its possible for you to live the life you desire and fulfill your dreams with ease instead of struggle. The reason that Human Design is so amazing is that it gives you a unique blueprint of how your energy works the best part is when I hear from clients who have experimented with living their design the incredible success, confidence, and fulfillment they experience.

After hitting several rock bottom moments including chronic health issues and burnout, Victoria recognised these signs from the Universe and took the leap to start her own business. Working from her home in Oakland CA, Victoria now runs the Human Design Coaching Certification and works with one-on-one clients to uplevel their career and relationships by following their human design.

Victoria added: In addition to the 1:1 work that which I love, what Im most excited about right now is the HD Coaching Cert - because Ive seen Human Design allow coaches to get their clients better results...You literally have a roadmap to how someones designed, so you can give more relevant and personalized guidance to your clients. Plus the community we have, where we are always discussing and going deep on human design topics is the best!

Kyla Derkach (@hathaastro)

Women feeling lost, stuck and hoping to discover their purpose and direction in love, life and business will find their perfect match in Palma De Mallorca-based Kyla Derkach. With a strong background in astrology and certified through the AFA, this Human Design Coach, Modern Astrologer and NLP Practitioner in training has a deep understanding of the patterns and unconscious programming of her clients.

Kyla said: I love working with bold, entrepreneurial, self-aware women who are committed to transforming anything holding them back from living their highest vibe life and making an impact on the world with their unique gifts. Keeping it real with my clients is important and my goal is to take the eye roll out of this stuff.

Kyla works with her clients through a range of consultations and programs across Astrology and Human Design, as well as her online course, Aphrodite Rising, which brings women into deeper alignment with their feminine nature. In 2021, she is launching a group coaching program and mentorship opportunities to help other women learn more about these modalities and how to incorporate them into their own businesses.

Kyla added: Ive been on a real healing journey throughout my life, which saw me pack up my party-filled, glamorous corporate life in Vancouver and set myself up on a majestic little island in the Mediterranean.

I tried many different things to stop getting in my own way you name it, Ive tried it! but it was only when I started integrating my knowledge of Astrology and discovered Human Design that things really started to shift. My mission now is to inspire others to beat self-sabotage, discover who they really are, and create a life and business they love too.

Taylor Eaton (@tayloreatoncoaching)

Washington-based Money Mindset and Human Design Expert, Taylor Eaton, is on a one-woman mission to heal societys relationship with money.

She explains: I dream of seeing our entire society shift away from the toxic patterns we currently have around money and showing people how they can harness the power of abundance for good. I want to create a new paradigm around this energy and help others to approach money in a way that empowers them.

Taylor offers private Human Design readings as well as programs and trainings that help individuals identify their unique blueprint for financial abundance, create aligned strategies for success, and shift their mindset to set them up for effortless income and impact.

Taylor adds: Learning how we are each uniquely designed to make money allows us to welcome more money into our lives with ease and heal blocks that keep money from flowing.

Ive helped countless clients scale their income on their terms and seeing them achieve this never gets old! I love blowing the old ways of doing business and money out of the water and helping people to learn to trust themselves and their own inner guidance.

Corinne Winters (@serveyourmuse)

Creative Living Mentor, Corinne Winters, uses a combination of Human Design, inner work and everyday tools to help creatives own who they are and release the pressure to conform.

Corinne said: Theres nothing more rewarding than helping clients embrace all parts of themselves, especially the things they once saw as quirky or unacceptable, and seeing how the full expression of who they are contributes to their work in the world. Thats why I advocate for Creative Living over self improvement, which implies that we have to change who we are to be good enough. My work is all about reconnecting people with the latent qualities within them originality, depth, courage, authenticity and resilience and helping them live from the inside out.

As a multi-hyphenate creative, Corinne has also spent two decades honing her craft as an internationally acclaimed opera singer, and now uses her expertise and love of teaching to help other curious and introspective people from artists and creatives to parents and entrepreneurs to navigate the same blocks that shes encountered in her journey so far.

People looking to let go of perfectionism, imposter syndrome or self-sabotage can work with Corinne through a variety of 1:1 sessions, interactive group workshops, made-to-order products tailored to their Human Design chart as well as a range of free resources.

Kendra Woods (@SoulfulSuccessByDesign)

Kendra Woods is a Human Design Business Alignment Coach on a mission to help ambitious, heart-centered, high-achieving women in business create success on their terms.

Kendra said: I spent over a decade in the corporate world and completely burned myself out so much so that I began to suffer from anxiety, bouts of depression and several physical health issues. When I finally woke up to the fact that something needed to change, I realized that my truth was that I wanted to life my life on my terms and for me and there was no other way to do that than to start my own business and create my own reality in a way that felt good for me.

The Alabama-based coach works with her clients through a range of services including high-level private coaching, courses, Human Design readings, Business Alignment Blueprints and masterclasses, all designed to help women in business to create success on their terms and in a way that is in alignment for them, creating more ease and flow. She is also the co-author of bestselling book, Girl Get Up and Win.

She added: Its such a blessing to be able to witness the beautiful transformations that my clients experience when we work together. I absolutely love what I do and Im passionate about helping others overcome confusion, self-doubt, low confidence and feeling defeated so that they can create lives that truly light them up.

Tiffani Purdy (@newparadigmbizbestie)

Florida-based Marketing Strategist and Human Design Teacher, Tiffani Purdy, helps coaches, consultants and service-providers to escape the burnout cycle and build businesses that fit in with their ideal life.

Tiffani said: Im all about helping entrepreneurs to get seen and sell their products and services with ease. When we finally drop the comparison and hustle culture and learn how to do things our way according to our Human Design, we can create businesses where we can freely express ourselves, have a lot of fun and make even more money.

Its my dream to see a world where more people have control over their lives and their income. I want Human Design With Tiffani to ultimately contribute to ushering in a new era of business where everyone gets paid well no matter what kind of job theyre doing.

Business owners can work with Tiffani in her signature program, The ENRICH Formula, where theyll learn the basics of Human Design, a therapeutic process to use and apply it in a personal development format, and how to use it to build a business that makes sense for their energetic design.

Cat Skreiner (@cat.skreiner)

Cat Skreiner started her entrepreneurial journey when she was seeking more balance in her life after becoming a new mother. Despite intending to return to her corporate role in digital for a global beauty brand after maternity life, she knew it was time to follow her true purpose in life and has never looked back.

Today, the Perth-based coach is now on a mission to help women in business to truly understand how they best operate in this world and what theyre here to do in their lifetime.

Cat said: I fuse more than 14 years experience in the Digital Marketing industry with Human Design to help my clients catapult their business success and drive massive impact through the integration and embodiment of their unique energetic gifts.

Whether Im working with female entrepreneurs through coaching and mentoring or personal readings, I use a combination of Human Design, Gene Keys and Team Energetics help them to create a business that is more intentional, aligned with their design and allows them to share their greatness with the world in a way that feels easy, fun and abundant.

Alexandra Danieli (@alexandra.danieli)

After years in the corporate and tech industry following leadership that wasnt in alignment with her values and vision, Alexandra Danieli took the leap to pursue her soul purpose supporting people in their spiritual growth and helping them to create the life they desire in their wildest dreams.

Working from her home in California, she now works with her clients through a range of private 1:1 and group coaching programs, as well as through the Ultimate Deconditioning System which she co-founded with her business partner and close friend.

Alexandra said: I work with people who are determined not to settle for a mediocre life theyve decided they want to live in abundance, confidence and have a supportive and harmonious romantic relationship. Theyre ready to finally implement the missing piece of the puzzle.

As we work together, I support them to activate their confidence, step into their authentic self, implement healthy relationship patterns, and call in the money they want to make consistently. This is about getting to know the Self on a deep level and transforming what doesnt work anymore upleveling in all aspects of life.

Leslie Collins (@wholeheartedbeing)

Leslie Collins uses Human Design, astrology and self-reflection to support her clients in digging deep to build an intricate understanding of their problems when navigating their partnerships, families, work, friendships and more.

Leslie commented: Wholehearted Being is here for anyone looking for the empowerment to show up authentically in their lives no matter who you are or what your background is. My work is focused on providing my clients with a safe and impartial support system whilst they develop the knowing, understanding and acceptance of themselves, which then equips them to show up fully in their lives.

Leslie offers counseling and coaching sessions to her clients to work on the major pillars of relating and life: Understanding, Communication, Boundaries, Confidence, Clarity and Mindset.

Leslie added: Prior to our sessions, I research everything I can about my clients Human Design, enneagram, love languages, astrology All of this knowledge helps me to be the best support provider I can be, helping them to understand why they are who they are, as well as how they interact with the people in their lives too.

Nadia Gabrielle (@_nadiagabrielle & @projectorsinvited)

Nadia Gabrielle is a multifaceted entrepreneur working at the intersection of business and wellbeing, merging her background in Design Thinking, Service Design and business building with more than 12 years of experience working in the wellness & self-development space.

Nadia said: All of my work is Human Design-informed. By looking up every single clients chart prior to working with them one-on-one, Im able to understand their energetic blueprint; their needs, strengths and areas for us to zoom in on, which makes our time together even more impactful. I work with all types, though being a Projector myself, Im particularly interested in Human Design Projectors, and offer specific Projector Coaching to integrate the mechanics, beauties and particularities of their aura into daily life and work.

Clients can work with Nadia on a 1:1 basis to build subconscious capacity and confidently embody who they wish to be in their lives and work, or in a group setting to learn proven strategic frameworks to create ease, profitability and longevity in their businesses.

Nadia also teaches regular classes on varied topics such as Human Design and the Subconscious Mind, or the Projector Aura in Business, as well as taking service-based business owners like coaches, consultants, creatives and practitioners through her annual Service Design School curriculum that teaches them to design spell-binding service experiences for their clients.

Nadia concluded: Im so lucky to get to work with so many incredible clients and students from all over the world. As a service-based entrepreneur, I get to build strong relationships with the people I work with, and seeing them have real and lasting results and making big strides in their lives and businesses is my favourite thing.

You can keep up with each of these inspirational coaches curated by Bloom Communications on their journeys by following them on Instagram.

Media DetailsContact: Amy WilliamsEmail: amy@bloomcomms.co

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Meet the Human Design Coaches to watch in 2021 - GlobeNewswire

Light-activated genes illuminate the role of gut microbes in longevity – Baylor College of Medicine News

Getting old is a complex matter. Research has shown that gut microbes are one of the factors that can influence several aspects of human life, including aging. Elucidating how a specific microbial species contributes to longevity is quite challenging given the complexity and heterogeneity of the human gut environment.

To explore the influence of bacterial products on the aging process, researchers at Baylor College of Medicine and Rice University developed a method that uses light to directly control specific gene expression and metabolite production from bacteria residing in the gut of the laboratory worm Caenorhabditis elegans.

We used optogenetics, a method that combines light and genetically engineered light-sensitive proteins to regulate molecular events in a targeted manner in living cells or organisms, said co-corresponding author Dr. Meng Wang, Robert C. Fyfe Endowed Chair on Aging and professor of molecular and human genetics and the Huffington Center on Aging at Baylor.

In the current work, the team engineered E. coli bacteria to produce the pro-longevity compound colanic acid in response to green light and switch off its production in red light. They discovered that shining the green light on the transparent worms carrying the modified E. coli induced the bacteria to produce colanic acid, which protected the worms gut cells against stress-induced mitochondrial fragmentation. Mitochondria have been increasingly recognized as important players in the aging process.

When exposed to green light, worms carrying this E. coli strain also lived longer. The stronger the light, the longer the lifespan, said Wang, an investigator at Howard Hughes Medical Institute and member of Baylors Dan L Duncan Comprehensive Cancer Center. Optogenetics offers a direct way to manipulate gut bacterial metabolism in a temporally, quantitatively and spatially controlled manner and enhance host fitness.

For instance, this work suggests that we could engineer gut bacteria to secrete more colanic acid to combat age-related health issues, said co-corresponding author Dr. Jeffrey Tabor, associate professor of bioengineering and biosciences at Rice University. Researchers also can use this optogenetic method to unravel other mechanisms by which microbial metabolism drives host physiological changes and influences health and disease.

Read the complete report in the journal eLife.

Other contributors to this work include first author Lucas A. Hartsough, Mooncheol Park, Matthew V. Kotlajich, John Tyler Lazar, Bing Han, Chih-Chun J. Lin, Elena Musteata and Lauren Gambill. The authors are affiliated with one of more of the following institutions: Baylor College of Medicine, Rice University and Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

Funding for this project was provided by Human Health Services and National Institutes of Health grants (1R21NS099870-01, DP1DK113644 and R01AT009050), National Aeronautics and Space Administration (grant NSTRF NNX11AN39H), the John S. Dunn Foundation and the Welch Foundation.

By Ana Mara Rodrguez, Ph.D.

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Light-activated genes illuminate the role of gut microbes in longevity - Baylor College of Medicine News

Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market 2020 Study Report by Industry Types, Growth, Share, Size, Key Manufacturers, Revenue, Trends, COVID-19…

The Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy market is expected to grow from USD X.X million in 2020 to USD X.X million by 2026, at a CAGR of X.X% during the forecast period. The global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy market report is a comprehensive research that focuses on the overall consumption structure, development trends, sales models and sales of top countries in the global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy market. The report focuses on well-known providers in the global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy industry, market segments, competition, and the macro environment.

Under COVID-19 Outbreak, how the Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Industry will develop is also analyzed in detail in Chapter 1.7 of the report., In Chapter 2.4, we analyzed industry trends in the context of COVID-19., In Chapter 3.5, we analyzed the impact of COVID-19 on the product industry chain based on the upstream and downstream markets., In Chapters 6 to 10 of the report, we analyze the impact of COVID-19 on various regions and major countries., In chapter 13.5, the impact of COVID-19 on the future development of the industry is pointed out.

A holistic study of the market is made by considering a variety of factors, from demographics conditions and business cycles in a particular country to market-specific microeconomic impacts. The study found the shift in market paradigms in terms of regional competitive advantage and the competitive landscape of major players.

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Key players in the global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy market covered in Chapter 4:, Acorda Therapeutics, Unity Biotechnology, Antoxerene, Celgene, Cohbar, Senex Biotechnology, Human Longevity Inc., T.A. Sciences, Agex Therapeutics, Recursion Pharmaceuticals, Calico Life Sciences, Spotlight Bioscience, Powervision Inc., Sierra Sciences Llc, Restorbio, Insilico Medicine, Oisin Biotechnology, Senolytic Therapeutics, Proteostasis Therapeutics Inc., Prana Biotechnology Ltd., Cleara Biotech

In Chapter 11 and 13.3, on the basis of types, the Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy market from 2015 to 2026 is primarily split into:, Senolytic Drug Therapy, Gene Therapy, Immunotherapy, Others

In Chapter 12 and 13.4, on the basis of applications, the Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy market from 2015 to 2026 covers:, Longevity, Senescence Inhibition, Cardiovascular Diseases, Neural Degenerative Diseases, Ophthalmology Disorders, Cancer

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Geographically, the detailed analysis of consumption, revenue, market share and growth rate, historic and forecast (2015-2026) of the following regions are covered in Chapter 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 13:, North America (Covered in Chapter 6 and 13), United States, Canada, Mexico, Europe (Covered in Chapter 7 and 13), Germany, UK, France, Italy, Spain, Russia, Others, Asia-Pacific (Covered in Chapter 8 and 13), China, Japan, South Korea, Australia, India, Southeast Asia, Others, Middle East and Africa (Covered in Chapter 9 and 13), Saudi Arabia, UAE, Egypt, Nigeria, South Africa, Others, South America (Covered in Chapter 10 and 13), Brazil, Argentina, Columbia, Chile, Others, Regional scope can be customized

Years considered for this report:, Historical Years: 2015-2019, Base Year: 2019, Estimated Year: 2020, Forecast Period: 2020-2026

Some Point of Table of Content:

Chapter One: Report Overview

Chapter Two: Global Market Growth Trends

Chapter Three: Value Chain of Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market

Chapter Four: Players Profiles

Chapter Five: Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market Analysis by Regions

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Chapter Six: North America Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market Analysis by Countries

Chapter Seven: Europe Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market Analysis by Countries

Chapter Eight: Asia-Pacific Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market Analysis by Countries

Chapter Nine: Middle East and Africa Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market Analysis by Countries

Chapter Ten: South America Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market Analysis by Countries

Chapter Eleven: Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market Segment by Types

Chapter Twelve: Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market Segment by Applications 12.1 Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales, Revenue and Market Share by Applications (2015-2020) 12.1.1 Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Market Share by Applications (2015-2020) 12.1.2 Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue and Market Share by Applications (2015-2020) 12.2 Longevity Sales, Revenue and Growth Rate (2015-2020) 12.3 Senescence Inhibition Sales, Revenue and Growth Rate (2015-2020) 12.4 Cardiovascular Diseases Sales, Revenue and Growth Rate (2015-2020) 12.5 Neural Degenerative Diseases Sales, Revenue and Growth Rate (2015-2020) 12.6 Ophthalmology Disorders Sales, Revenue and Growth Rate (2015-2020) 12.7 Cancer Sales, Revenue and Growth Rate (2015-2020)

Chapter Thirteen: Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market Forecast by Regions (2020-2026) continue

List of tablesList of Tables and Figures Table Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market Size Growth Rate by Type (2020-2026) Figure Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market Share by Type in 2019 & 2026 Figure Senolytic Drug Therapy Features Figure Gene Therapy Features Figure Immunotherapy Features Figure Others Features Table Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market Size Growth by Application (2020-2026) Figure Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market Share by Application in 2019 & 2026 Figure Longevity Description Figure Senescence Inhibition Description Figure Cardiovascular Diseases Description Figure Neural Degenerative Diseases Description Figure Ophthalmology Disorders Description Figure Cancer Description Figure Global COVID-19 Status Overview Table Influence of COVID-19 Outbreak on Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Industry Development Table SWOT Analysis Figure Porters Five Forces Analysis Figure Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market Size and Growth Rate 2015-2026 Table Industry News Table Industry Policies Figure Value Chain Status of Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Figure Production Process of Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Figure Manufacturing Cost Structure of Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Figure Major Company Analysis (by Business Distribution Base, by Product Type) Table Downstream Major Customer Analysis (by Region) Table Acorda Therapeutics Profile Table Acorda Therapeutics Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Unity Biotechnology Profile Table Unity Biotechnology Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Antoxerene Profile Table Antoxerene Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Celgene Profile Table Celgene Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Cohbar Profile Table Cohbar Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Senex Biotechnology Profile Table Senex Biotechnology Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Human Longevity Inc. Profile Table Human Longevity Inc. Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table T.A. Sciences Profile Table T.A. Sciences Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Agex Therapeutics Profile Table Agex Therapeutics Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Recursion Pharmaceuticals Profile Table Recursion Pharmaceuticals Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Calico Life Sciences Profile Table Calico Life Sciences Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Spotlight Bioscience Profile Table Spotlight Bioscience Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Powervision Inc. Profile Table Powervision Inc. Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Sierra Sciences Llc Profile Table Sierra Sciences Llc Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Restorbio Profile Table Restorbio Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Insilico Medicine Profile Table Insilico Medicine Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Oisin Biotechnology Profile Table Oisin Biotechnology Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Senolytic Therapeutics Profile Table Senolytic Therapeutics Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Proteostasis Therapeutics Inc. Profile Table Proteostasis Therapeutics Inc. Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Prana Biotechnology Ltd. Profile Table Prana Biotechnology Ltd. Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Table Cleara Biotech Profile Table Cleara Biotech Production, Value, Price, Gross Margin 2015-2020 Figure Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue ($) and Growth (2015-2020) Table Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales by Regions (2015-2020) Table Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales Market Share by Regions (2015-2020) Table Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue ($) by Regions (2015-2020) Table Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue Market Share by Regions (2015-2020) Table Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue Market Share by Regions in 2015 Table Global Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue Market Share by Regions in 2019 Figure North America Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure Europe Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure Asia-Pacific Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure Middle East and Africa Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure South America Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure North America Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue ($) and Growth (2015-2020) Table North America Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales by Countries (2015-2020) Table North America Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales Market Share by Countries (2015-2020) Figure North America Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales Market Share by Countries in 2015 Figure North America Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales Market Share by Countries in 2019 Table North America Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue ($) by Countries (2015-2020) Table North America Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue Market Share by Countries (2015-2020) Figure North America Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue Market Share by Countries in 2015 Figure North America Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue Market Share by Countries in 2019 Figure United States Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure Canada Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure Mexico Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth (2015-2020) Figure Europe Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue ($) Growth (2015-2020) Table Europe Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales by Countries (2015-2020) Table Europe Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales Market Share by Countries (2015-2020) Figure Europe Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales Market Share by Countries in 2015 Figure Europe Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales Market Share by Countries in 2019 Table Europe Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue ($) by Countries (2015-2020) Table Europe Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue Market Share by Countries (2015-2020) Figure Europe Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue Market Share by Countries in 2015 Figure Europe Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue Market Share by Countries in 2019 Figure Germany Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure UK Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure France Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure Italy Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure Spain Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure Russia Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure Asia-Pacific Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue ($) and Growth (2015-2020) Table Asia-Pacific Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales by Countries (2015-2020) Table Asia-Pacific Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales Market Share by Countries (2015-2020) Figure Asia-Pacific Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales Market Share by Countries in 2015 Figure Asia-Pacific Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales Market Share by Countries in 2019 Table Asia-Pacific Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue ($) by Countries (2015-2020) Table Asia-Pacific Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue Market Share by Countries (2015-2020) Figure Asia-Pacific Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue Market Share by Countries in 2015 Figure Asia-Pacific Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue Market Share by Countries in 2019 Figure China Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure Japan Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure South Korea Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure Australia Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure India Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure Southeast Asia Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Sales and Growth Rate (2015-2020) Figure Middle East and Africa Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Revenue ($) and Growth (2015-2020) continue

If you have any special requirements, please let us know and we will offer you the report as you want.

ABOUT US

ARCReports Store is a market research company that helps connect global differentials, break market entry barriers, track the latest developments surrounding the market thesis, develop market strategies and plan for the future by providing concrete actionable market research intelligence that can help them succeed. Our goals include offering accurate and relevant market intelligence that makes taking business decisions towards succeeding in todays business environments.

We offer a range of syndicated and regional market studies to our customers. These services include uniquely customized market intelligence that are better suited to their needs in accordance to their geographical, industrial, economical and technological needs.

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NOTE: Our report does take into account the impact of coronavirus pandemic and dedicates qualitative as well as quantitative sections of information within the report that emphasizes the impact of COVID-19.

As this pandemic is ongoing and leading to dynamic shifts in stocks and businesses worldwide, we take into account the current condition and forecast the market data taking into consideration the micro and macroeconomic factors that will be affected by the pandemic.

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Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Market 2020 Study Report by Industry Types, Growth, Share, Size, Key Manufacturers, Revenue, Trends, COVID-19...

How to live longer: Four simple dietary decisions that are proven to boost longevity – Express

The pandemic has forced many people to rethink how they lead their lives. Research by Cambridge Weight Plan has found that more than two thirds of the public (68 percent) will be switching up their diet in 2021. Knowing how to maximise the health benefits of your dietary decisions can be challenging, however.

As Gilbert explains, type-2 diabetes is "virtually absent" in those who restrict calories and follow a low-calorie diet such as the 1:1 Diet.

In fact, the 1:1 Diet has been shown to reverse diabetes in those who undertake it, as long it is sufficiently nutritious, Gilbert says.

The Cambridge 1:1 diet is a VLCD (Very low-calorie diet) meal replacement diet in which 415 to 1500 calories are consumed daily through a combination of meal replacement bars, smoothies, shakes and soups.

Extensive evidence points to the benefits of following a low-calorie diet.

One study published in Cell Metabolism journal this month concluded that cutting calorie intake by 15 percent over two years can slow ageing and protect against diseases such as cancer, diabetes, and Alzheimers.

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Vitamin D, otherwise known as the sunshine vitamin, is obtained through direct exposure to sun, although supplements are usually required to top up the vitamin in winter time.

"Vitamin D is intimately involved in immunity, protecting us particularly by helping our T cell immune response," Gilbert explains.

Studies have shown that vitamin D levels in the body are inversely related to the risk of death.

According to a large review study, low vitamin D levels have been linked to all-cause, cardiovascular, cancer and infectious-related mortality.

Gilbert explains: Berries have a number of health advantages and have been shown to improve heart health, reduce incidence and risk of cancer and diabetes, and to reduce blood pressure.

According to Gilbert, adding berries to a sugary meal can slow and reduce the appearance of blood sugar (glucose) in your blood.

"In turn this assists blood flow by helping your blood vessels dilate but also reduce the 'stickiness' of your blood, preventing inflammation and build-up of cholesterol," he says.

Cholesterol is a waxy substance that raises your risk of heart disease.

Test-tube and human studies suggest that they berries protect your cells from high blood sugar levels, help increase insulin sensitivity, and reduce blood sugar and insulin response to high-carb meals.

"Those who drink green tea seem to be protected from the dreaded all-cause mortality (death from any cause), even when researchers control for other behaviours," explains Gilbert.

This should raise few eyebrows. As Gilbert points out, green tea consumption protects DNA, helps with blood sugar control and may help prevent diabetes, decreases blood pressure and reduces arterial plaque.

According to a review of seven studies with a total of 286,701 individuals, tea drinkers had an 18 percent lower risk of diabetes.

See more here:
How to live longer: Four simple dietary decisions that are proven to boost longevity - Express

Indie Focus: Grief and resilience in ‘Pieces of a Woman’ – Los Angeles Times

Hello! Im Mark Olsen. Welcome to another edition of your regular field guide to a world of Only Good Movies.

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This is our first newsletter of 2021, and it has already been quite a year.

The events of this past week surpass any thoughts on movies at the moment. I feel I have likely said this before, but there is no one better at sorting through the cultural confusion of a moment like Wednesday than Times TV critic Lorraine Ali. As she wrote, Wednesdays violent attack cannot be seen as yet another preparatory stress test for democracy. It was the real thing. We, as a nation, are not immune to the crises in which we are so often intervening overseas, parachuting in to save the day and frequently mucking things up further by trying we should never again assume well be saved from the fate of nations that have fallen victim to tyrants by mere privilege alone.

Mary McNamara wrote about the weeks events as well. Ignorance, misunderstanding, claims of party divisions are no longer applicable the division is not about big government versus small, its about democratic government versus dictatorship. This is not about the grievances, real and imagined, of small-town America or the danger of elitist bubbles, real and imagined, of coastal cities. This is about people who believe America wont be great again until representative democracy is not just suppressed through racist voter restrictions and regional gerrymandering but completely destroyed.

And Carolina Miranda had these sharp thoughts on the Capitol building itself: The Capitol is indeed a symbol of democracy a troubled one, but an evolving one. One whose narratives are not yet fully written. That will be up to us.

There was nevertheless other news as well. Over the holidays, filmmaker Joan Micklin Silver died at age 85. Silver was the groundbreaking director of movies such as Hester Street, Between the Lines, Chilly Scenes of Winter and Crossing Delancey. In 1991, while speaking to an audience at the American Film Institute, she said, Be tenacious. Be strong. Be courageous. What can I say? Keep it up. You have to learn to take rejection. You have to learn to believe in yourself.

The first episode of The Envelope podcast of the new year features my conversation with Kemp Powers, who wrote the screen adaption of his own play One Night in Miami and co-wrote and co-directed the new Pixar animated film Soul. As Powers said of this rather remarkable moment of having two films out at the same time, That wasnt the plan. The world were living in has plans of its own.

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Directed by Kornl Mundrucz from a screenplay by Kata Weber, Pieces of a Woman is an exploration of one woman (Vanessa Kirby) working through the grief of losing a baby in childbirth. The movie starts with an extended single-take sequence of a home birth gone wrong depicted with startling momentum and gets more intense. Kirby won the prize for best actress when the film premiered at the Venice Film Festival, and the cast also includes Ellen Burstyn, Shia LaBeouf, Molly Parker and Sarah Snook. The film is streaming on Netflix.

If Burstyn were to be nominated for an Oscar, at 88 years old, she would become the oldest actor ever nominated by eight days. I really want that, I must say, she told Gary Goldstein for The Times. I think thats a badge of something. Of longevity, certainly!

Reviewing the film for The Times, Justin Chang wrote about the supporting characters orbiting Kirby. Arrestingly showy though they can be, these performances never threaten to eclipse or overwhelm Kirbys concentration. While this remarkable actor can unleash hell with the best of them, her most eloquent gestures here are her quietest, whether shes staring distractedly into the middle distance or deflecting her moms affectionate gesture, as if it were a slap in the face. Kirbys authority is commanding, even unassailable: At times Martha seems at odds with not only her loved ones but with the very movie shes in, firmly steering it away from the courtroom drama, or even the portrait of a relationships bitter end, that it seems on the verge of becoming. She keeps you off balance right through the dreamlike close, a final scene brave, misguided or both that suggests nothing is ever truly final.

In a review for rogerebert.com, Monica Castillo wrote, Kirby has to navigate her character through every parents waking nightmare, which she does impressively. As Martha, Kirby shifts from catatonic to chaotic, becoming just as destructive as her partner without feeling like a clich. Shes angry at Sean, her co-workers, her family especially her mom, Elizabeth (Ellen Burstyn), who talks about her loss as if it were a personal failure and chides Martha for not actively pressing charges against the midwife. Its a tension that leads to the best scene of the movie, a showdown between mother and daughter, both grieving and each with entirely different ideas on how to move forward. Its a moment so electric, it makes the marital drama feel like window dressing.

For Vanity Fair, Katie Rich wrote, Pieces of a Woman tends to tell instead of show, with Elizabeth admitting to Sean that she never liked him before weve really gotten a grasp on their relationship, or Sean escalating a fight into name-calling that feels out of character. It makes the excruciating childbirth sequence stand out all the more, as Benjamin Loebs camera swoops past Parkers worried eyes, LaBeoufs tightly coiled body language, or Kirbys throat letting out the guttural moans of a woman who thinks the labor is going to be the most painful part. That long, beautiful, heartbreaking scene finds bracing cinematic language for a process that is so often euphemized until the tragic conclusion, it is a remarkably realistic childbirth for a narrative film, in all its gross wonder. It is a relief when the scene ends, but also a bit of a shame, watching that lightning bolt recede into a more modest flicker.

Vanessa Kirby as Martha in Pieces of a Woman.

(Benjamin Loeb / Netflix)

Directed by Phyllida Lloyd from a screenplay by Malcolm Campbell and Clare Dunne, Herself tells the story of a woman (Dunne) in Dublin trying to rebuild her life for her and her daughters after leaving an abusive husband. Having premiered at last years Sundance Film Festival, it is streaming on Amazon Prime Video.

For The Times, Robert Abele wrote, Lloyd, directing her first film since telling a most opposite tale in The Iron Lady that of a powerful woman (Meryl Streeps Oscar-winning Margaret Thatcher) on the wane is very much in sync with the plucky empowerment saga Dunne wants to tell and embody. (Its collaborative synchronicity born from the pairs work together in theater.) Yet that silver-lining nature is also what keeps Herself from entirely distinguishing itself, too often leaving an admittedly powerful story about female fortitude to rely on schematics and clichs instead of the accumulated impact of its many well-played human details.

For the Washington Post, Ann Hornaday wrote, A colorful cast of friends and friends-of-friends helps to make Herself not just a celebration of one womans determination, but of community a portrait that feels like a lets-put-on-a-show fantasy grounded in the social principles of Ken Loach. Its a not always a convincing combination but, in Dunnes capable hands, its a fetching and absorbing one.

Clare Dunne, from left, Ruby Rose OHara and Molly McCann in the movie Herself.

(Pat Redmond / Amazon Studios)

Directed by Bryan Fogel, The Dissident is a documentary on Jamal Khashoggi, the Saudi Arabian journalist who was murdered in Turkey in 2018. Featuring interviews with Khashoggis fiance, Hatice Cengiz, and others, the film is something of a real-life international espionage thriller. The movie is available on video on demand.

Stuart Miller wrote about the movie for The Times, talking to Fogel about the path that took him from his Academy Award-winning debut documentary Icarus to this new film. The filmmaker said, Winning the Oscar, I felt an obligation to make more stories that would have an impact on society.

In a review for The Times, Robert Abele wrote, Some of Fogels techniques speak more to the slick state of advocacy docs these days than to what would most effectively tell the story, from the overworked score and editing to some regrettable computer animation that briefly feels like one has entered a video game simulation. Tyranny and its effects are no video game, but The Dissident overall retains the impact of its alarming narrative, never more so than when were reminded of how much support President Trump gave MBS despite his own intelligence agencies conclusion that the crown prince ordered the hit on Khashoggi. One can only hope the future wont see a preference for arms deals over principles of human decency.

Reviewing the movie for the New York Times, Devika Girish wrote, All of this material is so chilling and effective on its own that the movies emphatic music and computer-generated graphics which include a Twitter battle pictured as a showdown between 3-D flies and bees can feel like overkill. But these flourishes serve the films ultimate objective: to impress acutely upon us the injustice of a world where money and geopolitics supersede human rights.

Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, left, and journalist Jamal Khashoggi in the documentary The Dissident.

(Briarcliff Entertainment)

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Indie Focus: Grief and resilience in 'Pieces of a Woman' - Los Angeles Times

New Year, New Noise: 2021 predictions | UNLIMITED | Open Mic – The Drum

The 2021 predictions to back are the ones grounded in genuine

human understanding

The beginning of every year always sees a wave of inspirational trends look ahead pieces. The full-on bombardment of thinking often makes it hard to tell which are grounded in fact, which are just blue-sky thinking and who really is on the money.

There is an even greater onslaught of this will happen thinking out there than normal, partly since so many of last years forecasts went out of the window at the start of March. Also, arguably, no year in history has been more eagerly anticipated than 2021, with consumers battling conflicting emotions:

The hope that it will be better than 2020 and a collective determination to make it so

A nagging concern that it will be just as bad as last year

This makes it only natural for marketers to look even more closely than usual at the body of published trends work: which trends to believe and, more crucially, which to pin their companys 2021 on? Of course, it doesnt help when the various POVs are awash with contradictions and vested interests, or when there are so many.

Thats why weve done the hard work for marketers, ploughing our way through 30+ of the 2021 lookaheads in the public domain. Weve added our own expertise, backed by leading edge research, and run the ideas past our gold-standard teams specialising in comms, marketing and digital.

Based on all of that, here is our pick of 10 trends. Five in the consumer space and five in the marketing space to focus on.

5 Consumer trends to focus on

1. A changing relationship with physical spaces, town centres and a heightened focus on the local.

25% of UK urbanites want to move out of the metropolitan areas where they currently live

2. Sustainability: a green (re)awakening the end of more, moving away from big lifestyles, contentment with less, reducing waste.

72% of global consumers said companies behaving sustainably was more important to them because of COVID-19

3. A new fluidity. Weve lost many of the rituals that used to signpost our lives resulting in a sense of collective displacement. We may have replaced them with digital equivalents but over the coming year(s) well see a more proactive emergence of new models and rules.

Microsoft Japans experiment with a four-day workweek earlier this year resulted in a 40% in worker productivity.

4. In 2021, well see the emergence of a newly resilient consumer, taking control of their lives, balancing forward planning with an ability to roll with the punches, and innovating their own solutions.

Studies show that consumers are significantly more likely to try new brands when they go through a major life event.

5. Kindness culture and a return to we as the new-found appreciation of others will manifest itself in a greater focus on community, helpfulness, kindness, support, and empathy.

39% of those living with friends/roommates are concerned about their mental wellbeing.

5 Marketing trends to focus on

1. Organising for agility and flex. With the economy more unpredictable than ever, and with companies having all of last years pivoting stories fresh in their minds, organisations will be trying to be disruption-ready, setting themselves up in such a way that they can rapidly alter course to take account of any new wind direction.

82% said when brands pivoted to offer new, more relevant products or services it increased their desire to do more business with them.

2. Taking customer experience to the max. The rise of DTC will continue. Brands will shift the bar ever higher on service. The emphasis in delivery will shift from last mile to last few feet as organisations realise that product handovers represent something too important to trust to time pressured and disinterested couriers.

62% of marketers agreed that they actively consider the impact of packaging and delivery on customer experience.

3. 2021 will see brand purpose get real as consumers demand brands walk the walk as well as talking the talk with firm brand promises or pledges and acts not mere words.

60% of millennials & Gen Z say they plan on buying more from large businesses that have taken care of their workforces and positively affected society during the pandemic

4. The holy grail of distinctiveness: COVID was such a powerful disruptor that it encouraged convergence of product offerings and marketing message channel choice content, tone, and execution. 2021 will see brands making concerted efforts to refind themselves and re-express their uniqueness though such high-risk strategies are bound to create both winners and losers.

64% of marketers agree that advertising suffered from a lack of distinctiveness during quarantine, and there is a danger that this will persist

5. E-commerce innovation will surge. 2021 will see innovation in what online retail looks and feels like well see shoppable social surge ahead, purchasing via livestreaming take off, and efforts to make the online shopping process look and feel more like being in store, start to bear fruit.

In China, a Tommy Hilfiger livestream event attracted 14 million viewers and sold out of 1,300 hoodies in two minutes

Focus on Human Understanding signals, not noise

With so much noise out there, the brands that thrive in 2021 will be the ones that can correctly pick out the ones that fit a consumer truth and offer real longevity.

Link:
New Year, New Noise: 2021 predictions | UNLIMITED | Open Mic - The Drum

Dont miss these breakout sessions at TC Sessions: Space 2020 – TechCrunch

Ready to blast off and join thousands of attendees around the world atTC Sessions: Space 2020 on December 16-17? The event, focused on space technology and dedicated to helping early-stage startups succeed in this exciting yet daunting industry, features panel discussions and interviews with the top leaders, visionaries and makers on the planet.

Want to save $50? Buy your pass before Tuesday, December 15 at 11:59 p.m. (PT) to lock in the Late Registration price before rates increase.

While youll find many of these brilliant experts speaking from the Main Stage, dont miss the focused programming we have lined up for the Breakout Sessions. Thats where youll find our partners sharing their in-depth expertise on a range of topics. Check out these breakouts waiting to drop a galaxys worth of knowledge on you.

(all times in PST)

9:00 10:00 a.m.

Fast Money SMC Space Ventures, AFWERX and Space Force Accelerators

Learn how SMC Space Ventures, AFWERX and Space Force Accelerators work together to connect startups to government organizations and resources in the space industry.

10:00 11:00 a.m.Sponsored bySP8CEVC

Introducing the launch of the Worlds First Space Technology and Human Longevity focused Rolling Fund in partnership with AngelList

Fireside chat with the general partners and team from SP8CEVC covering the verticals of Space Technology and Human Longevity.

11:00 11:30 a.m.

Fast Money Working with the Army to Operationalize Science for Transformational Overmatch

Learn about DEVCOM Army Research Laboratory and the xTech Program of prize competitions that accelerate innovative solutions that can help solve Army challenges.

11:30 12:30 p.m.

Pitch Feedback Session

Join us for a pitch feedback session open to all startups exhibiting at TC Sessions: Space 2020 moderated by TechCrunch staff.

1:00 1:50 p.m.Sponsored byThe Aerospace Corporation

University Showcase Boldly Innovating in Space, for Space (Part One)

Technologies to Go Boldly in Space For the past half century, space exploration and technology has been earth-centric. Weve studied the earth, orbited the earth and sent images of distant places back to earth. In the coming decade, well embark on a new commitment: Were going to space to stay. Were committing to space commerce, space habitation and space exploration in order to not just stay in space, but to extend our human footprint into this solar system. To be successful, we need bold people and new technology to build and deploy the next generation of space capabilities. We need to capture these space opportunities, avoid potential threats and deliver on the promise of a multi-planet human race. This session showcases our partners USC and MIT, as they provide insight into their space programs. They are joined by university partners UCLA, ASU and Caltech, showcasing a range of emerging space technologies. Working with the Aerospace Corporation, these emerging capabilities can be evaluated and integrated into government space-faring missions for communicating, navigating and exploring in space with NASA, NOAA and the Air Force.

9:00 9:30 a.m.

Cislunar Space: Building a Self-Sustaining Lunar Economy

We are standing on the threshold of a post-scarcity human future. Cislunar space, the area between the Earth and the moon, holds the keys to a tremendous wealth of opportunities.

9:30 10:00 a.m.

Fast Money Advancing Space Technology with NASA SBIR

Learn about the Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) and the Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) programs powered by NASA.

10:00 10:30 a.m.

Fast Money NAVWAR SBIR/STTR Primer: The SBIR/STTR is a robust program designed to help small businesses address government needs while promoting commercialization. This session is dedicated to providing a primer on the program with tips on getting involved and getting engaged with the Naval Information Warfare Systems Command (NAVWAR).

10:30 11:00 a.m.

Fast Money Introduction to In-Q-Tels investing activities in the commercial space sector: In-Q-Tel is a strategic investment firm that works with the national security community of the United States. For 20 years, In-Q-Tel has served one mission: to deliver the most sophisticated strategic technical knowledge and capabilities to the U.S. government and its allies through its unique investment model. Over the past decade, In-Q-Tel has been one of the most active investors in the commercial space sector, with a broad investment thesis that touches many aspects of the sector. This session will provide an overview of In-Q-Tel as a whole, as well as a discussion of the firms activities in the commercial space sector.

11:00 11:30 a.m.

Fast Money Enabling a dual-use business model with Defense Innovation Unit (DIU)

Learn how you can take a part of DIUs development of on-demand access to space, persistent satellite capabilities and broadband space data transfer

11:30 12:30 p.m.

Starburst x TechCrunch Pitch Me to the Moon: Starburst Aerospace and TechCrunch are teaming up to launch a pitch competition like no other Pitch Me to the Moon. Think Startup Battlefield, but for space. Ten promising early-stage space startups (selected by Starburst) will have an opportunity to present their innovations live to a panel of high-profile judges from across the industry.

1:00 1:50 p.m.Sponsored byThe Aerospace Corporation

University Showcase Boldly Innovating in Space, for Space (Part Two)

Bold Missions For the past half century, space exploration and technology has been earth-centric. Weve studied the earth, orbited the earth and sent images of distant places back to earth. In the coming decade, well embark on a new commitment: Were going to space to stay. Were committing to space commerce, space habitation and space exploration in order to not just stay in space, but to extend our human footprint into this solar system. To be successful, we need bold people and new technology to build and deploy the next generation of space capabilities. We need to capture these space opportunities, avoid potential threats and deliver on the promise of a multi-planet human race. This session showcases our partners USC and MIT, as they provide insight into their space programs. They are joined by university partners UCLA, ASU and Caltech, showcasing a range of emerging space technologies. Working with the Aerospace Corporation, these emerging capabilities can be evaluated and integrated into government space-faring missions for communicating, navigating, and exploring in space with NASA, NOAA and the Air Force.

Whew, talk about a great lineup. You might say its out-of-this-world which raises the question: Can you hear a rimshot in space? Dont forget to peruse the rest of our programming in the event agendaand start planning your schedule now.

Pro Tip: Say goodbye to FOMO. Our virtual platform makes it easy to toggle between the Main Stage and Breakout Sessions. Plus, youll have access to video on demand, so you wont miss a beat (excluding the Expo Ticket).

Remember, late registration savings end on Tuesday, December 15 at11:59 p.m. (PT). We also offer discount passes for groups, students and government, military and nonprofit employees. Buy the pass thats right for you today!

Is your company interested in sponsoring TC Sessions: Space 2020?Click hereto talk with us about available opportunities.

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Dont miss these breakout sessions at TC Sessions: Space 2020 - TechCrunch

Five macro trends set to shape the next decade – Gulf Business

The coronavirus pandemic has been a tremendous accelerator of the secular trends we predicted back in December 2019. One thing is clear 2020 marks the end of the neoliberal era, exemplified by extreme monetarism and austerity. In advanced economies, the coming decade will be about fiscal dominance and unprecedented policy intervention in the real economy and financial markets, blurring traditional market signals and thereby reinforcing the importance of a robust strategic asset allocation based on established macro economic trends.

Bipolar Sino-US World The divide between the US and China continues to grow. While trade issues seem to have been put on the backburner, there are continued hostilities between the two countries on other fronts. The most notable subject is the coronavirus, as China is being blamed for the pandemic getting out of hand. With Joe Biden in the White House as of January 20, Democrats might tackle the conflict in a more diplomatic manner and give a greater importance to human rights issues, but the overall hawkish strategy should remain unchanged, if not strengthened.

As China ploughs ahead with the aim of restoring the nation to its previous glory, this 21st century cold war over economic, technological, and military supremacy will usher in a new dual world order, with separate economic and financial cycles and technological ecosystems. In this context, the benefits of international diversification are revived after having been significantly undermined by globalisation, giving investors reason to own both US and Chinese assets in their portfolios.

The emergence of a bipolar Sino-US world and the rise of China are of special interest to investors from the Gulf region in a world with declining interest rates and scarce growth, it is more important than ever to have exposure to regions and sectors which can still deliver positive real returns. China, and Asia more generally, is a hub of growth and innovation, with ever-growing and deepening financial markets, and is set to become the largest global economy this decade.

Unorthodox macroeconomic policies With the end of the neoliberal era comes the inevitable end of the policy toolbox dominated by monetary instruments. This policy template, which was in fact designed to solve problems that predated this period of extreme globalisation and financialisation, is dead, and the coronavirus crisis has buried it.There are four major aspects to the new policy landscape. First, with the credit channel out of commission, there will be much more emphasis on fiscal stimulus. As long as developed economies are subject to structural demand deficits and the private sector is unable to sustain growth on its own, the public sector must intervene and spend the savings glut accumulated by households and corporates.

Second, in line with Modern Monetary Theory, central banks will cooperate much more closely with governments to finance (i.e. monetise) the accumulated deficits from these fiscal interventions. Higher debt-to-GDP ratios will be more widely accepted, and the fear of resulting runaway inflation should diminish as deflationary pressures are acknowledged as being much stronger.

Third, stimulus will be implemented more directly. With the merger of the fiscal and monetary arms, central banks could deliver funds directly to households, a tool that could be further supported by the introduction of central bank e-currencies. Policy will thus become more efficient, as it could easily reach all sections of the population, including the most modest households with the highest propensity to consume. In that way, authorities could tackle the income inequality problem as well. We expect that governments will move to reduce inequalities through tools like symmetric taxation (eg. negative taxes for lower-income households, which is a much better option than universal income for all).

Lastly, the unconventional monetary policies that emerged following the 2008 financial crisis will remain, as the main objective of developed-market central banks has by now become financial stability. In fact, it has already been at least a decade since monetary authorities have been practising asset price targeting, that is, supplying liquidity when necessary in order to avoid a negative wealth shock that could in turn derail the real economy. Eventually, these policies should reflate the economy, which is when they would really be put to the test. We are not at that stage yet. We believe, in any case, that the conditions for hyperinflation in developed countries are not even close to being met.

Energy abundance World energy markets and related industries are undergoing profound structural changes. The dependence on fossil fuels, the past decades high prices, climate change, and environmental pollution are only some of the many challenges that have spurred investments and nourished innovation. We believe that we are in the midst of a transition, where new technologies satisfy our growing energy needs without further depleting fossil resources.

The transition to renewables is accelerating thanks to affordability, scalability, and access to infinite resources. Electric cars, air conditioning, and heat pumps mark the next phase of electrification, underpinning the energy carriers future dominance.

Traditional utilities are losing their customer base, as clean energy and new business models are breaking market barriers. From power trading to infrastructure finance, new players are altering the playing field.Meanwhile, the Covid crisis is accelerating the competitive dynamics in the oil business. Private oil companies have to venture to other areas, such as clean energy, to deliver growth and satisfy investors. Yet providing oil will still offer the opportunity to produce valuable cash flows for years to come. Ultimately, this is a shift from resources to technology and from producers to users, bearing broader geopolitical impact and raising the risks of related tremors.

The major transition currently experienced by energy markets is of particular importance to GCC investors. Investors heavily-tilted towards oil companies will need to internalise these structural shifts and turn their attention to renewables and companies that embrace these changes.

Stakeholder economy The benefits of extreme financialisation and globalisation have not been equally distributed across all social and economic groups. Worker compensation has lagged, while corporate profit margins in the developed world have soared, increasing both wealth and income inequality to levels not seen since the 1930s.Meanwhile, climate change and social equality issues have taken centrestage, especially in the eyes of younger generations. These pressure points are pushing the corporate sector to rethink their role in society. Increasingly, corporates are expected to assume ownership of their entire value chain and take active measures to promote sustainability and social responsibility, going beyond the satisfaction of regulatory rules and codes of ethics. This constitutes a major pivot point and a complete rejection of the shareholder-focused model.

Life science disruptions Healthcare areas that are related to digital health, genomics, and extended longevity should see further upside potential over the longer term, given political tailwinds, momentous demographic shifts around the world, the emergence of chronic diseases associated with ageing, and ever-rising medical costs.The Covid-19 pandemic may very well be a watershed moment for the healthcare industry, as it has certainly laid bare the weakness of the entire healthcare value chain. At the same time, the pandemic has given greater impetus to strengthen our resilience for present and future health threats, through greater adoption of digital health technologies and other innovative solutions.

Yves Bonzon is the group chief investment officer at Julius Baer

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Five macro trends set to shape the next decade - Gulf Business

Global Stoma/Ostomy Care Market Trajectory & Analytics Report 2020: Focus on Stoma Quality of Life Paves Way for Increased Spending on…

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The "Stoma/Ostomy Care - Global Market Trajectory & Analytics" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

Focus on Stoma Quality of Life Paves Way for Increased Spending on Stoma/Ostomy Care Products. Market to Reach $3.8 Billion

The global market for Stoma/Ostomy Care is projected to reach US$3.8 billion by the year 2027, trailing a post COVID-19 CAGR of 4.2% over the analysis period 2020 through 2027.

The growth will be driven by rapidly aging population increase in the number of operative procedures involving creation of intestinal stoma and the resulting focus shed on stoma quality of life. World's population is rapidly aging supported by the increase in longevity as modern medicine becomes increasingly effective in preventing chronic disease, and reducing mortality. Also, easy access to age-friendly primary healthcare and growing sophistication of healthcare infrastructure play key roles in longevity.

For the first time in human history the percentage of older people in the total population is continuing to increase. In addition to the aforementioned increase in life expectancy, falling fertility rates are accelerating the trend. The aging population creates massive challenges for the healthcare system since it means larger chronic disease burden.

Among the many diseases of the elderly such as dementia; arthritis; blindness; chronic bronchitis; motor neurone diseases; osteoporosis; Parkinson's disease; stroke; CKD; and Alzheimer's, incontinence and bowel obstruction caused by colorectal cancer and other diseases that require surgical removal parts of the rectum, anus and colon requires the highest nurse care and self-care management needs. Colorectal cancer is the leading cause for creation of stomas/ostomy accounting for 45.6% of the prevalence rate. Juxtaposed with this fact, the high prevalence of colorectal cancer, over 60% of the incidence rate, among the elderly aged over 70+ makes aging population a powerful demographic growth driver for stoma/ostomy care products.

Colostomy is the most popular type of procedure performed on 45.2% of ostomy patients in the 60+ age group, while Ileostomy is the second most common procedure performed on people aged over 60 with over 38.7% of ostomy patients in the 60+ age group having Ileostomy. Urostomy is performed on 16.1% of ostomy patients in the 60+ age group. The ostomy market also benefits from the increasing survival rates from colorectal and bladder cancer. Mortality rate from these cancers has improved considerably during the past decades, both for women and for men. Resultantly, the increasing life expectancy of people bodes well for the ostomy care products market, considering the chronic nature of the conditions and the increasing need to use ostomy products. The annual ostomy product costs per patient are estimated in the range of US$1,000 to US$1,200 on an on average globally.

Prices of ostomy products remain stable due to fixed reimbursement levels. Caring for stoma is extremely important given the high risk and financial burden of complications following ostomy surgery. Lack of proper ostomy care is the leading cause for hospital readmission rates and ER visits in the United States second to kidney transplants. Over the years, rising awareness and improving standards of ostomy care have helped drive the market for stoma/ostomy care products.

The field of stoma care is also evolving and improving with stoma care emerging into a unique field in nursing. Popularity and easy availability of specially qualified stoma care nurses; development of best practice guidelines; easy access to new clinical insights and tools are all helping to deliver the best possible care for stoma patients.

Among the noteworthy trends in the global market for ostomy bags has been the increasing tender based and bulk purchases of the bags by large hospitals and healthcare facilities with huge number of inpatients on whom ostomies have been performed and also patients with fresh stomas. In order to maintain uninterrupted supply of these bags for better ostomy care for inpatients, healthcare facilities have been following the tender-based procurement of the bags.

Key Topics Covered:

I. INTRODUCTION, METHODOLOGY & REPORT SCOPE

II. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

1. MARKET OVERVIEW

2. FOCUS ON SELECT PLAYERS

3. MARKET TRENDS & DRIVERS

4. GLOBAL MARKET PERSPECTIVE

III. MARKET ANALYSIS

IV. COMPETITION

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/4d7qea

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Global Stoma/Ostomy Care Market Trajectory & Analytics Report 2020: Focus on Stoma Quality of Life Paves Way for Increased Spending on...

6 Longevity-Promoting Herbs and Spices To Add to Your Cooking Rotation – Well+Good

The term longevity refers to the number of years you live, and it does have a limit. Our bodies are not designed to live to 120 years, although many of us would like to live that long if we had quality of life for that long, says Gary W. Small, MD, the physician in chief for behavioral health at Hackensack Meridian Health in New Jersey and the former director of the UCLA Longevity Center.

In reality, the normal (and inevitable) processes of oxidative stress and inflammation are thought to contribute to our gradual decline in health as we get older. That doesnt mean were helpless when it comes to our health. In fact, the foods we eat every day play a major role in healthy aging and longevityand a few herbs and spices may be especially helpful.

Inflammation is a natural part of the immune response to fight infection and repair damage from injuries. Excess inflammationis associated with chronic diseases including cardiovascular disease, cancer, diabetes, kidney disease, and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. We know that heightened inflammation and oxidative stress contribute to age-related diseases, says Dr. Small. If you look at a lot of studies and blood markers of inflammation, we find that age itself is often associated with heightened inflammation. Lifestyle habits, including poor diet, lack of exercise, stress, and a shortage of quality sleep play an important role in accelerating inflammation, he adds.

Thats where plant-based foods can come in. Plants naturally have anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties, which Dr. Small says may play some role in healthy aging and longevity. This may slow down the process of aging as well as support the immune system and protect against chronic conditions that are more common with age, explains Rachelle Robinette, a clinical herbalist and holistic health practitioner (and host of Well+Goods YouTube show, Plant Based). While we dont know for sure exactly how many antioxidants we need to consume for these effects, studies show that people who consume these kinds of foods live longer and better, says Dr. Small.

That doesnt prove that consuming any one particular food or supplement will have enough of an effect on your inflammation levels to actually have an impact on disease, Dr. Small adds. Were always looking for a quick fix or magic bulletEveryone wants a remedy, but none can even work well if diet and lifestyle are not in place, adds Robinette. In terms of longevity, diet and lifestyle are going to matter more than any herb or supplement. Herbs work wonderfully as medicine, but they really are supplemental.

Caveats aside, some foods really do boast more concentrated levels of disease- and age-fighting compounds than othersand that certainly cant hurt in moderation when you integrate them into your cooking routine. Whats great about spices is it makes your diet more palatable, you want a diet thats nutritious but delicious, says Dr. Small. (Just remember: You should always talk to your doctor before starting any new supplement; some can be toxic at higher doses, especially if youre taking certain prescription medications.)

Ginger is the epitome of food medicine, as Robinette calls it. The compound gingerol in ginger is the source of most of the plants many benefits; it has powerful anti-inflammatory and antioxidant effects and may have anti-cancer properties. (Which, hello longevity!) The Mayo Clinic is currently investigating whether eating 2,000 mg of ginger a day for six weeks can boost the microbiome, aka the collection of bacteria, fungi, and viruses that make up a large part of the human body. That would be a big deal, Robinette explains, since your microbiome affects your overall health, including your brain, mood, and immune system.

Robinette recommends having ginger a few times a week as a fresh extract, grated into food, added to stir-fries, or sliced in a hot cup of tea. You can also try Robinettes recipe for ginger shotswhich may be especially helpful during cold and flu season. I do several shots per day in winter, she says.

Heres the step-by-step for making Robeinettes ginger shot to reap the benefits of the plant:

You cant talk about herbs for longevity without talking about turmeric. Another powerful antioxidant and anti-inflammatory spice, turmeric is where curry gets its flavorand the antioxidant compound curcumin. In 2018, Dr. Small authored a small double-blind studyshowing that taking two 90 mg curcumin supplements daily for 18 months improved memory and attention in older adults with mild memory problems. We did find it has a significant effectcompared to placebo, says Dr. Small, who is currently expanding the research to a much larger sample size across the U.S. While hes not sure exactly how curcumin works to boost brain health, my best guess is its the reduction in inflammation, he says.

Robinette points out that turmeric has been called a natural immunomodulator, or a substance that helps keep the immune system in check by boosting immunity when you need it and tamping it down to prevent excess inflammation involved in many chronic conditions. Some research suggests that turmeric could potentially even play a role in preventing and treating cancer, cardiovascular disease, metabolic conditions, neurological disease, and skin diseases.

Although it certainly doesnt hurt to enjoy more foods with turmeric, youll need to pop a curcumin supplement to get the full health benefits of the spice. For therapeutic purposes, you want to take higher doses, says Robinette. Try to take the supplement when you eat your meals, preferably with fat (like fatty fish or nuts) to increase the bioavailability of curcumin. (Just check with your doctor before you start supplementing to ensure it doesnt interact with any health conditions you have or medications you take.)

Heres even more intel on all the benefits of turmeric:

Spirulina is a type of cyanobacteria (or algae) thats grown in water and sold as tablets or in powder form. It contains a high amount of protein for a plant. And with loads of vitamins, including iron, potassium, zinc, calcium, and B vitamins, its almost identical, nutritionally, to mothers milk, Robinette adds.

Given that following a plant-forward diet is key to healthy aging, Robinette says supplementing with spirulina can be beneficial for healthy aging. Nobody eats enough plants. Supplementing with something thats really concentrated like spirulina is acheat way to get more greens. Just be sure to check your spirulina comes from a clean water source. Aim for a teaspoon per day, says Robinette; since spirulina has a seaweed-esque flavor, she suggests tossing it into pesto or any savory recipe with greens, like salad dressings, soups, or dips.

Jalapenos, cayenne, and other types of peppers contain capsaicin, a chemical compound that makes food spicy and has antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties. Dr. Small points to a 2015 observational study of nearly half a million people in China, which concluded that people who ate more spicy foods were less likely to die of all causesand specifically of cancer, heart disease, and respiratory diseasesthan people who didnt or rarely ate these foods. The authors concluded the effect may be due to capsaicin.

How often should you hit the hot sauce? The Chinese researchers found that the benefits of capsaicin were cumulative; people who ate spicy foods six or seven times per week were least likely to die of any cause. But eating spicy meals even a couple of times a week seemed to have some benefit.

There are only a couple dozen plant adaptogens, including ginseng, that help increase the bodys resilience to stressors of all kinds. While you might associate ginseng with Traditional Chinese Medicine, its one of the oldest medicinal herbs used all over the world to support human health, Robinette says.

Robinson explains that adaptogens like ginseng micro-trigger the body, so it gets stronger over time to physical, emotional, and environmental stressors (like light and sounds). Its not impervious to stress, but youre better able to recover and not overreact, she says. Its helping move you between the sympathetic and parasympathetic states with more ease. Many of us are dealing with some level of stress these days, which can, over time, suppress the immune system and even shorten your lifespan by contributing to inflammation in the gut and disrupting sleep. Chronic stress is counterproductive for longevity in many ways, says Robinette.

Like most herbs, ginseng has antioxidant anti-inflammatory properties, says Robinette. A wealth of research suggests ginseng may have immunomodulatory and anti-cancer properties, and that it may even help control blood sugar in people with diabetes and improve learning and memory. Unlike most of the other herbs and spices on this list, you really need to take ginseng every day for an extended period of time to see benefits, says Robinette. You can enjoy it in any form, including tea, powder, capsule, and tincturejust be sure to talk to your doctor first, as ginseng can interact with some drugs (like warfarin and insulin).

The powerful phytochemicals, or plant antioxidants, in blueberries helps clean up free radicals, fighting the effects of inflammation that can in turn impact your health and longetivity. There are studies showing antioxidant foods like blueberries or pomegranatesshow moderate effects [on oxidative stress], though not as consistent or as big of an effect as we saw with curcumin, says Dr. Small. While were waiting to support this science, it certainly makes sense to try to consume colorful fresh fruits and veggies.

Wild blueberries, in particular, tend to be highest in gut-boosting fiber and antioxidants, says Robinette: They have more skin than grocery store blueberries (which are still good for you but bred to be sweet). Eat them fresh, sprinkle blueberry powder into your smoothies and cereal, or spread blueberry (or any other superfruit) paste onto toast like thick jam.

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6 Longevity-Promoting Herbs and Spices To Add to Your Cooking Rotation - Well+Good

Scientists should be allowed to cure ageing – The National

Life expectancy has come to be the gold standard in assessing the health of a population, especially during Covid-19, where the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention and others advised the elderly to "shield" for months in isolation. Health services across the industrialised world have kept their citizens alive for longer, often adding more than a decade of life over the last two generations.

But as lifespan the total number of years someone will be alive has increased exponentially, healthspan the part of a persons life when they are in good health has largely stayed the same. This creates a huge crisis a demographic, economic and, above all, a humanitarian one. And it doesnt have to be this way.

A Chinese winter swimming enthusiast swims in a cold Houhai lake in Beijing, China, December 3. Winter swimming is popular among middle-aged and elderly citizens as they believe it can keep them in excellent health. EPA

Unhealthy ageing is a human tragedy. If governments and health authorities can focus on healthspans, not just lifespans, longevity technology can remedy it. Looking and feeling younger for longer is not the preserve of beauty brands or Silicon Valley billionaires. The science is real. It just needs investment, a favourable regulatory environment and health policies that are as focused on allowing people to live as much, rather than just keeping them alive.

The quality of life is just as, if not more important, than the length of life

The adverse health effects of ageing, just like high cholesterol or high blood pressure, is a risk factor for a variety of diseases. This means ageing should be treated the same way as any other risk factor that is, something to be treated and reduced. Health policy, however, has not always caught up with the science. Ageing is not an inevitable part of life that must be accepted. It is a technical problem that can and should be overcome.

It is no mystery that some individuals age better (healthier) than others. Now we know why: In 2006, the stem cell researcher Shinya Yamanaka identified four key proteins that seemed to turn the clock back on the ageing of cells, otherwise known as the "Yamanaka factors". This discovery was so profound that it led him to win the Nobel Prize. It has been hailed by some as the most important advancement since Francis Cricks discovery of the Double Helix.

But those discoveries havent always found their way into health policy. "Bio-conservatives" have resisted the notion of dramatically tampering with the ageing process, with some describing it as nothing more than billionaires' bid to buy their way out lifes only certainty: death.

Palestinian grandmother Jihad Butto, 85, celebrates obtaining a bachelor's degree in religious studies with her family at her home in Nazareth, Israel, on October 9. Reuters

Azra draws henna on her grandmothers hands in Dubai. Azra Khamissa is a Dubai based Canadian/South-African chiropractor, fashion designer, and henna artist, on August 1, 2019. Reem Mohammed / The National

This misses the point. Every new medical discovery is seen by some as "playing God", until the meaning of playing God becomes simply "being an effective Doctor". No one is saying that we should aim to live forever. And we can all agree that human life is sacred and should be preserved. But the quality of life is just as, if not more important, than the length of life.

This is something medics, investors, policymakers and the public should support because poorly managed ageing is a huge drain on global healthcare systems and economies. According to the World Health Organisation, the number of people aged 65 or older is projected to grow from more than 524 million in 2010 to nearly 1.5 billion in 2050.

If those people are economically inactive and hugely dependent on a constant stream of expensive medical procedures, economies will collapse. That strain is already huge. According to a report in the US by the Congressional Budget Office, the US Federal government spent 40 per cent of its budget, a total of $1.5 trillion, on elderly care in 2018. The same report predicts that by 2029, over half of Federal healthcare spend, approximately $3bn, will be spent on elderly care.

When populations grow older and the age of a society becomes an inverted pyramid, older people become increasingly dependent on a shrinking working-age population. That means higher spending and taxes for the young, which disincentivises them from working. The downward spiral caused by the symptoms of ageing is something that must be avoided at all costs.

Elderly people pose in clothes they have made themselves in front of a town hall in Hongseong, South Korea, November 24. EPA

Beyond the demographic and economic statistics lies human tragedy. Ageing and its associated diseases force children to watch their parents and grandparents slowly lose their independence. People who have worked their entire lives are robbed of the opportunity to enjoy their hard-earned retirement or to keep working. A couple can be robbed of their relationship if one of them is lucky enough to have the "good ageing gene" and the other isnt.

Regulators, healthcare providers and investors must work today to close the gap between healthspan and lifespan. While the average human lifespan has increased from 47 to 73 in seven decades, the gap between healthspan and lifespan is growing. It is predicted that the average global healthspan-lifespan gap is approximately nine years. Living for more than 10 per cent of our lives in relative suffering should be consigned to the past.

Health, as the WHO defines it, is a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being, and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity. This definition should serve as a north star. Regulatory bodies like the FDA should create an accommodating environment for anti-ageing patents, including gene therapies, to be developed and licensed.

Similarly, healthcare providers should also look to partner with private longevity providers to get the leading products onto market if we are to have a fighting chance at closing the healthspan-lifespan disparity.

This thinking is already there: The UKs National Institute for Clinical Excellence decides which medicines to fund based on how many "quality life years" they will create.

It is time to set the bar for quality of life much higher, based on the best science available.

Published: December 23rd 2021, 4:00 AM

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Scientists should be allowed to cure ageing - The National

First AMR Preparedness Index finds UK, US top charts amid first world failures to address antimicrobial resistance threat – Homeland Preparedness News

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A new report from the Global Coalition on Aging (GCOA) and the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA), a first of its kind known as the AMR Preparedness Index, provides an evaluation and roadmap for the 11 largest global economies and their efforts to tackle rising cases of antimicrobial resistance.

While recognition of the threat has risen, according to the organizations, there has been a broad failure to match public promises and actual actions to avert a crisis. The U.K. and the United States have fared best along with Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Italy, Japan, and South Korea. Case studies were presented from Australia, Kenya, Russia, Saudi Arabia, and Sweden as well.

Increasing resistance to life-saving antimicrobials, together with our broken innovation pipeline, threatens to erode the very foundation of modern medicine and, with it, erase one of the principal achievements of the 20th century the miracle of human longevity, Michael Hodin, CEO of the GCOA, said. As the United Nations (UN) and World Health Organization (WHO) Decade of Healthy Ageing brings greater attention and energy to our remarkable demographic achievement and the COVID-19 experience make clear the compounded risk to older adults from infectious disease, we must fully acknowledge the threat that AMR poses to the very prospect of healthy and active aging. Without true action to effectively address AMR, tens of millions of lives both young and old will be cut short, and so many others will be diminished as a result of care foregone over concerns about now untreatable infection.

It is estimated that 700,000 people die each year from drug-resistant infections, and those figures are expected to grow as the problem worsens. Resistance is increasing to existing drugs, increasing the risk of even routine medical care.

If unaddressed, the continued rise of AMR is expected to lead to as many as 10 million deaths per year, disability and lower quality of life for millions more, and $100 trillion in lost GDP by 2050, the organizations said in a statement.

Countries were ranked based on seven categories. The results led the GCOA and IDSA to recommend several means of bolstering government action, as well, including:

The COVID-19 pandemic has made painfully clear to all the far-reaching impact of untreatable infectious diseases across societies and economies, Dr. Barbara Alexander, IDSA president, said. As we enter the next stage of the pandemic and with global momentum for AMR action building among G7 countries in the UK with the launch of the subscription pilot, and most recently, with the reintroduction of the PASTEUR Act in the US Congress the 2021 AMR Preparedness Index comes at a pivotal moment. We are pleased to partner with the Global Coalition on Aging to create this vital tool that will help governments around the world reinforce their words with actions.

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First AMR Preparedness Index finds UK, US top charts amid first world failures to address antimicrobial resistance threat - Homeland Preparedness News

The Link Between Stress & Longevity (And How To Stress Less As You Age) – mindbodygreen.com

First, it's important to note that everyone reacts to stress differently and you can't pigeonhole entire age groups. But generally speaking, research shows that your ability to manage stress isn't staticit waxes and wanes over time.

Part of this is inevitable and biological. Hormonal fluctuations during puberty and perimenopause can make us particularly susceptible to stress during these periods, for example. Past circumstances also play a role. Some people have had to go through more periods of stress and trauma than others, which can affect the way they react to hardship.

But interestingly enough, there is a growing body of research finding that our ability to regulate our emotions seems to improve with age. Take one study out of Stanford University, which included 184 adults of various ages. Starting in 1993, participants were asked to record their emotions (both positive and negative) multiple times over the course of a week once every five years. This data collection lasted 15 years, and the results were published in 2011.

At the end of the study, researchers found that, overall, self-reported emotional well-being increased with age. As participants got older, their outlooks also tended to even out and there was less variability between positive and negative emotions. And finally, those who experienced relatively more positive than negative emotions in everyday life were more likely to have survived over the study period, suggesting a link between emotions and longevity. "The observation that emotional well-being is maintained and in some ways improves across adulthood is among the most surprising findings about human aging to emerge in recent years," the paper reads.

Now, this study didn't focus on how stress, in particular, affects mood over time. But some shorter-term research focused on stress has also found that older adults tend to maintain a positive mood in the face of it than younger ones do.

Lifestyle physician and stress educator Cynthia Ackrill, M.D., suspects that this has to do with the widened viewpoint that age can bring. "You've been through a lot so you have a longer perspective to know that this too shall pass," she tells mbg.

AmyLorek, Ph.D., of the Center for Healthy Aging at Penn State Universityadds that, on average, older adults have accrued more self-awareness with time, giving them a better handle on their personal stressors.

"When we have a better understanding of our lives, we get better at selecting the things that are meaningful and important for us," Lorek says, adding that "older people actively opt out of things that are going to produce stress."

This may be true more generally, but again, Ackrill reminds us that stress is personal. While someone who has always practiced healthy stress management routines might find them strengthened with age, in her work she's seen the opposite to be true too. Someone with poor coping mechanisms might find that they have even more trouble handling stress as they get older. Some relaxing practices like exercise and social interaction can also become more difficult for older folks, especially if they have mobility issues or live alone.

The good news is that stress management is a skill that can always be trainedand it's never too late to practice it.

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The Link Between Stress & Longevity (And How To Stress Less As You Age) - mindbodygreen.com