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		<title>The longevity industry comes of age</title>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 15 Jun 2019 09:22:17 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Anti Aging]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[age]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>Source: theneweconomy.com Legends of a miracle cure for old age have been told for millennia, but the concept flourished around [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.mymedicplus.com/blog/the-longevity-industry-comes-of-age/">The longevity industry comes of age</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.mymedicplus.com/blog">MyMedicPlus</a>.</p>
]]></description>
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<p>Source: theneweconomy.com</p>



<p>Legends
 of a miracle cure for old age have been told for millennia, but the 
concept flourished around the 16th century after rumours spread that 
Spanish explorer Juan Ponce de León was on a quest to find a fountain of
 youth, rumoured to be located in Florida. To this day, tourists flock 
to a stone well in St Augustine in the hope that its sulphur-smelling 
water will smooth the wrinkles on their faces.</p>



<p>For now, death remains a certainty, but it is true that we are living  longer than ever before. Life expectancies have been trending upwards  since the late 19th century and, according to the United Nations,  the global population of those aged 60 and older more than doubled from  1980 to 2017, reaching 962 million. By the end of the century, this  group is poised to hit 3.1 billion. With birth rates tumbling, the  global population is inevitably becoming older. By 2100, a quarter of  the Earth’s residents will be aged 60 or above.</p>



<p>Having an older population is not necessarily a bad thing. Ageing 
only becomes a problem when a person’s quality of life, otherwise known 
as their health span or healthy life years, stagnates. “Sadly, the 
</p>



<p> index does not grow as fast as life expectancy 
does: people live longer, but they are also sick for longer,” Elena 
Milova, a board member and outreach officer at the longevity non-profit 
Life Extension Advocacy Foundation (LEAF), told <em>The New Economy</em>.
</p>



<p><strong>Ageing gracefully</strong><br> Current public health approaches to ageing are ineffective, according to the World Health Organisation’s (WHO) 2015 <em>World Report on Ageing and Health</em>.  The Geneva-based agency explained that, even in high-income countries,  current health systems are not prepared to meet the needs of older  populations. Long-term care models are “inadequate and unsustainable”,  and physical and social environments are filled with barriers that stop  the elderly from participating.</p>



<blockquote class="wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow"><p>Many companies will thrive in ‘hyperageing’ societies by 
targeting older populations with new products and services that extend 
healthy life years</p></blockquote>



<p>These issues must be addressed by supporting healthy ageing,  combating ageism and enabling autonomy in the elderly, the WHO  concluded. Some ways of doing this, detailed in the group’s 2017 action plan on ageing,  include investing in health systems and infrastructure, creating  age-friendly housing and establishing health services that focus on  meeting the multidimensional needs of the elderly.</p>



<p>Assistive technology, or ‘agetech’, is one way that older people can 
gain greater independence. The elderly are able to live 
self-sufficiently for longer with smart devices that automatically 
dispense medication, technologies that monitor cognitive skills and 
networking apps that improve social connectivity.</p>



<p>Agetech can also include financial products and services optimised 
for older users. “Today, most fintech banks are aimed at younger people 
using smartphones,” Dmitry Kaminskiy told <em>The New Economy</em>. 
Kaminskiy is working to build the Global Longevity Consortium, a group 
of companies that provide resources for the longevity industry.</p>



<p>In the next two or three years, Kaminskiy expects big financial 
corporations to show agetech the same level of excitement they had for 
fintech in the mid-2010s. “A lot of venture investors, angel investors 
and big financial institutions will recognise the opportunity of the 
market, and they will start to invest in it,” he said.</p>



<p>Ageing Analytics Agency, which Kaminskiy co-founded as part of his consortium, published a report in 2019  on the proactive steps Singapore has taken to address the problems  caused by its ageing population. In 2015, the city-state launched an  action plan for successful ageing. This included preventative and active  ageing programmes that begin at age 40, such as the National Silver  Academy – a network of organisations that offer seniors educational  programmes – and the Silver Generation Ambassadors, who make health  services and government schemes more accessible through home visits</p>



<p>Japan
 is another interesting country for longevity industry players. 
Currently, it boasts the world’s longest life expectancy, with half the 
population aged over 50 and more than a quarter over 65. Japan also 
holds the title of the highest ratio of centenarians per capita.</p>



<p>But these credentials have come with a price: the country is facing a  dementia crisis, with one in five people aged 65 or older expected to  suffer from the memory-loss disease by 2025. Because of Japan’s unique  position, a study by the consultancy firm McKinsey  said the country’s response to the “unprecedented” economic and social  challenge of ageing would become a roadmap for other governments  contending with ageing populations, such as Spain and Italy.</p>



<p>Corporate leaders have a big role to play in these countries too. In 
fact, many companies will thrive in ‘hyperageing’ societies by targeting
 older populations with new products and services that extend healthy 
life years, McKinsey said. For example, the report described a social 
network in Japan where users aged 50 and older can chat with others 
about their hobbies and interests. The product, created by Kozocom, aims
 to tackle social isolation in older people, who often live alone, by 
helping them become part of a community.</p>



<p><strong>A disease-free world</strong><br>
While one side of the longevity industry prepares for a world with 
significantly more elderly people, another aims to stop ageing from 
being a concern at all. Numerous scientific research firms are taking a 
preventative approach to the health implications of ageing by developing
 medical therapies that address the causes. Drugs that aim to extend the
 healthy period of peoples’ lives are already being trialled on humans.</p>



<p>“Science is increasingly showing that biological ageing consists of 
about a dozen root mechanisms; it is basically the accumulation of 
several types of damage that happen due to normal bodily functions, 
regardless of our lifestyle,” Milova said. “These root mechanisms of 
ageing can be addressed by medical means and, as a result, people will 
age more slowly with an extended period of good health, while the 
development of age-related diseases will be significantly postponed or 
even prevented.”</p>



<p>In the long run, focusing on the root causes of ageing will reduce 
the strain on nursing homes, healthcare providers, caregivers and 
assistive technologies in a world with a growing elderly population. 
This mission is already big business in Silicon Valley.</p>



<p>Facebook creator Mark Zuckerberg and his wife, paediatrician Priscilla Chan, announced in 2016  that they would donate $3bn through the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative to  curing, preventing or managing all diseases by the end of the century.  In their announcement, they said current spending on treatments is 50  times higher than investments into preventative medicine, which would  stop people from getting sick in the first place.</p>



<p>Google’s parent company, Alphabet, has been working to unlock the  secrets of ageing since 2013 with its biotech company, Calico. The firm  has received a budget of $2.5bn to date, but the details of its  operations are mostly a mystery. In 2018, the firm made a rare  announcement about its research on naked mole rats, which defy the usual  ageing process. In a statement on its findings, Calico said research found that naked mole rats’ risk of death does not increase with age, as is typical with other mammals.</p>



<p>In fact, the rodents showed little to no sign of ageing, and their 
risk of death did not increase even at 25 times past their reproductive 
maturity. “These findings reinforce our belief that naked mole rats are 
exceptional animals to study to further our understanding of the 
biological mechanisms of longevity,” said Rochelle Buffenstein, Senior 
Principal Investigator at Calico, in a statement.</p>



<p><strong>Reaching for immortality</strong><br>
Anti-ageing medicine is not just a Silicon Valley trend; today, these 
once-fringe ideas are gaining traction all around the world. Even big 
banks are beginning to realise their disruptive force.</p>



<p>According to a recent report by investment bank Citi,  the current anti-ageing market is worth about $200bn globally, but this  only involves non-therapeutics such as cosmetic products and  procedures. Recent breakthroughs in the science of ageing could produce  commercial therapeutics within the next decade.</p>



<p>Citi claimed the most promising anti-ageing approach was one 
undertaken by biotech firms, including Unity Biotechnology, a US-based 
company that is backed by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos. These firms are 
developing a class of drugs called senolytics that are designed to 
eliminate senescent cells, or cells that have ceased to divide and 
replicate.</p>



<p>The removal of these cells in mice delayed age-related diseases,  according to research funded by the US National Institutes of Health and  published in <em>Nature Medicine</em>.  In naturally ageing mice, the drugs also extended both their life and  health span. One senolytic therapy made by Unity is designed to treat  patients with osteoarthritis of the knee by essentially returning the  knee tissue to a more youthful state. If successful, the therapy could  be commercially available by 2023.</p>



<p>Steve Hill, Board Member and Editor in Chief at LEAF, told <em>The New Economy</em>
 that it currently takes about 17 years for a new drug to be developed 
from start to finish. Treatments such as senolytics, which are making 
waves now, have been in the works for years. Hill said: “The defeat of 
age-related diseases is a long haul, not something that will suddenly 
occur overnight; it will likely happen in small steps, each of which 
brings us closer to the goal.”</p>



<p>Therapies that delay or even reverse certain diseases of ageing could
 hit the market within the next decade, Hill said, but a more 
comprehensive control of age-related diseases will likely take much 
longer. “However, as our knowledge grows and automation and AI become 
increasingly present in the research setting, we could see that progress
 happening faster than it currently is,” he added.</p>



<p>Another barrier to the development of new medicines is cost. Most 
funding for early-stage scientific ventures comes from government 
investment and philanthropy, according to LEAF. Profit-focused investors
 are often wary of these projects as returns can take decades to 
materialise, if at all. But what was unthinkable to corporate investors 
like insurance companies or pension funds just half a decade ago is not 
so unconventional anymore.</p>



<p>“There is a tremendous change in the general perception towards 
longevity and actually even an acceptance of the technical possibility 
of extending life, or at least the healthy period of life,” Kaminskiy 
said. He expects 2019 to be a turning point for many bigger investors.</p>



<p>Longevity investor and billionaire Jim Mellon said in a white paper  published by British bank Barclays that “billions of dollars” would  soon be flowing into the longevity sector as its growth continues.  “There are very few companies available to the general public today, but  there will be hundreds lining up over the next two or three years.”</p>



<p><strong>The economics of ageing</strong><br> As the population turns increasingly grey, the economy will change in a number of ways. The European Commission’s <em>2018 Ageing Report</em>  said the EU’s working-age population, defined as those aged 15 to 64,  is shrinking “significantly” due to a combination of increased life  expectancy, declining fertility and migration flow dynamics. As a  result, the EU will go from having 3.3 working-age people for every  person over 65 to just two working-age people by 2070.</p>



<p>The commission also expects spending on healthcare and 
pharmaceuticals for age-related diseases to surge. It predicted spending
 on long-term care systems in the EU would rise by 73 percent to a total
 of 2.7 percent of GDP by 2070, from 1.6 percent of GDP in 2018. 
Meanwhile, spending on public health in the EU, which was 6.8 percent of
 GDP in 2016, could rise between 0.9 and 1.6 percentage points by 2070. 
As Milova points out, these issues create a double burden for healthcare
 and social welfare systems, which are dependent on taxpayer funding.</p>



<p>However, the advent of drugs that improve our healthy life years will
 have different implications for the global economy. In the bank’s white
 paper, Barclays’ Chief Economist for Europe, Antonio Garcia Pascual, 
said rising life expectancies – so long as they coincide with rising 
health spans – could be advantageous for the global economy. If people 
remain fit and healthy into their old age, they could continue to work 
for longer and boost long-term economic growth. Governments would also 
be collecting more taxes and thus have bigger budgets.</p>



<p>Elsewhere, the traditional economic dynamic will be turned on its 
head. Savings and investment plans will change as people work out how to
 finance their longer lives. This impact will extend to monetary policy,
 as Pascual explained in the white paper: “As a population ages, savings
 tend to rise and that brings down interest rates. That’s one reason why
 we are already seeing central banks struggling to lift interest rates; 
the long-term equilibrium rate is being dragged down by population 
dynamics.”</p>



<p>A handful of cities could benefit further by positioning themselves 
as hubs for longevity research. Aside from Singapore and Japan, the UK 
stands out as having expertise in a unique mix of three sectors that the
 longevity industry relies on: biotechnology, AI and finance. It is also
 home to an ageing population, with centenarians being the 
fastest-growing age group in the UK.</p>



<p>The British Government has already displayed an interest in the  sector, providing a £98m ($130m) challenge fund for healthy ageing.  Kaminskiy said accelerators could also be built within the next couple  of years to kick-start the growth of advanced biomedicine, agetech and  other aspects of the longevity industry. According to a report by AAA, there were 260 longevity-related companies operating in the UK as of 2018.</p>



<p>As far-fetched as the idea of curing all diseases sounds today,  similar feats have already been done on a smaller scale with vaccines.  To date, only smallpox has been declared completely eradicated by the  WHO, though other diseases have been eliminated in certain areas. This  work gives hope to the idea that, with more supportive environments,  preventative medicine and anti-ageing therapies, humans could live  longer and healthier lives. While the longevity industry still has some  growing up to do, the way we age is already transforming.</p>



<p><a href="https://www.theneweconomy.com/ageing">Ageing</a>, <a href="https://www.theneweconomy.com/agetech">Agetech</a>, <a href="https://www.theneweconomy.com/longevity">Longevity</a></p>
<p>The post <a href="https://www.mymedicplus.com/blog/the-longevity-industry-comes-of-age/">The longevity industry comes of age</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.mymedicplus.com/blog">MyMedicPlus</a>.</p>
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