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Want to live longer and healthier? Singapore makes strides in longevity field
Want to live longer and healthier? Singapore makes strides in longevity field

Straits Times

time20-05-2025

  • Health
  • Straits Times

Want to live longer and healthier? Singapore makes strides in longevity field

Dr Andrea Maier (left) and team member Dr Ajla Hodzic Kuerec. The NUS Academy for Healthy Longevity has won US$250,000 in the semi-finals of XPrize Healthspan, a global contest to reverse ageing. PHOTO: COURTESY OF ANDREA MAIER SINGAPORE – Want to live longer, healthier and reverse the effects of ageing? Singapore could be the right place to be as the science and business of longevity medicine pick up here. Earlier in May, a team from the NUS Academy for Healthy Longevity reached the semi-finals of the US$101 million (S$131 million) XPrize Healthspan , a global competition for accessible therapeutic solutions to reverse the effects of ageing. Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Longevity, beyond the eternal youth fantasy
Longevity, beyond the eternal youth fantasy

Indian Express

time13-05-2025

  • Health
  • Indian Express

Longevity, beyond the eternal youth fantasy

In an age obsessed with aesthetic perfection, it is refreshing — and vital — to see a longevity initiative grounded in substance rather than superficiality. The ambitious $101 million XPrize Healthspan, which will announce its semi-finalists this week, seeks to extend not merely the years of life but the quality of those years. Its aim is to rejuvenate the body's most vital systems — muscles, cognition, and immunity — by at least a decade for those aged between 50 and 80 years. Crucially, the winning solution must be accessible, scalable within a year, and affordable — a powerful antidote to the exclusivity that often shadows biomedical innovation. That the vision of equitable longevity has moved beyond age-reversal fantasies is a welcome shift. Ageing has far too often been cast as a pathology to be hidden, delayed, or denied, a decline to be concealed behind the mask of youth. Longevity is framed through a superficial lens — wrinkle creams, biohacking fads, and fat-loss drugs — but beyond this fixation on appearance, ageing has a deeper import. A meaningful extension of life must necessarily centre on capability — mental clarity, mobility and resilience to disease. These are the pillars that sustain autonomy and self-worth in old age, without which additional years risk becoming a slow erosion of the self, an undignified hollowing out of all that makes a person whole. As the global population ages, such innovations could radically reshape healthcare systems and reduce the burden on caregivers. According to the India Ageing Report 2023, for instance, the elderly population in the country is projected to surge to 347 million by 2050, accounting for 20.8 per cent of the population. By 2046, the number of elderly is expected to surpass the number of children under 15 years of age. This demographic shift will bring with it significant socio-economic challenges. But there is also now a glimmer of an opportunity in it: To reimagine old age not as a slow fading but as a phase of dignity and continued purpose.

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