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Scientists urge global investment and action
plan to avert impending aging crisis
July 14, 2010 – (BRONX, NY) – Now that scientists have
learned so much about aging through
laboratory studies, it's time to translate
those findings into medicines that can
benefit our aging population.
That was the message delivered by a panel of 10 preeminent
aging experts that included Jan Vijg, Ph.D.,
chair of genetics and the Lola and Saul
Kramer Chair in Molecular Genetics at Albert
Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva
University.
The expert panel was convened by the LifeStar Institute, a
nonprofit organization that educates the
public about the consequences of global
aging and supports medical research aimed at
preventing and curing age-related diseases.
Their report was published in the July 14 issue of the
journal Science Translational Medicine.
The aging process results in significant social and medical
costs that will rise rapidly in the coming
decades as the number of elderly people
increases. To prevent what it calls "a
global aging crisis," the panel recommends
that the U.S. and other countries
collaborate in an international initiative
that will translate laboratory findings
about aging into new kinds of medicines.
More specifically, the panel urged countries to use their
public health agencies to inform citizens
about how they can improve their lifestyles
so that they can live longer and healthier
lives. In addition, the panel wrote, there
is a need to develop regenerative therapies
that could restore youthful structure and
function in older people by repairing and
neutralizing the cellular damage that occurs
with aging.
"There is this misunderstanding that aging
is something that just happens to you, like
the weather, and cannot be influenced," said
Dr. Vijg. "The big surprise of the last
decades is that, in many different animals,
we can increase healthy life span in various
ways. A program of developing and testing
similar interventions in humans would make
both medical and economic sense."