What, to me, are even more interesting than the scientific angles are
the social ones. What are the implications of (potentially) 7-8
generations existing at the same time, as a matter of course? Malthus
comes to mind.

Thoughts?

Udhay

http://www.thetakeaway.org/story/j-craig-venter-living-longer-healther-lives/

J. Craig Venter on Living Well to the Age of 150 and Beyond
Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Aging. It's a universal disease, and an inescapable killer.

As more and more individuals in the developed world manage to escape
premature death, life expectancy has grown dramatically in our time.
Diseases like cancer and dementia can be understood as consequences of a
deteriorating body for reasons science still doesn't understand. We're
exploring what might be considered the natural limits of the human body,
and some believe that we can choose to push those limits out.

What is a human lifespan? Is there any reason why we can't function
biologically and mentally for 200 years? This is a cultural and policy
question we will be exploring all week.

Would you want to live to 100? What worries you about our society if
everyone could? Tell us the story of how you want to age.

Genomic and synthetic life scientist J. Craig Venter says aging is a
phenomenon we can control and arrest through genomic science. He
believes that by aggressively accelerating human mapping we can better
understand—and prevent—the consequences of human aging.

J. Craig Venter's new project is called Human Longevity Inc. and comes
with private funding and an association with the University of
California San Diego. The company will combine genetic and medical data
at a massive scale to come up with new ways to predict, prevent and
treat diseases of aging, such as cancer, heart disease and Alzheimer's.
Venter says it will be the largest DNA sequencing operation in the
world—capable of processing 40,000 human genomes a year.

"Age is the number one risk factor for every disease, but it's not
treated as a disease on its own," says Venter.

To crack the question of aging, Venter says his new project will connect
layers of information that have never been put together, starting with
the entire human genome and then layering in the genetic code of the
microbes, in addition to measuring proteins and chemicals.

"We'll be doing tests that people won't necessarily be able to get
anywhere else, and combining that all together," says Venter. "We're
trying to get the whole picture and create a database that can actually
become really predictive of what's associated with disease and what's
associated with health."

While average life expectancy isn't expected to creep up to 150 anytime
soon, Venter says that if humans live longer—and healthier—then we can
all lead more productive lives. Right now, Venter says citizens are
paying in to the retirement system for their "normal careers," which has
presented challenges now that humans are living much longer and
withdrawing from a system that was never intended to support a longer
lifespan.

"We can solve all the economic problems by simply changing the
retirement age to age 75, and still have another 20 or 30 years of
healthy life after that," he says. "[If] people have a chance to be
productive longer, it's good for them and good for society—retirement
generally isn't good for anybody."

It seems that living well is the key to this project. Venter points to
his own mother, who is 90-years-old and is "mentally intact." However,
he says that despite her sharp wits, her physical self is not
progressing the same way, saying that her body is "starting to wind
down" and getting frail.

"There's ways, we think, in the future to change that, and at least keep
people more active for a longer period of time," he says. "We're not
trying to push to get 150 or 200 as a lifespan—we have a lot of other
problems on the planet that we have to solve—but healthcare is now the
single most expensive thing in our economy. If we go to a preventive
medicine paradigm, if we try to prevent diseases instead of waiting to
treat them in end stages after they occur, we can lower the healthcare
budget and have people live a healthier life."

Venter says his team will be looking for protective aspects of the human
genome to better fight and understand diseases of aging.

"With the FDA, we're already beginning a dialogue with them—I think the
FDA is critical for this," says Venter. "Regulating test [sic] I think
is an important thing because there are so many different kind of tests
out there that aren't very meaningful. It's the quality of the
information you're being given, does it mean anything and can you do
anything with it? If you're trying to decide to have your breast
removed, are you making that decision based on reliable data? This has
to work very broadly for the healthcare industry. It has to be
financially viable, it has to actually be truly actionable and reduce
the cost of medicine if it's going to be highly successful. That can't
be driven by the government."

So will these techniques be widely available to the public? Listen to
the full interview to find out.

-- 
((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

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