With human longevity, itâs very easy to get obsessed with ageânamely, that the bigger the number, the better. But how to stay healthy into those later years is arguably much more important.
âSimply living to 100 is not going to mean anything if the last 20 years of your life are spent bedbound and in a care home,â says Leslie Kenny, a co-founder of Oxford University’s Longevity Project and the founder of the startup Oxford Healthspan.
Instead, Kenny and other longevity experts prefer to focus on âhealthspanâ: the number of years someone lives a healthy, functional life. Itâs a concept thatâs more relevant than ever. For the last century or so, the average human life expectancy has gradually ticked upwards, thanks to improvements in things like medicine, diet, and working conditions. Now those gains are levelling offâor even decreasing. A new, headline-grabbing study in the journal Nature Aging has found that, without huge scientific breakthroughs, âsurvival to age 100âyears is unlikely to exceed 15% for females and 5% for males.â On average, life expectancy will settle around 84 years for men and 90 years for women.
This is basically because weâve made all the big gains already. As Kingâs College London professor Norman Lazarus puts it, âweâve removed those things that used to kill us.â But abandoning a goal to live to 100 and beyond doesnât mean giving up on staying healthy. There are basic, effective habits we can adopt that will drastically increase the quality of our later years. Hereâs what some of the worldâs experts on aging and longevity recommend for how to stay healthy for longer.
Leslie Kenny, founder of Oxford Healthspan and co-founder of the Oxford Longevity Project
In her 30s, Kenny was diagnosed with autoimmune conditions, including lupus, and told she had five years to live. A combination of hospital treatment and lifestyle changes helped her put those conditions into remission, and sheâs now reached 59. She stresses that fancy longevity science is only helpful if we get the basics right: âWe can put seatbelts in cars,â she says, âbut if youâre going to drive 120 miles per hour up the wrong side of the street, those seatbelts arenât going to save you.â There are five things she recommends focusing on:
Get to bed by 10 p.m.
âDeep sleep, which we tend to experience at the beginning of our sleep cycle, generally only happens between 10 p.m. and 2 a.m.,” says Kenny. âIf weâre not asleep between those hours, we donât get the benefits from it.â
Stay social
âWe know men are worse at maintaining vibrant social connections throughout their lifetime,â she adds. They get married and tend to neglect their friends, who are âabsolutely vitalâ for mental health. One idea to fight back? Find an interesting, engaging hobby that has a social aspectâideally with people from different generations.
Eat well
This means lots of vegetables, âsensible amountsâ of fruit, and, especially as we get older, protein from healthy sources, like sardines, anchovies, and mackerel. Other great options are mushrooms, which include vitamin D (associated with stronger immune systems) and walnuts, which are high in omega-3 fatty acids, and so Kenny says are âvery good for brain health and lowering inflammation in the body.â
Take a hike
âWe know trees release chemicals called terpenes, which are anti-inflammatory,” she adds. âWalking in the woodsâwhat the Japanese call shinrin-yoku â actually reduces cortisol, a stress hormone, and that helps with your sleep.â And natural light is general is very important for setting our circadian clocks.
Stay strong
Maintaining muscle use is really important as we age: âMuscles make an anti-inflammatory chemical called myokines, and inflammation is a real problemâit will make us live shorter lives that are lower quality,â Kenny says. Strength training could mean going to the gym, or just carrying your groceries or moving bags of soil while gardening. âMy personal favourite is to use these blood-flow restriction bands from Japan called Kaatsu,â she adds. They cause the pituitary gland to release more growth hormone, to help build muscle even among older people. Maintaining your leg muscles is crucial. As Kennyâs colleague at the Oxford Longevity Project, Sir Muir Gray, once said to her, âif you canât sit down and get up from the toilet, that is your one-way ticket to a care home.â
Valter Longo, director of the Longevity Institute at the University of Southern California
Eat within 12 hours each day
âThereâs a lot of people talking about fasting for 16 hours a day, but we know that if you skip breakfast, thatâs not good for you for many different reasons,â says Longo. Eating between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m. is âa very simple ruleâ, he saysâheâs ânever seen a single negative publicationâ say itâs harmful.
Three or four times a year, do a âfasting-mimicking dietâ
This is a five-day vegan diet that mimics the effect of fasting on the human body. After about 32 clinical trials, it seems to be âvery consistently effectiveâ in causing stem cell activation and something called autophagy, when cells recycle their damaged components. There are clinically tested FMD products which Longo says are âvery easy to find in most countries around the world.â
Joanna Bensz, CEO of Longevity Centre Europe
Meditate
Research shows that regular meditation reduces cortisol levels, which in turn supports heart health and the immune function. âJust 10 minutes a day can improve our stress resilience and positively affect blood pressure,â Bensz says. âThis can be a part of a morning routine or a short break during the day.â
Exercise regularly, and in moderation
âPeople who engage in regular moderate physical activity, like walking or yoga, have a lower risk of death from heart disease and cancer. Interestingly, excessive exercise can increase free radical levels, which may counteract some benefits. The key is daily, moderate activity.â
Eat healthy fats
âThe Mediterranean diet, rich in vegetables, nuts, olive oil, and fatty fish like salmon, can reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease by up to 30%. Omega-3s in fatty fish help combat inflammation, which is a major driver of ageing processes.â
Philip Borg, radiologist and founder of the Longevity Clinic in Malta
Screen for diseases early
Current healthcare very reactive to problems when they appear, but âby the time a chronic disease is diagnosed, youâve already missed the boat,â Borg says. If you donât smoke and youâre above the age of 50, youâve got an 80% likelihood of dying of cancer, cardiovascular disease, neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimerâs, or metabolic diseases like diabetes. All these things âtake about 30 years to develop,â and the earlier you catch them, the more you can do about them.
Norman Lazarus, professor at Kingâs College London and author of The Lazarus Strategy: How to Age Well and Wisely
Donât overeat
You shouldnât worry about eating special foodsâjust eat a normal, balanced, heathy diet. âPeople like to add baubles and beads and bells,â Lazarus says, but the key thing is to not overeat. âEven if the diet is fantastic, if you eat too much, youâre in trouble.â
Find a kind of exercise that you love â and do it religiously
âMost people underestimate just how important exercise is,â he adds. âItâs not something we add. Weâve got lungs, a heart; we breath, we run. Weâve got all of that already built in, and we must use it.â Only about 30 percent of the population are exercising properly, but it helps reduce your risk from âall the common diseases which weâre now dying of,â like Alzheimerâs and heart attacks. You donât need to do an âOlympic amountââthree hours a week will give you the âmaximalâ benefit.
âI was quite overweight by the time I was 50,â he adds, âand I decided one day, âIâm going to change my lifestyleâ. I took up cycling, and my life changed.â Lazarus also does some exercise at home, because cycling doesnât work on all of your muscles: 15 minutes on his upper body muscles, and a few push-ups, four times a week. âYou must choose a physical activity that you enjoy, because itâs a lifelong commitment.â Heâs now 88, and cycles ânot because I want to exercise, but because I enjoy going out.â
This story originally appeared on British GQ.