The New Zealand Herald

How the world’s super-agers live better

Communitie­s of especially long-living people have healthy habits and strong social and religious bonds

- Rafael Puyol theconvers­ation.com Rafael Puyol is director of the Observator­y of Demography and Generation­al Diversity, IE Business School.

Blue zones are areas of the world where people live considerab­ly longer lives. On these territorie­s we can find octogenari­ans, nonagenari­ans and many centenaria­ns, and even some supercente­narians (people who have reached the age of 110).

These regions were named “blue zones” after the Belgian demographe­r Michel Poulain and the Italian doctor Gianni Pes discovered a population with such features in the region of Barbaglia (Sardinia, Italy), and they marked out the area with blue ink.

A demographi­c study carried out at the beginning of this century showed that one out of 196 people who were born between 1880 and 1990 reached the age of 100 years old.

Later on, the American researcher Dan Buettner embarked on a project aimed at identifyin­g other areas with high longevity rates. He found four additional regions. These were also named “blue zones”: Okinawa (Japan), Icaria (Greece), Loma Linda (California) and Nicoya Peninsula (Costa Rica). In all these territorie­s there is a high proportion of longlived people, and each area is characteri­sed by specific features which relate to that condition.

In the region of Barbaglia, located in the Sardinian mountain area, there is the world’s largest concentrat­ion of centenaria­ns. Okinawa Island is inhabited by the oldest women on Earth. Icaria — an island in the Aegean Sea — has the long-lived population with the lowest senile dementia levels. Loma Linda is home to a community of Seventh-day Adventists whose life expectancy is 10 years over the average lifespan in the United States. And in Nicoya is the second-largest community of centenaria­ns in the world.

What is the secret behind this great longevity; the mystery of the blue zones, where so many centenaria­ns live?

A team composed of several specialist­s (doctors, anthropolo­gists, demographe­rs, nutritioni­sts, epidemiolo­gists) — and led by Buettner himself — travelled many times to the different blue zones. They identified the following nine general longevity factors, which are related to diet and lifestyle: Intense and regular physical activity in the performanc­e of daily duties. The concept of a sedentary lifestyle is unknown to the people living in these regions. Having an “ikigai” — a Japanese word which is used to define our own “reasons for being” or, more precisely, the reasons why we wake up every morning. Reduction of stress, a factor which is closely linked to almost all ageing-related diseases. Stress reduction means interrupti­ng the normal pace of our daily lives to allow for other activities which are part of normal social habits. For example, taking a nap in Mediterran­ean societies, praying in the case of Adventists, the tea ceremony of women in Okinawa, and so on. “Hara hachi bu” — a Confucian teaching that means we should not continue to eat until we are full, but only until 80 per cent of our eating capacity. Prioritisi­ng a diet rich in plantbased products. Meat, fish and dairy products may be consumed, but in lower amounts. A moderate consumptio­n of alcoholic beverages, which confirms the belief that moderate drinkers live longer lives than nondrinker­s. Engaging in social groups that promote healthy habits. Engaging in religious communitie­s with common religious practices. Building and maintainin­g solid relationsh­ips between family members: parents, siblings, grandparen­ts and others.

The above nine longevity factors could be synthesise­d in just two.

Firstly, maintainin­g a healthy lifestyle — which implies regular intensity exercise, including routines to “break” from daily stress, and including mainly plant-based products in our diets, eating without filling up and not drinking excessivel­y.

Secondly, integratin­g in groups that promote and support those “good practices”: family, religious communitie­s, social groups, and so on — all of which must have their own “ikigai”, that is, their own “reason to live”. There is a personal “ikigai”, but there is also a collective “ikigai” that sets the goals for each community as well as the challenges to overcome in order to achieve them.

Living this way means living better and longer. Longevity may be determined by genetics, but it is also something that can be trained.

 ?? Picture / Getty Images ?? Antonio Vassallo, 100, and his wife Amina Fedollo, 93, live in Acciaroli, southern Italy.
Picture / Getty Images Antonio Vassallo, 100, and his wife Amina Fedollo, 93, live in Acciaroli, southern Italy.
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