As soon as a handful of scientists come up with an intervention shown to influence aging in other species, they begin selling it as an intervention for humans, even though there may not be evidence it works.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I think science has begun to demonstrate that aging is a disease. If it is, it can be cured.
For healthy adult people, the really big thing we can foresee are ways of intervening in the ageing process, either by slowing or reversing it.
The vast majority of studies say anti-aging supplements don't work.
There is an anti-aging possibility, but it has to come from within.
If you can slow the biological process of aging, even a minor slowdown in the rate at which we age yields improvements in virtually every condition of frailty and disability and mortality that we see at later ages.
Anti-aging is an extremely under-explored field.
The field of ageing research is full of characters. We have hucksters claiming that cures for ageing can be bought and sold; prophetic seers, their hands extended for money, warning that immortality is nigh; and would-be Nobelists working methodically in laboratories in search of a pill to slow ageing.
If the aging process is controlled in a similar way in worms and humans, then we can use what we learn about worms to speed our study of higher organisms.
No one can avoid aging, but aging productively is something else.
I think using anti-aging products really helps; the sooner the better, you know?