In COVID-19 Crisis, Older Americans Are More Resilient Than Younger Generations, Edward Jones and Age Wave Research Finds – PRNewswire

ST. LOUIS, Aug. 4, 2020 /PRNewswire/ --Despite COVID-19's severe and disproportionate impact on the health of aging adults, older Americans reported they are coping far better than younger ones, according to the Edward Jones and Age Wave study released today, "The Four Pillars of the New Retirement." The9,000-person, five-generation study in the U.S. and Canada revealed that in the U.S. 37% of Gen Z and 27% of millennials said they have suffered mental health declines since the pandemic began, while only 15% of baby boomers and 8% of silent generation respondents said the same.

"COVID-19's impact forever changed the reality of many Americans, yet we've observed a resilience among U.S. retirees in contrast to younger generations," said Ken Dychtwald, Ph.D., psychologist/gerontologist and founder and CEO of Age Wave. "Older Americans tend to recognize the value of a long-term view, and so as they think about their lives, longevity and legacy, they're able to pull from an array of experiences that help them weather current storms, feel gratitude about many aspects of their lives and still plan for the future."

The landmark Edward Jones and Age Wave research uncovered a new definition for retirement, as far more than simply the end of work. The majority of U.S. retirees (55%) defined retirement as a whole new chapter filled with new choices, freedoms and challenges, and they do so in a more holistic way across four important areas of health, family, purpose and finance.

COVID-19's Impact on Family Closeness and Finances COVID-19's initial dramatic impact on the U.S. economy and personal financial situations may very well leave long-lasting implications. Reflecting a great deal of generational generosity, 24 million Americans* have provided financial support to adult children due to COVID-19, and an overwhelming 71% of retirees said they would offer financial support to their family even if it could jeopardize their own financial future. Despite COVID-19's negative impact on finances, 67% of Americans said the pandemic has brought their families closer together. The research also revealed that 20 million Americans stopped making retirement savings contributions during the COVID-19 pandemic and only a quarter of working Americans were on track with their retirement savings prior to the pandemic.[i]

"We've certainly seen COVID-19's disruptive force on finances, with the pandemic influencing retirement timing and financial confidence," said Ken Cella, Edward Jones Client Services Group Principal. "However, this cloud has brought several silver linings in terms of family closeness and important discussions about planning earlier for retirement, saving more for emergencies and even talking through end-of-life plans and long-term care costs."

Social Relationships as Predictor of Health and Purpose While loneliness is pervasive across all five generations, as people age, physical isolation becomes a greater health risk, as deadly as smoking a pack of cigarettes a day[ii], and it is linked to increased risk for heart disease and dementia.[iii]While most retirees (76%) said they derive the greatest sense of purpose from social relationships, specifically time spent with loved ones, 72% noted that one of their biggest fears is becoming a burden on their families.

"Retirees say they miss people and purpose, not paychecks, when they retire, but 31% of new retirees are struggling to find purpose in this stage of life. They want to feel useful, not just youthful, and keep learning and growing at every age," Dychtwald added.

The study found that 89% of all Americans feel that there should be more ways for retirees to use their talents and knowledge for the benefit of their communities and society at large.

Financial Advisors as Connectors and Confidence Builders As Americans redefine retirement in a broader way across the four pillars, the majority of U.S. respondents felt their ideal financial advisor is a guide who can understand them and help them achieve their goals. In fact, 84% of those working with a financial advisor said that their financial advisor relationship gave them a greater sense of comfort regarding their finances during the pandemic.

Further underscoring the fundamental importance of financial security, retirees are often met by new challenges as they enter retirement. Thirty-six percent of retirees said managing money in retirement is more confusing than saving for retirement, and they want help navigating. Fifty-two percent of retirees cited healthcare costs, including long-term care, as the most common financial worry. This concern was also echoed by pre-retirees as more than two-thirds (68%) of those who plan to retire in the next 10 years said they have no idea what their healthcare and long-term care costs will be in retirement.

"Beyond finances, we can help our clients envision and truly realize a holistic retirement, which, we know includes decisions about their health, family and purpose," said Cella. "Empathy and knowledge allow us to better serve our clients in a human-centered way and work together to achieve what's most important to them and their families."

While the above findings feature a selection of respondents' thoughts regarding the new definition of retirement, further examination of the four pillars of health, family, purpose and finances reveal their highly intertwined nature and influence in shaping retirees' overall quality of life. For more details from The Four Pillars of the New Retirement, please visit http://www.EdwardJones.com/NewRetirement.

MethodologyThis report is based on a large-scale investigation of what it means to live well in retirement that began in November 2019. The study was conducted by Edward Jones in partnership with Age Wave and The Harris Poll.

As part of the study, The Harris Poll conducted an online, representative survey from May 21 through June 4, 2020among more than 9,000 adults age 18+, in the US and Canada, including n=3,000 among a US general population, n=1,000 among a Canadian general population, and oversamples of approximately 500 in each of the following 10 metropolitan regions: Atlanta, Charlotte, Cleveland, Dallas, Kansas City, Los Angeles, Portland, Raleigh-Durham, St. Louis, and Toronto.Results were weighted where necessary to bring them into line with their actual proportions in the population.

*Estimated projections to the US population are calculated based on the 2019 Census Current Population Survey.

About Edward Jones Edward D. Jones & Co., L.P., a Fortune 500 company headquartered in St. Louis, provides financial services in the U.S. and, through its affiliate, in Canada. Every aspect of the firm's business, from the investments offered to the location of branch offices, caters to individual investors. The firm's 19,000-plus financial advisors serve more than 7 million clients with a total of $1.2 trillion in client assets under care. Visit http://www.edwardjones.comor the recruiting website at http://www.careers.edwardjones.com. Member SIPC.

About Age Wave Under the leadership of Founder and CEO Ken Dychtwald, Ph.D., Age Wave is the nation's foremost thought leader on population aging and its profound business, social, financial, health care, workforce, and cultural implications. Dychtwald's long-awaited new book What Retirees Want: A Holistic View of Life's Third Age was just published (Wiley, July 15,2020). Since its inception in 1986, the firm has advised numerous non-profits and over half the Fortune 500. For more information, please visitwww.agewave.com.

About The Harris Poll The Harris Poll is one of the longest-running surveys in the U.S.;tracking public opinion, motivations and social sentiment since 1963. The Harris Poll is now part of Harris Insights & Analytics, a global consulting and market research firm that delivers social intelligence for transformational times. The Harris Poll works with clients in three primary areas; building twenty-first-century corporate reputation, crafting brand strategy and performance tracking, and earning organic media through public relations research. Learn more atwww.theharrispoll.com

[i]Federal Reserve, Report on the Economic Well-Being of U.S. Households in 2018 - May 2019

[ii]Holt-Lunstad J, Smith TB, Layton JB. Social relationships and mortality risk: a meta-analytic review. PLoS Med., July 2010

[iii]National Institute on Aging, "Social isolation, loneliness in older people pose health risks," April 23, 2019.

SOURCE Edward Jones

https://www.edwardjones.com

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In COVID-19 Crisis, Older Americans Are More Resilient Than Younger Generations, Edward Jones and Age Wave Research Finds - PRNewswire

An ancient dinosaur relative is also related to humansand its DNA may hold the secret to living longer – SYFY WIRE

The tuatara is old. 250 million years old. That was when this bizarre creature shared its last common ancestor with other reptiles before it evolved further and diverged. It used to be one of of several Rhynocephalia species that crawled across the antediluvian continent of Gondwana, but is now the only one that remains. Its genome links it not only to reptiles (which it most obviously resembles), but also birds and yes, mammals like humans.DNA from this living relic could also be the elixir of life.

"We found out when the tuatara diverged withevolutionary dating, using the amount of genetic change that has occurred between tuatara and its nearest relatives," Neil Gemmel, a professor of anatomy at the University of Otago in New Zealand, who led a study recently published in Nature, told SYFY WIRE.We can calibrate the level of change over time against established genetic splits across the tree of life that have been established from the fossil record and key geological events.

Amniote vertebrateswhich either hatch from eggs or develop from an egg in the placentaare thought to have first appeared 312 million years ago and then branched off into two groups. Synapsids included early mammals and now-extinct reptiles with mammalian characteristics. Sauropsids were once dinosaurs and other reptilian ancestors that have since died out and were replaced with or evolved into birds or lizards, snakes and other extant reptiles. The tuatara has baffled scientists for so long because of synapsid and sauropsid features that could reveal what we never knew about amniote evolution.

Sauropsid and synapsid advantages of tuatara range from extreme night vision to a sense of smell that could identify potential mates just as well as potential prey. It makes you wonder whether this lizard-thing was the result of a superpoweredserum.

Tuatara have one of the largest vertebrate genomes ever. There are many repeating elements that are unique to the tuatara, which became an entire phylum of its own after it diverged from snakes and lizards. It shares parts of that genome with turtles, chickens and even humans. Stranger still is that the types of repeating elements in tuatara DNA are closer to mammals than birds or lizards. It has evolved specialized genes for immunity, thermal regulation, odor reception and metabolism.

You can probably see where this is going. Replicating such strong MHC genes in humans could save lives in the future.

Understanding the tuataras extremely low metabolism and Methuselan longevity could possibly help us extend the human lifespan. Tuatara can live past a hundred years, which makes them the longest-lived reptiles next to some species of tortoise, and there may be a link to certain proteins in its system along with genes that protect them from free radicals. Major histocompatibility (MHC) genes mean that its tissues are compatible with those of many different individuals without an immune response. Could that make living to at least a hundred a thing for humans?

What we currently know is that tuatara have a few more genes than others species that are known to be protective against DNA damage and cellular aging from work in other systems," said Gemmel. "It therefore seems possible that these gene products may contribute to tuataras longevity, though it would take quite a bit of work to test if these are indeed protective against ageing.Iff they are there, maybe there will be prospects to develop these into supplements of drugs intended to protect against aspects of aging."

Whatever the tuatara is, it is a window into the deep past that could unlock amazing advances for the future.

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An ancient dinosaur relative is also related to humansand its DNA may hold the secret to living longer - SYFY WIRE

In COVID-19 Crisis, Older Canadians Are More Resilient than Younger Generations, Edward Jones and Age Wave Research Finds – Canada NewsWire

The landmark five-generation study examines how the pandemic has transformed and impacted the outlook for retirement in Canada across key areas including health, family, purpose and finances.

MISSISSAUGA, ON, Aug. 4, 2020 /CNW/ - Today Edward Jones, in partnership with Age Wave, released a landmark study that takes a comprehensive look at retirement in Canada, focusing specifically on four central pillars: health, family, purpose and finances. The study examines trends affecting the rapid transformation of retirement in Canada as the country's aging population approaches this new stage of life. This includes the impact of COVID-19 which has accelerated many of the trends unearthed in this study.

Despite COVID-19's severe and disproportionate impact on the health of aging adults, older Canadians reported they are coping far better than younger ones. "The Four Pillars of the New Retirement" study of 1,000 Canadian respondents across five-generations revealed that 38 per cent of Gen Z and 36 per cent of millennials said they have suffered mental health declines since the pandemic began, while only 20 per cent of baby boomers and 7 per cent of silent generation respondents said the same. The majority of Canadian retirees (51 per cent) defined retirement as a whole new chapter filled with new choices, freedoms and challenges, and they do so in a more holistic way across four important areas of health, family, purpose and finance.

"We've certainly seen COVID-19's disruptive influence on finances, with the pandemic impacting retirement timing and financial confidence," said David Gunn, Country Leader, Edward Jones Canada. "However, the pandemic has brought families closer and renewed the focus on important discussions about planning earlier for retirement, saving more for emergencies and even talking through end-of-life plans and long-term care costs."

"COVID-19's impact forever changed the reality of many Canadians, yet we've observed a resilience among Canadian retirees in contrast to younger generations," said Ken Dychtwald, Ph.D., psychologist/gerontologist and founder and CEO of Age Wave. "Older Canadians recognize the value of a long-term view, and so as they think about their lives, longevity and legacy, they're able to pull from an array of experiences that help them weather current storms, feel gratitude about many aspects of their lives and still plan for the future."

The four pillars to living well in the "new retirement"

The study goes beyond the impacts of COVID-19 and outlines what makes today's retirement "new". Canada's retirement landscape is unique - increasing longevity and a groundswell of Boomers entering retirement make this one of the most significant societal shifts in history. The study found, changing attitudes and aspirations coupled with external forces (i.e. economic downturns, the pandemic, technology, etc.) have drastically changed the expectations of those approaching or entering retirement and will shape what retirement looks like for generations to come.

The study identified four key pillars for living well in the "new retirement":

Health When it comes to living well in retirement, 97 per cent of retirees and 99 per cent of those age 75 and over, say that health is more important than wealth. 91 per cent of Canadian retirees say it's never too late to improve health, however, there is an intention/action gap as 51 per cent of Canadian retirees don't exercise regularly, and 33 per cent say they don't maintain a healthy diet. While physical health usually declines with age, for many Canadians mental health rises.

Family A bright spot coming out of the pandemic is the deepening of family ties. Two-thirds of Gen Z define family as "anyone they love and care for, regardless of whether they are related by blood, marriage or adoption." They believe in "families of affinity" or families of choice. As we approach what is expected to be the largest generational wealth transfer in recent memory, retirees cite they worry about their children more (44 per cent) and are willing to do whatever it takes, personally and financially, to support family members in need, even if it means sacrificing their own financial security (63 per cent). The study also found, 47 per cent of Canadians overall and 30 per cent of Canadians age 65 and over have yet to begin discussing their end-of-life care preferences with their family or close friends.

Purpose Retirees with a strong sense of purpose are happier, healthier and live longer, according to the study. This cohort reports they find their strongest sense of purpose from spending time with loved ones (72 per cent) and many (46 per cent) find purpose by being generous or helping others, particularly women (54 per cent). They are also looking for meaningful ways to carve out their free time. They don't just want to keep busy; they want to make useful and rewarding contributions to community and family. As the country's population continues to age, 89 per cent of Canadians agree that there should be more ways for retirees to help in their communities.

FinancesAccording to the study, a chief financial goal amongst retirees, is to have enough resources to provide security (48 per cent) and the freedom to live the lives they want (47 per cent). Retirees' greatest financial worry is not economic uncertainty like recessions, inflation or taxes, despite the disruption associated with COVID-19. Their greatest concerns are encountering unexpected expenses (54 per cent) and the cost of health care, including long-term care (47 per cent). Pre-retirees express even higher concerns about health and long-term care (59 per cent) with three quarters of those who plan to retire (74 per cent) stating they have no idea what their health and long-term care costs may be in retirement.

"Beyond finances, we can help our clients envision and truly realize a holistic and fulfilling retirement, which, we know includes decisions about their health, family and purpose," said Gunn. "Empathy and knowledge allow us to better serve as a trusted advisor to our clients in a human-centered way and work together to achieve what's most important to Canadians and their families."

While the above findings feature a selection of data regarding the new definition of retirement, further examination of the four pillars of health, family, purpose and finances reveal their highly intertwined nature and influence in shaping retirees' overall quality of life. For the complete study, please visit http://www.edwardjones.ca/newretirement.

MethodologyThis report is based on a large-scale investigation of what it means to live well in retirement that began in November 2019. The study was conducted by Edward Jones in partnership with Age Wave and The Harris Poll. As part of the study, The Harris Poll conducted an online, representative survey from May 21 through June 4, 2020,among more than 9,000 adults age 18+ in the U.S. and Canada, n=1,000 among a Canadian general population and an oversampling of n=500 in Toronto.

About Edward Jones Canada Edward Jones is a full-service investment dealer with more than 850 financial advisors in Canadian communities from coast-to-coast. A member of the Investment Industry Regulatory Organization of Canada and the Canadian Investor Protection Fund, the firm is also a participating organization in the Toronto Stock Exchange. Edward Jones has been ranked #1 for eight consecutive years in the J.D. Power Canada Full-Service Investor Satisfaction Study (2013-2020). For more information, visit edwardjones.ca.

Edward Jones received the highest score in the J.D. Power 2013-2020 Canada Full-Service Investor Satisfaction Studies of investors' satisfaction with their full-service investment firm. Visit jdpower.com/awards.

About Age WaveUnder the leadership of Founder and CEO Ken Dychtwald, Ph.D., Age Wave is the North America's foremost thought leader on population aging and its profound business, social, financial, health care, workforce, and cultural implications. Dychtwald's long-awaited new book What Retirees Want: A Holistic View of Life's Third Age was just published (Wiley, July 15, 2020). Since its inception in 1986, the firm has advised numerous non-profits and over half the Fortune 500. For more information, please visitwww.agewave.com.

About The Harris PollThe Harris Poll has been tracking public opinion, motivations and social sentiment since 1963 and is now part of Harris Insights & Analytics, a global consulting and market research firm that delivers social intelligence for transformational times. The Harris Poll works with clients in three primary areas; building twenty-first-century corporate reputation, crafting brand strategy and performance tracking, and earning organic media through public relations research. Learn more atwww.theharrispoll.com@HarrisPoll

SOURCE Edward Jones

For further information: Nisha Mohan, Edward Jones, [emailprotected], (647) 212-6699; Tom Horn, Proof Strategies, [emailprotected], (416) 969-2781

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In COVID-19 Crisis, Older Canadians Are More Resilient than Younger Generations, Edward Jones and Age Wave Research Finds - Canada NewsWire

The Power and the Glory of Comics A Review of "Green Lantern: 80th Anniversary" | A Comics Column – Nation Valley News

Cover by Liam Sharp 2020 DC Comics (used for review purposes only)

by Patrick R. Burger

Comics are the very real inheritors of the pulp fiction legacy, and the first appearance of the original Green Lantern in 1940, four years after pulp fiction master Robert E. Howards death, owes a lot to the pulp fiction heritage in general and, I believe, to Howards signal success in creating larger-than-life super-heroic characters (essentially proto-super-heroes). It seems self-evident that Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster (creators of Superman), Bob Kane (creator of Batman) and Martin Nodell, the creator of the original Green Lantern, were influenced by the pulps. The supernatural-weird fiction pulp influence was apparent in the 1940 Green Lanterns magical powers, as was the detective-crime fiction pulp heritage in the flavour of the stories. With the 1959 re-boot of Green Lantern we were introduced to Hal Jordan as Green Lantern, but wooden art and a 10-year-old reading level, and the whites-only world that existed at that time in DC comics1resisted the emotional resonance of the revolution in comics storytelling that was going on at Marvel at the same time. But DC, and Green Lantern in particular, made up for lost time with the classic Denny ONeil and Neal Adams game-changing relevance stories of the early seventies, especially with this classic sequence:

Green Lantern by Neal Adams 1970 DC Comics (used for review purposes only)

Since then, Green Lantern comics have twinned a social conscience with the hallmark of the pulps and the comics that succeeded them epic adventure and action.

Before dipping into the stories, a comment about the character2and his (her and its) longevity is in order. The interesting thing about the Green Lanterns, particularly Hal Jordan, is that their super-power is essentially willpower. The Green Lantern power rings channel the willpower, but without willpower the rings can do little on their own. While it is a trope of super-heroes (and the pulp fiction heroes they descend from) that their willpower allows them to overcome great obstacles, this is even more significant in Green Lantern stories. Just as Robert E.Howards pulp heroes exhibit a Nietzschean will to power, the Green Lantern concept is essentially founded on that philosophy.

The 80th Anniversary celebration edition opens with a tale of the original Green Lantern from the 1940s, engineer Alan Scott, who survives a sabotage-induced rail disaster thanks to a mysterious green lantern. The story requires knowledge of the original Green Lanterns origin going in, as it is a sparse human-interest moment about Scott visiting the mother of the crash victim who pointed out the mysterious lantern to Scott before dying. The mothers speech wherein she resents Scott for surviving while her son had to die reveals, in perhaps a metaphoric way, that her dying son was the source of the light that saved Scott. James Tynion IVs writing is a bit abrupt, and Gary Franks art is somewhat static but this nod to the original Green Lantern has dignity and gravitas.

Last Will (featuring Hal Jordan for many of us the real Green Lantern) is a powerful and dramatic piece where Green Lantern crash lands on a planet and his malfunctioning power ring cannot tell him where the desolate moon-scape-like place he has landed is. To make matters worse, the ring only has enough energy to send three SOS messages. Heartfelt calls to the Green Lantern Corps, Batman (who Green Lantern reveals is a role model to him) and to Jordans long-time love interest, Carol Ferris, precede the moment where his ring fails and can no longer protect him from the atmosphere. Which he discovers he can breathe! It turns out hes been in the Nevada desert all along and his Justice League of America buddies end up having a laugh at his expense. Although the joke ending is a bit of a let-down, you totally buy the emotional lead-up to the joke-reveal and only then do you start thinking of logical problems: the existence of some vegetation should have tipped Hal off, and an experienced space explorer should have been able to recognize the constellations as being what youd see from Earth. But writer Geoff Johns effort is still commendable while Ivan Reis art is the best in the whole collection, with his flawless anatomy and great perspectives.

Green Lantern (Hal Jordan) by Ivan Reis 2020 DC Comics (used for review purposes only).

Of course, no Green Lantern anniversary issue could be without Green Lanterns greatest enemy, and The Meaning of Fear captures Sinestros brilliance, cowardice and cruelty. As he speaks to a dying Green Lantern about fear and willpower, Sinestros explanation about how his willpower is fuelled by his fear has a tragic logic that explains much in our world. When the dying Green Lantern refuses to feel fear, Sinestro kills him, and here writer Cullen Bunn brilliantly uses a trope of Green Lantern stories: how the power ring of a dying Green Lantern will find the nearest worthy recipient. The story ends with Sinestro taking off into space after the ring and we understand now that he has been killing every rookie recipient of that ring before they can amass the experience needed to defeat someone like Sinestro. Doug Mahnkes feathery art style leads to some beautiful panels but his anatomy does not have the perfection and robustness of Reis although his layouts are quite powerful.

The next story was a treat for those of us who bought Green Lantern comics in the 70s, for it teamed the legendary writer Denny ONeil with another DC great, artist Mike Grell. Touted as ONeils last story for DC, Time Alone revisits the early 70s Green Lantern and Green Arrow on their on-the-road discovering of America. For a time in the mid-70s it looked like Grell would be the artistic inheritor of Neal Adams: despite occasional issues with anatomy and perspective, his art was dynamic, sexy and often hit the bullseye. ONeils farewell story captures the hippie flavour of the early 70s Green Lantern stories by foregrounding Green Lanterns reading of Walden by Thoreau, while Grell provides some nice layouts (and a tribute to the 1969 Mercury Cougar), but anatomy issues make one cringe from time to time (especially in comparison to Reis and Mahnke).

Legacy, a story featuring Kyle Rayner, the fourth human to be given a Green Lantern power ring, is a solid, bit run-of-the-mill story with a teamwork message. The script by Ron Marz reminds Green Lantern fans of Kyle Rayners pivotal role in upholding justice when the Green Lantern Corps temporarily disbanded, and Darryl Banks art is capable, with dynamic lay-outs, but with some stiffness in characters bodies and faces. The teamwork message is undercut by the fact that Rayner wills his ring to duplicate the other human Green Lanterns to help him overcome his foe. While this is revealing of Rayners thoughts on teamwork, there is, in fact, no real teamwork, so the story falters on that level.

Heart of the Corps is a story that features the rough-housing, wise-cracking Guy Gardner the third human to receive a power ring and a Green Lantern Corps favourite, Kilowog. This Peter J. Tomasi tale is a classic DC birthday surprise story, with the kicker being that after Guy Gardner has led the morose Kilowog through some Dionysian fighting Kilowogs birthday is the same day that his planet was destroyed. The cheesiness of a birthday story is overcome by the magnitude of the gesture and its healing intention, and Fernando Pasarins art is cosmic and impressive.

Of all the Lanterns, John Stewart the black Green Lantern created by Denny ONeil as a corrective to the whites-only DC world up until the late 60s gets the shortest shrift by being featured (alongside Hawk Girl) in a story by hip comic creators Charlotte (Fullerton) McDuffie and Chriscross. The stylized retro-kind of art seems very cool at first glance, but the story is also retro to the 10 year-old-aimed, wooden story-telling of the early 60s. Sparse, corny and stilted dialogue mars the story, as does an artistic lapse at the climax where the reader doesnt really get what is happening. The least impressive story of the collection.

The next story, Four is one of the most powerful of the collection as it flash-forwards to Hal Jordan, John Stewart and Kyle Rayner meeting up as old men to joke and reminisce, especially about Guy Gardner and his self-sacrificing style of heroism. Dialogue between the ex-Lanterns and the waitress make the reader think that Guy Gardner is simply late, like every year, but the final panel has the three gathered before Gardners tombstone. It is a nice homage to the Guy Gardner character, written by Robert Venditti, and Rafa Sandovals art varies between impressive and basic.

The next story features the sixth human Green Lantern, Jessica Cruz. The story begins with Cruz battling an anxiety attack, thus addressing a real concern of modern life. Cruz reveals the horrific origin of her anxiety and as befitting the great tradition of the Green Lanterns she is able to call on her willpower to overcome her anxiety and her monstrous foe. She helps, and is helped by, her partner Green Lantern, the fifth human with a power ring, Simon Baz. Writer Mariko Tamaki does a fine job humanizing the cosmic willpower theme at the core of Green Lantern stories, while artist Mirka Andolfo shines in depicting Cruz as both athletic and waif-like.

Green Lantern (Hal Jordan) by Ivan Reis 2020 DC Comics (used for review purposes only)

The final story, Homegrown Hero, features the afore-mentioned Simon Baz. This Muslim characters very existence shows DC addressing the social reality of American (and North American) life, and writer Sina Grace makes sure we see him interacting with with his hijab-wearing aunt and sister in the normalcy of day-to-day life. DC walks an interesting line with this character as he is frequently partnered with Jessica Cruz, whose skin-tight Lantern garb expresses the inherent sexiness of costumed female super-heroes (which aesthetic has for decades now been worn by women throughout the western world). That Baz can accept and co-exist with both liberal western and orthodox Muslim social conventions is a positive signal that DC is emitting with this character. Ramon Villalobos art is capable and has a bit of a European-Heavy Metal feel and it brings across the seediness of the terrorist attempts by white supremacists to shoot up a Muslim art exhibit and a mosque. Baz speech to one of the terrorists is reminiscent of the game-changing speech of the black man in the early 70s Green Lantern cited above: This ring is a lot like my faith. I fight for compassion. It doesnt make me the judge thats HIS job. Being a Lantern, a Muslim its about oneness.

Just as the pulps before them, comics embody an important social function. Just as Robert E. Howards characters and stories pushed against societal norms whether it was Solomon Kane allying himself with an African shaman, or Conan accepting the authority of the female pirate captain Blit we see that same socially-progressive agenda in the Green Lantern comics. Each of the stories in this Green Lantern: 80th Anniversary special carries this tradition forward. The highlighting of willpower in the concept behind the Green Lantern characters is a message about how human will can make change for the better. In a world where nature is being destroyed at a catastrophic rate due to human will, it will take an enormous act of willpower to change course and protect the planet instead of destroying it.

Finally, this collection has something for everyone. For the Green Lantern newbie, this is a perfect introduction to the universe of characters and stories that have emerged from the 80 year tradition of Green Lantern. For the current up-to-date reader, this is a celebration of all that is Lantern in comics today. And for the older reader who grew up with Green Lantern in the 60s, 70s and 80s, it is a wonderful refresher on what has gone before and where the concept is going today.

1In street scenes in Gotham City, Metropolis or Central City all the citizens were depicted as white; in other words, black Americans simply did not exist in the DC comics world.

2Green Lantern is a misleading term, as there are 7,500 Green Lanterns in the universe and no less than six on Earth!

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CarthroniX President/Chairman of the Board R. Rex Parris and Carrol Parris Donate $50,000 in Support of Life Extension Research – PRNewswire

LANCASTER, Calif., Aug. 3, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- R. Rex Parris, President and Chairman of the Board of biotech company CarthroniX, announced a donation of $50,000 to Denis Evseenko, MD, Ph.D. of the Keck School of Medicine of USC to support continued research in the field longevity.

Dr. Evseenko was recently awarded a $1.69 million research project grant from the National Institutes of Health to address how to slow arthritis in aging joints. He has helped develop breakthroughs in molecular studies that identified and characterized the unique cell populations that form the superficial human joint cartilage zone.

Dr. Evseenko is one of the world's leading medical researchers of arthritis and how gene activity drives cartilage development. "The CDC reports that 23% of all adults, or 54 million people, have some form of arthritis and are limited in their activities due to severe joint pain," said Mr. Parris. "Dr. Evseenko's work will help tens of millions of people in this country and many more worldwide, living with arthritis's daily struggle. Now there is evidence that it will also extend the quality of life and longevity."

CarthroniX is comprised of scientists and surgeons with expertise in regenerative medicine and stem cell research. Their research is focused on creating novel small molecules to stimulate the regrowth of healthy cartilage. Dr. Evseenko's work fits seamlessly with CarthroniX's goals of extending the quality of life for millions of people. Osteoarthritis is one component of the aging process as cartilage degenerates over time, especially after injury and wear and tear.

Recently it was discovered that some of the small molecules studied to treat arthritis also reverse the aging of human cells in vitro. This gift will enable Dr. Evseenko's lab to advance to the next stage of research. The CX-1 small molecule will hopefully slow the aging of mice. If this is confirmed, CarthroniX will seek FDA approval of human trials to investigate CX-1's effect on human longevity and regeneration of vital organs. "This gift will help us explore some fundamental and transformative questions related to life span extension," said Dr. Evseenko.

CarthroniX novel technologies are proven to preserve, repair, and regenerate cartilage in joints and suppress inflammation in large animals. CarthroniX is developing two types of drugs: one that is both regenerative and anti-inflammatory, and a second that is solely anti-inflammatory.

ABOUT CarthroniX

CarthroniX is developing novel small molecules to stimulate the growth and regeneration of articular cartilage in joints. CarthroniX patented, first-in-class small molecule CX-1 activates an established regenerative pathway; they demonstrated this results in cartilage proliferation, cellular migration, and deposition of cartilaginous matrix.

Media Contact: Joe Marchelewski, [emailprotected]

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CarthroniX President/Chairman of the Board R. Rex Parris and Carrol Parris Donate $50,000 in Support of Life Extension Research - PRNewswire

Sustainability and Covid-19 accomodations can co-exist in hospitality industry, by Jane Bokunewicz – Press of Atlantic City

While hospitality organizations have taken steps to slow the spread of coronavirus, in terms of green initiatives, they may have taken a few steps back.

In 2019, a World Wide Fund for Nature study estimated that by the year 2030, plastic pollution would nearly double. By and by, more restaurant operators and food establishments began finding sustainable solutions to reverse this trend. The casual chain Just Salad introduced a $1 reusable plastic bowl to its customers, saving an estimated 75,000 pounds of plastic waste per year. Starbucks and Dunkin Donuts offered low-cost reusable cups. Supermarkets strongly encouraged and in some instances, required reusable shopping bags at checkout. These innovative methods to reduce plastic usage would soon be placed on an indefinite hold in an effort to follow CDC guidelines for COVID-19 and minimize tactile transmission between staff and customers.

In the wake of COVID-19 and the shutdown to follow, local restaurants faced an evident catch-22 contradiction when it comes to reducing trash, plastic and non-recyclables: take-out. As restaurants began to experience major losses in revenue, take-out and delivery deemed permissible by most states seemed to be the only way these establishments could keep their doors open. Customers were happy to provide support and longevity to their local businesses.

However, take-out typically requires single-use packaging and excessive plastic consumption, which poses an environmental concern. A Press of Atlantic City article on July 30 reported a significant increase in litter on the beaches and boardwalks due in part to an increase in outdoor dining and take out orders.

Unfortunately, food and beverage is not the only hospitality sector to have to scale back green initiatives. Pre-pandemic, hotels including Marriott, Hilton and Intercontinental began replacing mini-shampoos and conditioners with bulk pump-top dispenser units in an effort to reduce plastic waste. In todays reality, the pump-top while environmentally conscious could result in guests feeling hesitant to touch something previously used by other guests.

At the present moment, slowing the spread of COVID-19 and saving as many human lives as possible is of higher priority than negative environmental impact. However, whos to say that the two cannot work in tandem? Do customers need the plastic utensils provided for takeout if they are just taking the food home to eat? Just offering a no-utensil option could both reduce waste and save money.

COVID-19 has encouraged the eco-friendly innovation known as contactless technology. McGettigans 19th Hole in Galloway, for example, has a QSR code on each dining table that customers can scan with their smart phone and be directed almost instantly to an online menu, eliminating the risk of contracting the virus via physical menus and reducing the need for disposable paper or plastic-coated menus. Sirens Bar & Grill in Atlantic City has taken QSR coding a step further: once the customer scans the code, they are able to place orders directly from their smart phone, enter their table number, and wait patiently for their food to arrive. Customers can pay the bill and tip from their phones as well, entirely eliminating touch, and paper, from the process.

Without a doubt, the ingenuity on the part of restaurant, hotel and casino operators in adapting to this new normal of COVID-19 precuations has been nothing short of commendable. As operators continue to innovate and rethink previous business models, it is also especially important to keep an eye on sustainability finding ways to both slow the spread and minimize unnecessary waste.

Jane Bokunewicz, of Galloway Township, is coordinator of the Lloyd D. Levenson Institute for Gaming, Hospitality and Tourism, and an associate professor of hospitality and tourism management studies at Stockton University,

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Sustainability and Covid-19 accomodations can co-exist in hospitality industry, by Jane Bokunewicz - Press of Atlantic City

HABRI Advocates the Human-Animal Bond – Pet Age

No matter where you are, the four words in these uncertain times seem to precede every commercial, every newscast and every other piece of media across the globe. True enough, in this brave new world of COVID-19, anxiety and fear seem to be the marching orders of the day. Finding ways to safely destress and maintain mental health becomes a major priority when all the world seems to be falling apart.

We, of course, know that one of the best sources of mental wellness comes directly from pet ownership. Numerous studies have shown that pet ownership and interactions with pets have direct, tangible benefits on a persons health. But, spreading the word of these benefits has become the watchwords for the Human Animal Bond Research Institute (HABRI).

Founded in 2010 by leaders throughout the pet industry, HABRI works to advance through science, education and advocacy, the vital role of the human-animal bond in the health and well-being of individuals, communities, and companion animals.

In doing so, the organization maintains the worlds largest online library of human-animal bond research, it funds scientific research to document the health benefits of companion animals, and it serves as a liaison to the public for that research.

HABRIs advocacy takes shape in numerous forms, starting with research. To date, HABRI has funded over $3M across 30-plus scientific research projects, demonstrating the health value of companion animals and pets on their owners. Its research partners have included University of Missouri, Tufts University, University of Georgia, and several other major research institutions. In May 2018, HABRI partnered with Mars Petcare to hold a summit on the role of pets in alleviating loneliness, social isolation and other mental ailments; a partnership which continues through this day.

The results of these HABRI-funded research studies have benefitted nearly every walk of life: pets have been shown to improve reading comprehension, reduce classroom disruptions and increase social skill acquisition for third and fourth grade children, have shown improved family function and reduced stress in homes with autistic children, have shown to reduce PTSD symptoms in veterans, and so much more.

HABRIs research partnerships continue to be in the vanguard, showing the benefits of pet ownership and in animal-companionship on the whole. Other research under HABRIs purview has included pet allergy prevention and immunity research, studies into the benefits of companion animals within the workplace, and the correlation between cardiovascular fitness to dog ownership.

Further, HABRIs research has even resulted in changes at the legislative level. The Pet and Women Safety Act, which passed in December 2018, now provides grants to domestic violence shelters to include service animals to aid in rehabilitating victims of domestic violence. Thanks to the tireless advocacy of those in the pet care community, these animals can now help countless individuals across the country.

This comes in conjunction with HABRIs Pet Night on Capitol Hill, a yearly reception in Washington, DC, that provides members of the pet care community to interact with members of Congress, soundly delivering the message that pets are vital for human health and quality of life. While COVID-19 has prevented an in-person Pet Night this year, HABRI was able to shift to Pet Week on Capitol Hill, which featured a full week of programming between legislators and pet care professionals.

And now, in a world that continually faces social isolation and loneliness due to COVID-19-based restrictions, the role of companion animals on our mental health becomes magnified to a powerful degree. HABRI has responded to this need by sharing numerous infographicsavailable on their websitedemonstrating the benefits of pet ownership on longevity, mental health, and more. In addition, HABRI maintains an active social media presence on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and LinkedIn, sharing up-to-the-minute information on research initiatives, events within the pet care community, and other content that can easily be shared with all those interested in the bond between pets and their owners. Many thanks to Steve Feldman and Lindsey Melfi for contributing valuable content for this article. For those interested in supporting HABRI, viewing the organizations research or downloading HABRI posters, flyers or infographics, visit habri.org.

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HABRI Advocates the Human-Animal Bond - Pet Age

L.A. Zoo’s lion soulmates euthanized together after age-related health problems – CTV News

Hubert and Kalisa were best friends for life.

The African lion duo spent many years together, never having cubs with each other but companions, nonetheless.

But on Thursday, their partnership came to an end. The Los Angeles Zoo made the decision to humanely euthanize the two lions, due to declining health and age-related illnesses.

"Hubert and Kalisa are an iconic part of the L.A. Zoo experience, and our staff and guests have been touched by their loyal companionship," Denise Verret, director of the L.A. Zoo, said in a statement. "Their longevity is truly a testament to the level of expert care our veterinary and animal care teams provide for our elderly animals. These lions will remain a positive part of our history, and they will be greatly missed."

Hubert, born Feb. 7, 1999, and Kalisa, born Dec. 26, 1998 spent six years together at the L.A. Zoo, and even more while at the Woodland Park Zoo in Seattle.

The average life expectancy for African lions in the wild is mid-teens, whereas in captivity is about 17 years, the L.A. Zoo said.

Their population in the wild is estimated between 23,000 to 39,000, but declining, the L.A. Zoo said. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species lists the animals as "vulnerable" because of "human-wildlife conflict, prey depletion, the illegal trade of lion body parts for traditional medicine, trophy hunting, and disease," the zoo said.

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L.A. Zoo's lion soulmates euthanized together after age-related health problems - CTV News

NUS-led team uncovers molecule that promotes muscle health when magnetised – Newswise

Newswise As people age, they progressively lose muscle mass and strength, and this can lead to frailty and other age-related diseases. As the causes for the decline remain largely unknown, promoting muscle health is an area of great research interest. A recent study led by the researchers from the National University of Singapore (NUS) has shown how a molecule found in muscles responds to weak magnetic fields to promote muscle health.

Led by Associate Professor Alfredo Franco-Obregn from the NUS Institute for Health Innovation and Technology (iHealthtech), the team found that a protein known as TRPC1 responds to weak oscillating magnetic fields. Such a response is normally activated when the body exercises. This responsiveness to magnets could be used to stimulate muscle recovery, which could improve the life quality for patients with impaired mobility, in an increasingly ageing society.

The use of pulsed magnetic fields to simulate some of the effects of exercise will greatly benefit patients with muscle injury, stroke, and frailty as a result of advanced age, said lead researcher Assoc Prof Franco-Obregn, who is also from the NUS Department of Surgery.

The NUS research team collaborated with the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) on this study, and their results were first published online in Advanced Biosystems on 2 September 2020. The work was also featured on the cover of the journals print edition on 27 November 2020.

Magnets and muscle health

The magnetic fields that the research team used to stimulate the muscle health were only 10 to 15 times stronger than the Earths magnetic field, yet still much weaker than a common bar magnet, raising the intriguing possibility that weak magnetism is a stimulus that muscles naturally interact with.

To test this theory, the research team first used a special experimental setup to cancel the effect of all surrounding magnetic fields. The researchers found that the muscle cells indeed grew more slowly when shielded from all environmental magnetic fields. These observations strongly supported the notion that the Earths magnetic field naturally interacts with muscles to elicit biological responses.

To show the involvement of TRPC1 as an antenna for natural magnetism to promote muscle health, the researchers genetically engineered mutant muscle cells that were unresponsive to any magnetic field by deleting TRPC1 from their genomes. The researchers were then able to reinstate magnetic sensitivity by selectively delivering TRPC1 to these mutant muscle cells in small vesicles that fused with the mutant cells.

In their previous studies, the researchers have shown that response to such magnetic fields were strongly correlated to the presence of TRPC1, and it included the rejuvenation of cartilage by indirectly regulating the gut microbiome, fat burning and insulin-sensitivity via positive actions on muscle. The present study provided conclusive evidence that TRPC1 serves as an ubiquitous biological antenna to surrounding magnetic fields to modulate human physiology, particularly when targeted for muscle health.

Metabolic changes similar to those achieved with exercise have been observed in previous clinical trials and studies led by Assoc Prof Franco-Obregn. Encouraging benefits of using the magnetic fields to stimulate muscle cells have been found, with as little as 10 minutes of exposure per week. This tantalising possibility, to improve muscle health without exercising, could facilitate recovering and rehabilitation of patients with muscle dysfunction.

Assoc Prof Franco-Obregn shared, About 40 per cent of an average persons body is muscle. Our results demonstrate a metabolic interaction between muscle and magnetism which hopefully can be exploited to improve human health and longevity.

Next steps

This study represents a milestone in the understanding of how a key protein may developmentally react to magnetic fields.

Metabolic health such as weight, blood sugar levels, insulin, and cholesterol are strongly influenced by muscle health. As exercise is a strong modulator of metabolic diseases through the working of the muscles, and magnetic fields exert similar benefits of exercise, such magnetism may help patients who are unable to undertake exercise because of injury, disease, or frailty. As such, the NUS iHealthtech research team is now working to extend their study to reduce drug dependence for the treatment of diseases such as diabetes.

We hope that our research can help alleviate side effects by reducing the use of drugs for disease treatment, and to improve the quality of life of the patients, said Assoc Prof Franco-Obregn.

This project has recently won the Catalyst Award in the inaugural Healthy Longevity Catalyst Awards conferred by the US National Academy of Medicine. The team was recognised for their breakthrough innovation to extend human health and function later in life.

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NUS-led team uncovers molecule that promotes muscle health when magnetised - Newswise

Cognitive Super Agers Defy Decline in Brainpower | NIA – National Institute on Aging

Although its normal for brainpower to decline as people age, its not inevitable, studies show. Some people remain cognitively sharp into their 80s, 90s, and beyond, defying the common assumption that cognitive decline is a natural part of aging.

These lucky few, called cognitive super agers, perform demonstrably better on memory tests, such as remembering past events or recalling a list of words, compared with other adults their age. NIA-supported researchers are exploring the factors that set these people apart so the knowledge can be used to help others prevent or reverse age-related cognitive decline.

There is a tendency to equate aging with a decline in mental function, said Molly Wagster, Ph.D., chief of the Behavioral and Systems Neuroscience Branch in NIAs Division of Neuroscience. We want to study these cognitive super agers, who clearly break the expectation of cognitive decline, and unravel their secrets.

Atrophy is the strongest correlate of age, said Claudia Kawas, M.D., of the University of California (UC), Irvine. She leads the longitudinal 90+ Study of more than 1,800 people age 90 years and older the fastest growing sector of the U.S. population.

According to Kawas, a 90-year-old brain typically weighs 1,100 to 1,200 grams, and this is 100 or more grams less than the typical 40-year-old brain. Brain shrinkage mostly affects the prefrontal cortex and hippocampus, and the cerebral cortex, which is important for complex thought processes. Over time, the brain can also be affected by declining levels of neurotransmitters, changing hormones, deteriorating blood vessels, and impaired circulation of blood glucose. These brain changes can affect thinking, making it harder to recall words and names, focus on tasks, and process new information.

Physically, the brains of cognitive super agers seem to defy wear and tear better than the average brain. Researchers at Northwestern Universitys Mesulam Center for Cognitive Neurology and Alzheimers Disease in Chicago have tentatively identified a brain signature for cognitive super agers, which they define as people age 80 years and older who have performance on memory tests comparable to people two to three decades younger. The researchers conducted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans on 12 cognitive super agers, 10 cognitively normal peers, and 14 cognitively normal people in the 50- to 65-year age range. Comparisons revealed that the cingulate cortex, a brain region considered important for the integration of information related to memory, attention, cognitive control, and motivation was thicker in super agers than in their same-age peers and showed no atrophy compared with the same brain region of the middle agers. In fact, a specific region of the anterior cingulate cortex was significantly thicker in the brains of cognitive super agers than in middle agers brains.

In a separate study, the Northwestern researchers found that super agers brains contained a much higher density of a particular type of cell called von Economo neurons, which are linked to social intelligence and awareness. Their brains had more of these neurons even than the brains of younger adults.

In a third investigation, the Northwestern researchers used MRI to measure brain volume over an 18-month period in a small group of study participants age 80 and older. They measured a 2.24% average annual volume loss in the cognitively normal adults versus a 1.06% loss in the super agers. In short, the super agers brains shrank at a significantly slower rate.

At Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, researchers are studying younger super agers people between age 60 and 80 who have memory recall abilities similar to those of 18- to 32-year-olds. Theyve identified distinctive thicknesses in two neural networks that connect parts of the brain important to memory function. The thickness is nearly the same as in the brains of younger adults. The researchers also found that super agers have a bigger hippocampus than other adults their age.

Researchers with UC Irvines 90+ Study have identified a curious and counterintuitive feature of the super ager brain: sometimes it shows the pathologies that characterize Alzheimers disease and related dementias.

Everyone thinks theres this really strong correlation if you have plaques and tangles, you have dementia, and if you dont have plaques and tangles, you shouldnt have dementia, said Kawas. Through both autopsies and PET scans of the brains of the oldest old, investigators have found that both of those things are often not true.

Researchers are exploring several theories to explain why some peoples cognitive abilities stay intact to the end of life. Perhaps they start out in life with larger, stronger brains. Or perhaps their brains somehow change to compensate for agings damaging effects. Another theory being pursued is whether their brains have stronger defenses against the assaults of aging.

A persons environment may be a factor. Human and animal studies by NIA-supported scientists have contributed to the growing body of evidence that enriching experiences, such as advanced education and mind-challenging occupations, can help brains last longer.

Various exposures throughout the lifetime might help people maintain their brains better or maintain their cognition in the face of age- or disease-related brain changes, explained Yaakov Stern, Ph.D., of the Taub Institute for Research on Alzheimers Disease and the Aging Brain at Columbia University Medical College, New York.

Other research focuses on genetic explanations. In an ongoing study of the Longevity Genes Project at Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New York, investigators are comparing the genetic profiles of children of healthy centenarians with the genetic profiles of the children of parents who did not live as long. They are looking for genes that might support strong neural networks and offer protection against mental and physical decline.

Social factors also could play a role in healthy cognitive aging. In one of Northwestern Universitys studies, investigators gave a 42-item questionnaire on psychological well-being to 31 cognitive super agers and 19 cognitively normal peers. The cognitive super agers reported more friends and family connections, a finding that builds on past research showing links between psychological well-being and lower risk of Alzheimers.

Researchers are grappling to explain why some peoples brains resist physical decline and why other peoples brains show physical signs of age- and disease-related deterioration yet continue to function well. Two theories that are being explored revolve around the concepts of cognitive reserve and brain maintenance. Cognitive reserve is the idea that some brains are strong enough to fend off the assaults of aging and disease. Brain maintenance is the idea that some brains have extra power to keep working well even in the face of aging and disease.

As UC Irvines Claudia Kawas, M.D., explained, You can super age by not getting Alzheimers pathology, or you can super age by getting it and somehow managing to not get sick with it.

Yaakov Stern, Ph.D., of Columbia University, uses a computer analogy: Some peoples brains have good hardware that doesnt break down as easily, while others have software that can write around problem areas in the hardware.

What specific changes in the brain and body provoke cognitive decline or, conversely, stave it off? A team of scientists in NIAs Intramural Research Program, led by Peter Rapp, Ph.D., chief of the Neurocognitive Aging Section, is seeking an answer through a project called STARRRS, for Successful Trajectories of Aging: Reserve and Resilience in RatS.

Rats are useful for studying the effects of aging because they are short-lived, and their brains do not accumulate the hallmark plaque and tangle pathology of Alzheimers. The breed of rats used for STARRRS has natural variability; some maintain their cognitive function as they age, and some dont. This makes them particularly useful for comparative studies.

Researchers are observing the behaviors of these rats over their lifetimes and using neuroimaging, tissue sampling (obtained through noninvasive means, so as not to interfere with behavior), and other methods to track whats going on in the brain.

This is a rare and wonderful opportunity to follow individual animals and relate any changes in cognitive performance to changes going on elsewhere in the body and in the brain, said Wagster. STARRS should give us insights into potential targets for prevention and intervention, as well as when it would be most appropriate to intervene.

In April 2017, NIA coordinated the Cognitive Aging Summit III, which was supported by the McKnight Brain Research Foundation (MBRF) through a generous grant to the Foundation for NIH (FNIH). The summit brought together a multidisciplinary group of investigators with shared interest in research on age-related cognitive decline and cognitive reserve and resilience, as compared to cognitive impairment or dementia. Participants identified opportunities for expanding our knowledge in this area, as well as gaps in our knowledge. One of the opportunities highlighted resulted in the STARRRS initiative.

Another new initiative that stemmed from the summit and that also is underway Collaboratory on Research Definitions for Cognitive Reserve and Resilience brings together investigators from around the globe to develop a consensus on uniform definitions for terms such as cognitive reserve, brain maintenance, resilience, and compensation so that the research community will have a common language and understanding for reporting of results. Use of uniform definitions offers many benefits, including the pooling of data across studies to allow for adequately powered analyses and better interpretation of data.

Its one thing to say, life exposures might increase reserve, says Stern, who serves as the primary investigator for the collaboratory charged with the definitions task. Its another thing to say, we propose that the types of occupation people have can allow them to cope better with amyloid pathology. We can measure amyloid, we can measure cognition, and we can show how life exposure actually moderates between the two. In other words, we can turn a concept into a very concrete recipe for analysis.

In February 2020, NIA issued an additional funding opportunity that stemmed from the Cognitive Aging Summit for support of research to understand factors that promote sustained cognitive health in older age: RFA-AG-21-015, Network for Identification, Evaluation, and Tracking of Older Persons with Superior Cognitive Performance for Their Chronological Age. Although chronological age itself remains the strongest predictor of age-related cognitive decline and many forms of dementia, including Alzheimers, it has become clear there are protective factors against these outcomes that are poorly understood. Awarded grants will support aggregation of sufficient numbers of these cognitive super agers to advance the fields understanding of factors that promote sustained cognitive health and those that are not of primary importance. Working in part with funds contributed by MBRF in conjunction with FNIH, NIA invites applications to identify, evaluate, and track individuals with superior cognitive performance for their advanced age across multiple sites. The deadline for submission of applications is October 1, 2020.

Further research on cognitive super agers could lead to strategies that everyone can use in younger years, in midlife, and in older age to maintain thinking and memory skills. Just as important, it could also provide insights into how dementias such as Alzheimers might be prevented or reversed and provide critically important information for the identification of targets for interventions. And by identifying the factors that affect brain health, this research might one day be used to reduce disparities in brain-enriching opportunities so that everyone has a chance to keep their brain at maximum power throughout life.

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Cognitive Super Agers Defy Decline in Brainpower | NIA - National Institute on Aging

Generosity can make us live longer, new research shows. Now, that’s more important than ever – CNN International

There is a linear relationship between the amount and frequency of wealth transfers and the lengths of individuals' lives, the study results have shown.

"At the beginning of life you are reliant on others," said lead study author Tobias Vogt, who is an assistant professor in the faculty of spatial sciences at the University of Groningen. "It's a good idea to help others throughout the course of our lives."

The researchers' goal was to track data on how every individual in a given society consumes and saves.

Intergenerational wealth transfers can include money, but they can also include houses, benefits or time.

Wealth transfers are more common where social cohesion is high

The researchers recognized that other factors -- such as country's gross domestic product (GDP) and income inequality -- also affect a population's life expectancy and adjusted their models to include those factors.

One likely reason, Vogt said, for the correlation between countries experiencing greater longevity in the presence of financial transfers was that those countries exhibited stronger social cohesion.

To back that up, he cited a 2010 meta-analysis performed by researchers at Brigham Young University -- with an aggregate of 148 separate studies involving a total of more than 300,000 participants. It found that survival was 50% greater for those with stronger social relationships compared to those with lesser or no social bonds.

Sharing leads to long life

Western Europe and Japan ranked highest on data linking resource sharing and lower mortality levels.

France and Japan, the nations with the lowest mortality risk, showed the highest average individual wealth transfers. Theses countries shared between 68% and 69% of their lifetime income, while reporting mortality rates about twice as low as China and Turkey, where people shared between 44% and 48% of their lifetime earnings, according to the study.

"South American countries also rank high in terms of generosity, as they share more than 60% of an average individual's lifetime income," the researchers reported.

On the low side of the spectrum, countries in Sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia were those in which people were least able to share portions of their lifetime earnings and experienced shorter life spans.

This research complements findings in the UN's World Happiness Report

Generosity and life expectancy are among the six variables scientists look at when making the World Happiness Report, which is released annually by the Sustainable Development Solutions Network for the United Nations.

This year, even as the coronavirus pandemic swept Europe, Finland held on to its happiest country title for a third straight year.

"Generous behavior is related to trust and mutual regard and a sense of being together," said John Helliwell, co-editor of the World Happiness Report and professor emeritus of economics at the University of British Columbia. "People who are happier are subsequently healthier."

Vogt and his team's research fit in well with the body of science the UN and researchers around the world have been monitoring since 2012 as they have cultivated the happiness index, Helliwell said.

Societies with high mutual trust are more likely to be resilient, and that could be seen in how they have fared recently against the coronavirus, he explained.

Those nations succesfully keeping the virus at bay, such as Norway and New Zealand, are places where people trust each other.

"There's an evolutionary story being told by this (paper)," he said, that our collective endurance as a species isn't about survival of the fittest individuals, but rather about survival of the most cooperative societies.

"To the extent generosity adds to longevity, it's about our resilience to disease, or to earthquakes, or changes in climate," Helliwell said. "Leaders must broaden our capacity to help one another."

These results have relevance to the pandemic

In a year of pandemic, global GDP is expected to drop by 5.2%, according to a World Bank estimate in June.

That means we're in for a lot of lost transfers of value, whether they be a scholarship fund not collecting its annual fundraising goal, a laid-off middle-aged couple struggling with ailing parents' nursing home bills or governments collecting less in taxes during a time of high unemployment.

Although simply spending time with a wiser older relative might be one of the best ways to transfer value from one generation to another, measures such as those would be a subject for a future study, Vogt said.

"We suggest that this support reduces mortality by meeting urgent material needs, but also that sharing generosity may reflect the strength of social connectedness, which itself benefits human health and wellbeing and indirectly raises survival," the researchers wrote in the paper.

As the economic engine grinds to a halt, we're faced with the prospect of our resource crunch resonating in the lives of ourselves, our children and our parents for years to come.

But the social science says there are ways to navigate the dilemma.

"It's important how countries get out of these situations," Vogt said, noting how countries such as Spain and France have high life expectancy and have high social cohesion, characteristics that can help shield them against the worst effects of the pandemic.

One of the most valuable ways to transfer something important to a loved one is to cook and care and read to them, he said.

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Generosity can make us live longer, new research shows. Now, that's more important than ever - CNN International

Global Precision Medicine Software Market in-Depth Analysis, Key Players, Challenges, Segmentation and Forecasts to 2027. – The Think Curiouser

Latest updated Report gives analysis of Precision Medicine Software market overview, scope, market risks, market driving force and market opportunities. Precision Medicine Software competitive situation, sales, revenue and global market share of top manufacturers working in Precision Medicine Software industry are analyzed clearly by landscape contrast

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The research mainly covers Precision Medicine Software market in North America (United States, Canada and Mexico), Precision Medicine Software Europe industry (Germany, France, UK, Russia and Italy), Asia-Pacific (Southeast Asia, China, Korea, India and Japan), Precision Medicine Software South America industry (Brazil, Argentina, Colombia), Middle East and Africa (Saudi Arabia, UAE, Egypt, Nigeria and South Africa). The Precision Medicine Software report also performs SWOT (Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats) with XX CAGR values, and XX USD of past(2015-2019) and Precision Medicine Software forecast(2020-2027) on the basis of growth and market condition following with the size of Precision Medicine Software market.

The Global Precision Medicine Software market reportcomprises variouskey manufacturers, application analysis and type analysis:

Key players of the global Precision Medicine Software market:

Abbott Laboratories(US)Syapse, Inc. (US)Roper Technologies(US)Sunquest Information Systems Inc. (US)Pfizer, Inc., Merck & Co., Inc.(US)N-of-One, Inc. (US)NantHealth, Inc. (US)LifeOmic Health, LLC (US)Fabric Genomics (US)Allscripts(US)GlaxoSmithKline plc(UK)Gene42, Inc. (Canada)Foundation Medicine, Inc. (US)Koninklijke Philips N.V. (Netherlands)PierianDx, Inc. (US)Translational Software, Inc. (US)Flatiron Health, Inc. (US)IBM Watson Group (US)Sanofi S.A.(France)Tempus Labs, Inc. (US)AstraZeneca plc(US)2bPrecise LLC (Israel)Qiagen(Germany)SOPHiA GENETICS SA (Switzerland)Human Longevity, Inc. (US)

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Cloud-basedOn-premise

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Healthcare providersResearch centers & Government institutesPharmaceutical & Biotechnology companiesOther end users

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Segments of the Precision Medicine Software Report:

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1. Precision Medicine Software Industry Synopsis

2. Global Precision Medicine Software Market Size by Segmentation (2020-2027)

3. Precision Medicine Software Leading Manufacturers Company Profiles

4. Global Precision Medicine Software Market Competitive Study by Players

5. US Precision Medicine Software Market Development Status and Overview

6. Europe Precision Medicine Software Market Improvement Status and Overview

7. Africa Precision Medicine Software Market Development Status and Overview

8. South-America Precision Medicine Software Market Improvement Status and Overview

9. Asia-pacific Precision Medicine Software Market Development Status and Overview

10. Southeast Asia Precision Medicine Software Improvement Status and Overview

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12. Dynamics of Precision Medicine Software Market

13. Precision Medicine Software Market Growth Factors Study

14. Research Conclusions

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Global Precision Medicine Software Market in-Depth Analysis, Key Players, Challenges, Segmentation and Forecasts to 2027. - The Think Curiouser

Layoffs plague nonprofits some more troubled than others – Generocity

In the beginning, there were nonprofit agencies about 15,000 in the five-county region.

Then COVID-19 divided them into essential and nonessential organizations. On the necessary side, are the nonprofits that provide the basics that millions of Americans depend upon to survive. On the wrong side of the coronavirus tracks is the arts and cultural organizations whose offerings are deemed wonderful but dispensable in this time of pandemic.

And that inequality has begat escalating unemployment.

Russell Johnson, president and CEO of HealthSpark Foundation, said that its too early to tell the impact statistically but anecdotally there have been many layoffs. We are carefully monitoring this question. Some agencies have laid-off staff. Some were forced to close such as child care centers, senior centers, YMCAs and have either not yet reopened or are slowing reopening.

HealthSpark was a founding partner and investor in the MontCoPA COVID-19 Response Fund, a partnership effort between local philanthropic organizations, nonprofits, government, and public citizens, which has raised nearly $800,000 towards pandemic relief efforts and has supported 127 nonprofits to date most of them health and human service agencies.

"Nearly all organizations that are not providing safety net services are laying off their staff especially as their PPP (Payroll Protection Program) runs out."Nancy Burd

Nearly all organizations that are not providing safety net services are laying off their staff especially as their PPP (Payroll Protection Program) runs out and no further allocation is on the horizon, said Nancy Burd of The Burd Group, a Philadelphia-based strategic planning consultancy for grantmakers.

According to a recent study, there were 242,000 nonprofit employees earning more than $11 billion in annual wages in the five-county Philadelphia region.

In May, the results of the Rapid Response: the PHL Nonprofits and COVID-19 Survey, showed that about one out of every five nonprofits in the 10-county region had already laid off staff and one in four anticipated more furloughs to come within the year. Most of these nonprofits were small agencies with a staff of less than 20 people, a large volunteer force and annual budgets between $1 million to $2.49 million.

The nonprofit sector is one-fourth of the economy of Montgomery County, said Johnson, (This survey) gives you a sense of what the nonprofit sector is going through.

For workers, the pandemic s longevity is turning temporary furloughs into permanent unemployment. For the nonprofits that are hibernating programs versus shutting down completely, (they) are trying to keep some programming alive virtually and would hope to re-open in 2021. At that time they would staff up as programs come back. Maybe the staff will be different, but that is the current strategy for many organizations, added Burd.

In our area, one of the first to announce furloughs was the Greater Philadelphia YMCA of Conshohocken, states largest coronavirus-related layoff. We had to make this really tough choice, CEO and President Shaun Elliott told the Philadelphia Inquirer, so that we could survive as an organization to reopen when its possible.

A $100 million organization, the Greater Philadelphia YMCA was taking in only $500,000 a month on expenses of $45 million after the state shuttered the agency.

The YMCA laid off 4,000 people, about 700 of them fulltime employees, leaving a skeletal staff of about 60 people. Elliott stopped collecting a paycheck and the pay of remaining staff was reduced.

On the stronger side of the corona divide are the health and human service agencies.

Here in Philadelphia, and elsewhere, nonprofits providing important safety net services are responding to greater demand and resources appear to be plentiful at all levels philanthropy, government and individuals, Burd said. The Covid 19 Fund run by the Philadelphia Foundation has raised $17 million+ and has distributed most all of it, but only to the social safety net nonprofits.

However, the cultural and arts sector, which was a $4 billion economic driver in Philadelphia alone, is faring much worse. Donors, who may be historically committed to the arts or their colleges are diverting their philanthropic dollars to those in need, that is their first impulse, Burd explained.

The irony is many nonprofits were traveling the right fiscal path and had diversified their revenue streams to decrease dependency on grants and government contracts. It was, in the time before COVID-19, sound business practice.

The great recession of 2008 was the wake-up call. We had encouraged the sector to increase earned income, to become less dependent upon contributed income which has too many strings attached and little control. And those that intentionally recalibrated their business model, were among the healthiest orgs. They became adept at maximizing earned income by monetizing their assets and using them aggressively all to promote financial health and growth and prepare for crisis, Burd said.

Then she added: But today, these are precisely the organizations who have been hurt the most in this pandemic.

After careful reflection, we have determined that reopening Please Touch Museum at this time presents a significant public health risk as well as a financial one. With that, The Please Touch Museum announced it was extending its temporary closure into 2021. After three rounds of layoffs in six months, the staff dropped from 71 employees to 18. Patricia D. Wellenbach, president and CEO of Please Touch Museum called the decision, agonizing.

(Photo by P. Meyer for Visit Philadelphia)

Before COVID-19 the museum had an operating budget of $700,000 per month, almost 90% of it was funded from earned revenue including ticket sales and facilities rentals. With the shutdown of the state and schools, its operating budget had slid to $200,000 per month.

The Kimmel Center too earned 93% of its income and had reduced its dependency on philanthropy. But that was before large public gatherings were forbidden. With no audience for its money-making shows and concerts, Kimmel Center President and CEO Anne C. Ewers announced it was furloughing 80% of its staff and cutting pay and hours for the others.

In general, nonprofits are waiting for state and federal budgets (to provide funding), Johnson said. In June, Moodys Analytics announced that based on their calculations, states collectively would need to find $312 billion while the local governments would need uncover close to $200 billion to balance their budgets.

We are forever changed, Johnson. We will never go back to the way things were.

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Layoffs plague nonprofits some more troubled than others - Generocity

How Gavin Williamson failed latest A-level test and lost all remaining trust Tom Richmond – Yorkshire Post

NewsOpinionColumnistsBORIS Johnson sacked the top official at the Department for Education this week, saying it was time for fresh official leadership.

Saturday, 29th August 2020, 8:30 am

Jonathan Slaters departure came shortly after Ofqual chief executive Sally Collier resigned over the A-level and GCSE exams debacle.

I hope both will still give evidence to next weeks Education Select Committee inquiry into the awarding of grades and to quote the Prime Minister that mutant algorithm.

Its also vital that teachers and students know where they stand before the new academic year begins how much of the curriculum will be feasible and how will their work be assessed?

This much was clear after Williamsons latest interview on Radio Fours Today programme I, and others, now struggle to trust a single word that he utters.

It began with the latest U-turn this time on the wearing of face masks in schools. At every stage we always listen to the best scientific and medical advice, he said.

Williamson then ignored a question about the views of Dr Jenny Harries, the deputy chief medical officer, who had said 48 hours previously that evidence about the need for over-12s to wear face masks was not strong.

Told that headteachers were dizzy from the frequency of Government U-turns, the Minister said: We set out really clear guidance in early July. If it was that clear, why the confusion now?

Williamson was no clearer when responding to a senior Tory MPs call for the firm smack of government to spread the message that schools are safe. That is why we have been absolutely clear... whittered Williamson. If you had been, backbenchers would not be mutinous.

Told it had been a torrid time, he was then asked if he expected to still be in his job in a years time. Not only did Williamson dodge the question I love the job, I have one of the very, very best jobs in government but there was no apology for the angst that he has caused.

It was then put to Williamson that an awful lot of his own MPs do not share his confidence. He responded by talking about educations amazing ability to transform lives and his upbringing in, Im ashamed to say, Yorkshire.

Finally, Williamson was asked about Ofquals algorithm and whether he had pressed the exam regulator to see if it would adversely affect poorer children. At every stage... fairness had to be at the heart of it, he obfuscated.

The presenter persisted did the Minister ask how the model would affect poorer children? He said that he did so. Yet, when pressed to see if he was satisfied by any assurances given, he started talking about the difficulties in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland over exams.

Having then intimated that Ofqual, and not the DfE was to blame, Williamson was then asked why he had not sought resignations earlier? His unease was again discernible.

And when the issue of an independent inquiry was raised at the end, to ensure children are not treated again like this, Williamson said other measures were being considered.

Evasive, insincere and disingenuous, a student would expect a Grade U if they performed in an exam and failed to answer so many basic and fundamental questions.

Why, therefore, should we continue to trust Gavin Williamson with the education of the next generation when his primary preoccupation appears to be saving his own job at whatever cost? I despair.

GAVIN Wiliamsons political disasters do for now take the heat off Matt Hancock, the Health and Social Care Secretary. Those two words for now are key and pertain to social care and staff shortages in this sector.

Yet some interesting feedback from an acquaintance whose daughter, who is studying medicine, has been working in a care home during Covid. They commented on what a positive experience it has been. They also saw how the most basic of personal care is critical to good medicine.

And, because she got to know the patients better than she would on a temporary ward, she has seen them more as human beings who need special care and attention. Now appreciative that basic care is as important as sophisticated medical interventions, theyre valid points that Ministers should take on board.

IMITATION, they say, is still the sincerest form of flattery hence why I spotted Tony Blairs autobiography in a prominent position on the bookshelf of Damian Hinds when the former Education Secretary was interviewed by Channel Four News.

What I do know, however, is that schools policy should not be a political football; there should be far more cross-party co-operation, but I fear this is a forlorn hope when Parliament is so polarised.

TALKING of Tony Blair, he was still Prime Minister when Jimmy Anderson took the first of his 600 Test wickets.

A measure of Andersons longevity, the Education Secretary back in May 2003 was Charles Clarke he had replaced Estelle Morris after she resigned because she believed she was not up to the job.

A rare honourable resignation take note Gavin Williamson there have been significantly more Education Secretaries than England cricket captains in the past 17 years. On that, Im stumped.

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How Gavin Williamson failed latest A-level test and lost all remaining trust Tom Richmond - Yorkshire Post

BioAge Discovers Key Pathway and Identifies Promising Phase 2 Ready Drug to Treat and Reverse Immune Aging, a Root Cause of COVID-19 Morbidity and…

BioAge Plans Phase 2 Clinical trial in Hospitalized COVID-19 Patients

Clinical development plan supported by potent inhibition of PGD2 DP1 Receptor by BGE-175, activating immune-modulating mechanisms that result in 100% survival in aged preclinical models of coronavirus

BioAges proprietary human aging data links activation of PGD2 DP1 signaling to increased risk of mortality and susceptibility to infections

RICHMOND, Calif., Aug. 25, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- BioAge Labs, Inc., a biotechnology company developing medicines to treat aging and age-related diseases, today announced that it has in-licensed a clinical-stage therapy with significant promise and potential in treating immune aging in older patients hospitalized with COVID-19. The compound, BGE-175, is a potent orally administered inhibitor of the prostaglandin D2 (PGD2) DP1 signaling pathway associated with increased risk of mortality, and susceptibility to infections. The company recently generated preclinical data showing significant immune-modulating and anti-viral activity of BGE-175 which resulted in 100 percent survival in a preclinical model of the SARS 1 virus. In addition to fully protecting infected mice from death and improving morbidity, treated mice showed a 10-fold decrease in virus in their lungs. BGE-175 has demonstrated clinical activity and safety in a large number of subjects across multiple clinical trials for another indication.

Aging is the largest risk factor for COVID-19 morbidity and mortality, said Kristen Fortney, Ph.D., BioAges Chief Executive Officer. BGE-175 has the potential to restore the function of several key immune mechanisms that become dysregulated with aging, and that are critical to mount an effective response to major immune challenges such as COVID-19, SARS, and pandemic influenza. We plan to advance BGE-175 into a Phase 2 clinical trial in COVID-19 patients to evaluate whether its unique mechanism can improve patient outcomes by directly targeting immune aging.

Dr. Fortney added, Our AI-driven analysis of our proprietary human aging data maps out how the immune system is dysregulated during aging. Beyond COVID-19, BGE-175 has the potential to address other diseases driven by immune aging. BGE-175 is the second in a growing pipeline of promising therapeutics that BioAge will bring forward to treat diseases of aging.

BioAges preclinical data, obtained in collaboration with coronavirus expert Stanley Perlman, M.D., an American Academy of Microbiology fellow, and professor at the University of Iowa, shows that DP1 receptor antagonism elicits a potent protective response in a mouse model of SARS-coronavirus viral challenge.

Dr. Perlman noted, We have found over the past several years thatan age-dependent increase inDP1 signaling contributes to worse outcomes in the context of mouse infection with several human pathogens.We havepreviously shownimproved outcomes when DP1 signaling is genetically blocked, but BGE-175 is the first drug that has the same effect.BGE-175 may help counteract deleterious immune changes that occur with aging.

These preclinical data are particularly impressive and highly differentiating to support the potential of BGE-175 in COVID-19, said Adolfo Garcia-Sastre, Ph.D., Professor of Medicine and Microbiology and co-director of the Global Health & Emerging Pathogens Institute at The Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City. While others in the field have used cellular models, BioAges preclinical data in a coronavirus preclinical model may offer more predictive translation of potential in clinical trials.

The pathways impacted by BGE-175 are linked to lifespan and healthspan in BioAges proprietary human aging data. The prostaglandin pathway, as well as several key components of the immune response to viral challenge, are significantly associated with longevity and multiple functional measures. Inhibition of PGD2 DP1 receptor signaling impacts multiple immune mechanisms, including activation of dendritic cells and NK cells, and reducing neutrophil infiltration. Preclinical studies demonstrate that BGE-175 inhibits neutrophil migration and that DP1 inhibition boosts dendritic cell function, both of which counteract known aspects of immune aging, and are also therapeutically promising for COVID-19 and other respiratory infections.

BGE-175 has demonstrated clear target engagement with inhibition of PGD2 signaling and safety in a large number of subjects across multiple clinical trials in another indication. Based on its groundbreaking research on the potential of BGE-175 for COVID-19, BioAge was granted a binding Letter of Intent from an undisclosed pharmaceutical company to enter into an exclusive license agreement to develop and commercialize BGE-175 for treatment and prevention of COVID-19 infections in the United States, Europe and the United Kingdom. Furthermore, for a one-year period BioAge has the exclusive option to license additional rights for other disease indications. Under the terms of the LOI, BioAge will make an upfront payment and contingent development and regulatory milestone payments plus royalties based on annual net sales. BioAge will be responsible for all development, manufacturing and commercialization of BGE-175 for treatment or prevention of COVID-19 infection in the United States, Europe and UK. Further details of the agreement will be released after additional patents applications are filed.

About the BioAge Platform The BioAge platform identifies key drug targets that will impact aging. The Companys proprietary human aging cohorts have blood samples collected up to 45 years ago, with participant -omics data that is tied to extensive medical follow-up records including detailed future healthspan, lifespan and disease outcomes. BioAge has built a systems biology and AI platform that leverages these rich datasets to identify the molecular drivers of age-related pathology. BioAges pipeline of therapies targeting these key pathways will address the significant unmet medical needs of an aging population.

About BioAgeBioAge is a biotechnology company developing proprietary drugs to treat aging and aging-related diseases. Since its founding in 2015, the Company has raised $37 million in venture capital funding from Andreessen Horowitz, Khosla Ventures, Felicis Ventures and others to back its AI-driven approach to map the molecular pathways that impact human longevity. BioAges mission is to develop a pipeline of therapeutic assets that increase healthspan and lifespan.

Source: BioAge Labs, Inc.

Contact Information:BioAge | peng@bioagelabs.comMedia | swheeler@wheelhouselsa.com

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BioAge Discovers Key Pathway and Identifies Promising Phase 2 Ready Drug to Treat and Reverse Immune Aging, a Root Cause of COVID-19 Morbidity and...

Hiring, investments likely to slow down; these 5 factors to decide time, pace of Indias economic recovery – The Financial Express

Rumki Majumdar

With the movement restrictions easing gradually, India is striving to bounce back to normalcy. However, some uncertainties continue to exist. The economic rebound to the pre-COVID-19 levels is likely to be gradual as the rising number of infections, the intermittent regional lockdowns, social distancing norms, and safety concerns result in a vicious cycle of low demand and supply. According to a consumer survey by Deloitte, uncertainties around employment and financial anxieties have reduced the spending intent amongst Indian consumers on discretionary goods. Lower demand is expected to translate into constrained business investment in capital projects and delay in hiring.

Policymakers and businesses will require resilience to prepare in the months ahead to recover from this crisis. Five factors will be key in determining the pace and time of the recovery. The availability of treatment and vaccines will be the most important factor, and the sooner people have access to either of these, the quicker will be the economic revival. This is because the spread of the virus and its longevity are slowly leading to another contagionof caution and fear (the second factor). Caution amongst consumers may change their consumption behaviours and demand patterns, while businesses may modify business practices leading to rapid automation or business models, such as reshoring.

The third factor will be the intensity of the secondary impact of supply-chain disruptions spilling across industries and the financial sector. Initially, a few industries, such as hospitality and manufacturing, felt the immediate impact of the virus and the movement restrictions that followed. Possibilities of several outbreaks and prolonged pandemic may impact productivity, and capacity building across all industries, all of which may also lead to slower credit growth.

The strength of domestic consumer demand, the primary pillar to growth, will be the fourth factor. While rural demand may hold up for some time because of better rainfall and the governments support to provide employment opportunities in rural areas, the rapid spread of the infections in urban areas may keep the demand subdued. That said, the infection curve in larger urban areas (such as NCR and Mumbai) appears to be flattening and economic activity is expected to gather steam as these regions gradually open up. Simultaneously, global economic growth and trade will influence domestic demand as well. A coordinated effort to curb the infection spread will translate into a synchronised recovery across the world. However, there is less evidence suggesting harmonised efforts to curb the spread as different countries are at different stages of the infection.

Finally, the extent and effectiveness of the fiscal and monetary stimulus by the government will determine the human cost and economic disruption, as India strides towards a new normal on the other side of the pandemic. So far, the government has announced a wide range of health, tax, financial, business, and social measures and reforms to help people and businesses respond to COVID-19. Fresh measures aimed at improving infrastructure, regulations, and job opportunities will likely aid in a sustained recovery and rebuilding. In other words, government measures will be crucial in cushioning the pandemic impact on industries and economic activity.

The variations around these five factors will likely determine Indias economic growth for the next few years. This could range from a moderate economic impact with gradual recovery (most likely case) to severe economic damage with sluggish recovery (extreme worst case with low likelihood). We are optimistic about the outlook and assuming that the contagion is under control by the end of this year, consumer spending will quickly pick up pace due to strong pent-up demand. Private investment growth, which has been in the negative territory for over three quarters now, will recover after it picks up cues from a sustainable increase in demand. Under the most likely scenario, recovery is likely to gain momentum from the start of FY2022 after negative growth in FY2021.

A quick economic recovery will likely have a moderate impact across all industries and may lead to a relatively uniform revival, with a few bouncing back sooner than others. Once the recovery begins under the most likely scenario, prices may escalate faster. Pent-up demand backed by high government spending may cause demand to overshoot supply.

If the pandemic prolongs, essential goods segment of retail, the pharmaceutical industry, and the technology and communication industry will likely weather the storm in due course of time. However, the hospitality and banking industry may continue to see difficult times ahead. Industries must prepare themselves for uncertain times while hoping for the best.

Rumki Majumdar is an Economist at Deloitte India. Views expressed are the authors personal.

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Hiring, investments likely to slow down; these 5 factors to decide time, pace of Indias economic recovery - The Financial Express

Why Silicon Valley Execs Are Investing Billions to Stay Young – Robb Report

Entrepreneur Dave Aspreys end-of-life plans are quite simple, really, even if some of his ambitions sound laughably optimistic to most of us.I want to die at a time and by a method of my own choosing, and keep doing awesome things until that day, he tells me. I dont think its outrageous to believe Ill make it to 180 years old. And if I run out of energy, itll just be because I did too much cool shit for my own good.

Asprey is strolling across his lush property in British Columbia, holding up his phone and pointing out the specimens in this years garden as we chat over Zoom in the midst of the global pandemic. Hes protecting his skin from the sun with a goofy Outdoor Research hat and wearing a long string of beads that he says are each over a hundred years old, from cultures around the world.

Asprey, 48, is the founder of the Bulletproof wellness empire and a vocal champion of the movement to extend human life expectancy beyond 100 years. Hes made millions by experimenting on his own body and packaging his home-brewed discoveries into books, a podcast, consulting services and consumer products (you may have even tried his butter-laced coffee). Asprey, who was a web-security executive before he became the Bulletproof Executive, is just one of a cadre of tech elite who have begun directing their attentionand truckloads of moneytoward the problem of life extension. Jeff Bezos, Peter Thiel, Sergey Brin, Larry Ellisonname a Silicon Valley A-lister and he or she is likely funding longevity research, experimenting with anti-aging interventions or both. These are the masters of the universe who see no reason they cant take the tech industrys optimization obsession and apply it to the ultimate challenge: conquering death itself.

And their efforts appear to be paying off: Thanks to a recent explosion of advances in longevity medicine, Aspreys vision of living healthfully into his second century might not be so crazy. In fact, for people in middle age right now, a handful of therapies in clinical trials have the potential, for the first time in human history, to radically transform what old age looks like. If the life extensionists are right, a person whos 40 today might reasonably expect to still be downhill skiing, running a 10K or playing singles tennis at 100.

Dave AspreyDave Asprey

If you do anti-aging right, Asprey insists, youll have a level of resilience and energy to fight what comes your way. If you get Covid-19, youre less likely to become very sick. The idea is that at a cellular level, youre making yourself very hard to kill.

The most extreme of the controversial interventions Asprey has undergone involved having stem cells extracted from his own bone marrow and fat and then injected into hundreds of locations on his body. Into every joint, between every vertebra and into my cerebrospinal fluid, face and sex organs, he tells me cheerfully. For what I spent on that, I could have bought a really nicely appointed Tesla.

He trots up a flight of stairs to his home office, which sits above a million-dollar lab filled with health gadgets, such as a cryochamber, a hypoxic trainer and an AI-enabled stationary bike. For a wealthy person, investing in your body should be a major part of your Im rich strategy, he explains. Personally, I think you should be spending at least 2 to 3 percent of your net worth on health and longevity. Get a personal chef who can cook you the right food. Its not that hard.

It might be an exaggeration to say BioViva CEO Liz Parrish believes death is optional, but for her, Aspreys goal of living to 180 shows a distinct lack of ambition. If you can reach homeostasis in the body, Parrish says, where its regenerating itself just a little bit faster than its degrading, then what do you die of? An accident or natural disaster, probably. Theres no expiration date at 90 or 100 years old.

Tall, blond and fit, Parrish cuts a strikingly youthful figure at 49one that might convince you to order whatever shes having. But, like Asprey, she has received criticism from the longevity research community for becoming patient zero in her own experimental drug trial, aimed at halting aging at the cellular level. In 2015, Parrish underwent telomerase and follistatin gene therapies in Bogota, Colombia. The procedures involved receiving around a hundred injections of a cocktail of genes and a virus modified to deliver those new genes into her bodys cells. The objective was to prevent age-related muscle loss and lengthen her telomeres: the caps at the end of our chromosomes. Scientists have identified their unraveling as not only a marker of aging but also a potential cause of age-related decline.

Liz ParrishLiz Parrish

Parrish told the media about her clandestine experiment and has published periodic updates on her condition in the five years since, and she reports that she has indeed increased her muscle mass and lengthened her telomeres. Parrishs punk-rock approach stems from her conviction that the medical-research communityboth the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and researchers who arent business-mindedis moving too slowly, with too much red tape, when it comes to advancing aging therapeutics. But gene therapy is a relatively new area of medicine that brings with it a host of new risks, including cancer, severe immune reactions and infections caused by the viral vector used to deliver the drug.

Parrish downplays such worries. There may be risks, she tells Robb Report. But the known risk is that youre 100 percent likely to die. So you have to decide for yourself if the potential benefit outweighs that.

Humans have always aspired to find the fountain of youth, so people might be skeptical about the fact that anti-aging technologies are working now, says British investor and businessman Jim Mellon. But the fact is that this is finally happening, and we need to seize the moment. Mellon cofounded Juvenescence, a three-year-old pharmaceutical company thats investing in multiple technologies simultaneously to increase the odds of bringing winning products to market.

Mellon, 63, has made his fortune betting on well-timed investment opportunities, and he predicts that a new stock-market mania for life extension is just around the corner. This is like the internet dial-up phase of longevity biotech, he enthuses. If youd invested in the internet in the very early days, youd be one of the richest people on the planet. Were at that stage now, so the opportunity for investors is huge. According to a report by Bank of America Merrill Lynch, hes not wrong: The market for technologies to increase human life span is projected to grow sixfold to $610 billion in just the next five years.

When I talk to Mellon in the late spring, hes sequestered on the rugged coast of the Isle of Man, a tiny spit of land in the Irish Sea. Despite being what he describes as imprisoned there for 15 weeksand countingduring the Covid-19 shutdown, hes jovial and chatty and wants to make it clear that his interest in life extension is much more than financial. Working to extend life is an ethical cause, he says. If we can help people to live healthfully until the end of life, well transform the world completely. Well reduce a huge amount of pressure on failing health-care systems, and well have to reimagine pension and life insurance. This should be the number-one tick in anyones investment portfolio.

If youd like to get on board with this social-impact view of longevity, it helps to understand the trajectory of aging today. In Americas most affluent neighborhoods, the average life span is about 88 years. (Meanwhile, in this countrys poorest, it hovers around a meager 66 because of a raft of inequalities, such as diet, stress, smoking, pollution and health care.) For most people, health starts gradually diminishing in the last 15 years of life with the onset of chronic conditions, including arthritis, neurodegeneration and diabetes. If we could eliminate such diseases of aging, experts say, the US could save an estimated $7.1 trillion in health-care costs over the next 50 years. (Quite where all these sprightly centenarians might live on this already densely populated planet remains to be seen.)

Jim MellonEric Verdin

One of Mellons bets is on a class of drugs called senolytics, which destroy senescent cells: the so-called zombie cells that, for complex reasons, stop dividing as we age. Senescent cells harm the body by secreting compounds that cause inflammation in surrounding tissues. Many age-related conditionsarthritis, diabetes, Alzheimers, cancerhave an inflammatory component, and studies suggest that a buildup of senescent cells is a large part of the problem.

A number of biotech start-ups are devel- oping drugs that target cell senescence, but the furthest along is Unity Biotechnology, a company in South San Francisco that has three drugs in clinical trials to address aging conditions, starting with osteoar- thritis of the knee. Unity raised more than $200 million from such big names as Thiel and Bezos, who chipped in through their investment firms, before going public in 2018. Since then, Mellon has also bought a small stake.

The holy grail of senolytics will be the development of a preventive therapy to wipe out senescent cells in the body before they cause conditions of aging, theoretically extending life span. In June, a team from Sloan Kettering published new breakthrough research showing that CAR T cellstypically used for precision cancer therapycan also be used to target and kill senescent cells. Prescription senolytics for anti-aging therapy are still years away, but unsurprisingly, theres an audience of longevity enthusiasts who want to access such anti-aging miracles yesterdayand no shortage of FDA-unapproved ways to chase after them. For instance, after a few studies examined the senolytic effects of a chemotherapy drug called dasatinib, the website FightAging.org published a step-by-step guide to senolytic self-experimentation using chemotherapeutics.

It doesnt take a Ph.D. in biochemistry to guess that taking off-label chemo drugs might come with harmful side effects, but that hasnt stopped a zealous group of body-hackers from trying it themselves and chronicling their efforts online. The internet is littered with novice longevity adviceand sketchy anti-aging companies eager to separate the hopeful and desperate from their money, like the company that charges $8,000 for transfusions of plasma from the blood of teenagers and early-twentysomethings (yes, just like Gavin Belson on HBOs Silicon Valley). Many of these are at best ineffective and at worst deadly, since the same cellular systems that fuel growth in young people might cause cancer when tipped into overdrive. Imagine the tragic irony of paying tens of thousands for a therapy that promises to help you live longer but actually causes the cancer that kills you.

Adobe

Beyond the obvious red flags of repurposed chemo drugs and the bloodletting of teens, it can be difficult for a layperson to separate the world-changing longevity breakthroughs from the terrible ideas. Enter one of the worlds leading experts on longevity to help make sense of things.

Eric Verdin, 63, is president and CEO of the Buck Institute, a globally renowned center for aging research just outside San Francisco in Marin County. Verdin is bullish on the promise of living healthfully to at least 100. Today. But 180? Dont count on it. My prediction, based on everything we know today, is that getting to 120 is about the best we can do for the foreseeable future. Ill bet my house were not going to see anyone live to 180 for another 200 years, if ever, he says. But making everyone a healthy centenarian, this is something we can do today. And thats something to be excited about.

Verdins own lab at the Buck Institute studies the aging immune system and how its affected by lifestyle factors, such as nutrition and exercise. Informed by this research, Verdin follows a time-restricted diet in which he eats all of his meals in an eight-to-nine-hour window (similar to the Buchinger Wilhelmi process) and gets plenty of exercise mountain biking in Marins steep hills. The good news is that over 90 percent of what causes diseases of aging is environmental, and that means its within your control, he says.

But he emphasizes that responsible management of your health comes with limits, like avoiding experimental therapies. A group of people have decided to try some expensive and dangerous interventions, but there is zero evidence that any of these are going to help them live longer, he says. The problem, according to Verdin, is that the results of aging interventions in mouse trials can look very promising but rarely translate to success in humans. Theres a huge delta between the health of a stressed lab mouse and an optimally healthy mouse, Verdin says. So when you treat lab mice with longevity therapeutics, you see an outsized result that doesnt at all guarantee the same result in humans.

On the other hand, Verdin tells Robb Report, there are definitely new protocols worth getting excited about. Take, for instance, rapalogs, a class of drugs that interact with a protein called mTOR, which serves as a linchpin for multiple critical biological processes, including cell growth and metabolism. Rapalog drugs tamp down mTOR, possibly preventing age-related diseases such as diabetes, stroke and some cancers. The drug rapamycin, the most heavily studied formula, was approved in the US in 1999 to help prevent organ-transplant rejection. Last year the medical journal Aging published a rapturous opinion piece by oncologist Mikhail Blagosklonny in which he made the case that rapamycinin small or intermittent dosesis effective as a preventive treatment to ward off diseases of aging, and that, in the elderly, not taking rapamycin may be even more dangerous than smoking.

Eric VerdinJim Hughes Photography

Later this year, a biotech firm called resTORbio, which was spun out of the Swiss-based Big Pharma company Novartis in 2017, is expected to seek FDA approval for its rapalog RTB101, which clinical trials have shown to slow age-related decline of the immune system and improve immune response in elderly people by more than 20 percent, a key factor in protecting vulnerable aging populations from disease. (It is currently in trials on elderly patients with Covid-19.) This is the furthest-along program of anything in the aging field, Joan Mannick, cofounder and chief medical officer of resTORbio, told MIT Technology Review last year. If health authorities approve this drug well have a product for people to prevent age-related diseases. Not just in our lifetime, but in, you know, a few years.

One of the many effects of rapamycin is that it mimics the mechanisms of calorie restriction. As Verdins lab and others have shown, fasting provides a number of anti-aging benefits, including insulin regulation, reduced inflammation and, to put it colloquially, clearing out the gunky by-products of metabolismpart of the reason Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey and other tech titans eat just a few meals per week. For lesser mortals, fasting is extremely hard to commit to and not much fun, hence the huge interest in calorie-restriction mimetics like rapamycin, which provide all the benefits without the downer not-eating part.

Of all the calorie-restriction mimetics, the one sparking the most excitement among longevity researchers is already on the market: metformin, a decades-old diabetes drug. Metformin became a part of the Silicon Valley health regimen several years ago after an epidemiological study showed that Type 2 diabetics who took the drug lived longer than non-diabetics who didnt. Just about everyone in the longevity industry takes metformin, Verdin tells me. He takes it himself, and nearly everybody I interviewed is taking or has taken it, too.

In April, Nir Barzilai, the renowned endocrinologist who spearheaded research on the anti-aging properties of metformin, announced in an opinion piece he co-authored in the journal Cell Metabolism that his lab is launching a large clinical trial to investigate the anti-aging effects of the drug on non-diabetic populations. Barzilais goal is to prove to the FDA that aging itselfrather than conditions associated with it, like Alzheimers and arthritiscan be targeted as a disease. If Barzilai is successful and the FDA approves aging as a treatment indication, the process of bringing longevity therapies to market would accelerate rapidly.

Just as the FDA was able to move faster to bring Covid-19 therapies to market this year, we will reach a tipping point when public opinion pushes the FDA to approve aging as an indication, and the longevity-research field will make leaps as a result, Mellon says. He has contributed funding to Barzilais metformin research, which he believes will be instrumental in proving that there are compounds that can extend human life across the board.

The fact of the matter is that the US has the best regulatory system for new drug development in the world, Mellon says. Were in the first era ever when humans can be bioengineered to live longer. And in 10 years, well have solutions that are even better than today. Just wait, its coming.

Liz Parrish

Jim Mellon

Diet:Vegetarian.Mindfulness practice:Nightly meditation.

Exercise regimen:30 minutes of cardio and 10 minutes of weights,five days a week.

Anti-aging Rx:Regenerative gene therapies. Im certain most peoplewill take them in the next couple decades.

180th-birthday wish:Solving another critical issue.

Sleep routine:7.5 hours plus a 30-minute nap; in bed by 9 p.m.

Vitamins/supplements/ prescription meds:Vitamins D and B12, metformin.

Exercise regimen:Walk or run minimum 10,000 steps a day;weights three times week.

Anti-aging Rx:Green tea.

100th-birthday wish:Another 25 years.

Dave Asprey

Jim Hughes Photography

180th-birthday wish:Either a cruise to Mars or a 1970 Mustang Fastback,which by then will be 210 years old!

Sleep Routine:Avoid: coffee after 2 p.m., heavy workouts after 6 p.m.,alcohol during the week and heavy eating in the evening.

Vitamins/supplements:Vitamin D, omega fatty acids, NMN, citrus bioflavonoidcomplex, fiber supplement, prebiotic supplement.

Diet:Fasting-mimicking diet once every four to six months;roughly 16:8 intermittent fasting at other times.

Mindfulness practice:Daily meditation.

Anti-aging Rx:I love cooking and eating, so I do not restrict foodon the weekend. Happiness with friends and family is thesurest path to longevity.

100th-birthday wish:A bike tour across the US, from coast to coast.

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Why Silicon Valley Execs Are Investing Billions to Stay Young - Robb Report

In COVID-19 Crisis, Older Americans Are More Resilient Than Younger Generations, Edward Jones and Age Wave Research Finds – Webster County Citizen

ST. LOUIS, Aug. 4, 2020 /PRNewswire/ --Despite COVID-19's severe and disproportionate impact on the health of aging adults, older Americans reported they are coping far better than younger ones, according to the Edward Jones and Age Wave study released today, "The Four Pillars of the New Retirement." The9,000-person, five-generation study in the U.S. and Canada revealed that in the U.S. 37% of Gen Z and 27% of millennials said they have suffered mental health declines since the pandemic began, while only 15% of baby boomers and 8% of silent generation respondents said the same.

"COVID-19's impact forever changed the reality of many Americans, yet we've observed a resilience among U.S. retirees in contrast to younger generations," said Ken Dychtwald, Ph.D., psychologist/gerontologist and founder and CEO of Age Wave. "Older Americans tend to recognize the value of a long-term view, and so as they think about their lives, longevity and legacy, they're able to pull from an array of experiences that help them weather current storms, feel gratitude about many aspects of their lives and still plan for the future."

The landmark Edward Jones and Age Wave research uncovered a new definition for retirement, as far more than simply the end of work. The majority of U.S. retirees (55%) defined retirement as a whole new chapter filled with new choices, freedoms and challenges, and they do so in a more holistic way across four important areas of health, family, purpose and finance.

COVID-19's Impact on Family Closeness and Finances COVID-19's initial dramatic impact on the U.S. economy and personal financial situations may very well leave long-lasting implications. Reflecting a great deal of generational generosity, 24 million Americans* have provided financial support to adult children due to COVID-19, and an overwhelming 71% of retirees said they would offer financial support to their family even if it could jeopardize their own financial future. Despite COVID-19's negative impact on finances, 67% of Americans said the pandemic has brought their families closer together. The research also revealed that 20 million Americans stopped making retirement savings contributions during the COVID-19 pandemic and only a quarter of working Americans were on track with their retirement savings prior to the pandemic.[i]

"We've certainly seen COVID-19's disruptive force on finances, with the pandemic influencing retirement timing and financial confidence," said Ken Cella, Edward Jones Client Services Group Principal. "However, this cloud has brought several silver linings in terms of family closeness and important discussions about planning earlier for retirement, saving more for emergencies and even talking through end-of-life plans and long-term care costs."

Social Relationships as Predictor of Health and Purpose While loneliness is pervasive across all five generations, as people age, physical isolation becomes a greater health risk, as deadly as smoking a pack of cigarettes a day[ii], and it is linked to increased risk for heart disease and dementia.[iii]While most retirees (76%) said they derive the greatest sense of purpose from social relationships, specifically time spent with loved ones, 72% noted that one of their biggest fears is becoming a burden on their families.

"Retirees say they miss people and purpose, not paychecks, when they retire, but 31% of new retirees are struggling to find purpose in this stage of life. They want to feel useful, not just youthful, and keep learning and growing at every age," Dychtwald added.

The study found that 89% of all Americans feel that there should be more ways for retirees to use their talents and knowledge for the benefit of their communities and society at large.

Financial Advisors as Connectors and Confidence Builders As Americans redefine retirement in a broader way across the four pillars, the majority of U.S. respondents felt their ideal financial advisor is a guide who can understand them and help them achieve their goals. In fact, 84% of those working with a financial advisor said that their financial advisor relationship gave them a greater sense of comfort regarding their finances during the pandemic.

Further underscoring the fundamental importance of financial security, retirees are often met by new challenges as they enter retirement. Thirty-six percent of retirees said managing money in retirement is more confusing than saving for retirement, and they want help navigating. Fifty-two percent of retirees cited healthcare costs, including long-term care, as the most common financial worry. This concern was also echoed by pre-retirees as more than two-thirds (68%) of those who plan to retire in the next 10 years said they have no idea what their healthcare and long-term care costs will be in retirement.

"Beyond finances, we can help our clients envision and truly realize a holistic retirement, which, we know includes decisions about their health, family and purpose," said Cella. "Empathy and knowledge allow us to better serve our clients in a human-centered way and work together to achieve what's most important to them and their families."

While the above findings feature a selection of respondents' thoughts regarding the new definition of retirement, further examination of the four pillars of health, family, purpose and finances reveal their highly intertwined nature and influence in shaping retirees' overall quality of life. For more details from The Four Pillars of the New Retirement, please visit http://www.EdwardJones.com/NewRetirement.

MethodologyThis report is based on a large-scale investigation of what it means to live well in retirement that began in November 2019. The study was conducted by Edward Jones in partnership with Age Wave and The Harris Poll.

As part of the study, The Harris Poll conducted an online, representative survey from May 21 through June 4, 2020among more than 9,000 adults age 18+, in the US and Canada, including n=3,000 among a US general population, n=1,000 among a Canadian general population, and oversamples of approximately 500 in each of the following 10 metropolitan regions: Atlanta, Charlotte, Cleveland, Dallas, Kansas City, Los Angeles, Portland, Raleigh-Durham, St. Louis, and Toronto.Results were weighted where necessary to bring them into line with their actual proportions in the population.

*Estimated projections to the US population are calculated based on the 2019 Census Current Population Survey.

About Edward Jones Edward D. Jones & Co., L.P., a Fortune 500 company headquartered in St. Louis, provides financial services in the U.S. and, through its affiliate, in Canada. Every aspect of the firm's business, from the investments offered to the location of branch offices, caters to individual investors. The firm's 19,000-plus financial advisors serve more than 7 million clients with a total of $1.2 trillion in client assets under care. Visit http://www.edwardjones.comor the recruiting website at http://www.careers.edwardjones.com. Member SIPC.

About Age Wave Under the leadership of Founder and CEO Ken Dychtwald, Ph.D., Age Wave is the nation's foremost thought leader on population aging and its profound business, social, financial, health care, workforce, and cultural implications. Dychtwald's long-awaited new book What Retirees Want: A Holistic View of Life's Third Age was just published (Wiley, July 15,2020). Since its inception in 1986, the firm has advised numerous non-profits and over half the Fortune 500. For more information, please visitwww.agewave.com.

About The Harris Poll The Harris Poll is one of the longest-running surveys in the U.S.;tracking public opinion, motivations and social sentiment since 1963. The Harris Poll is now part of Harris Insights & Analytics, a global consulting and market research firm that delivers social intelligence for transformational times. The Harris Poll works with clients in three primary areas; building twenty-first-century corporate reputation, crafting brand strategy and performance tracking, and earning organic media through public relations research. Learn more atwww.theharrispoll.com

[i]Federal Reserve, Report on the Economic Well-Being of U.S. Households in 2018 - May 2019

[ii]Holt-Lunstad J, Smith TB, Layton JB. Social relationships and mortality risk: a meta-analytic review. PLoS Med., July 2010

[iii]National Institute on Aging, "Social isolation, loneliness in older people pose health risks," April 23, 2019.

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In COVID-19 Crisis, Older Americans Are More Resilient Than Younger Generations, Edward Jones and Age Wave Research Finds - Webster County Citizen

How AI is bringing the dark matter of nutrition to light, unlocking the power of plants – The European Sting

(Credit: Unsplash)

This article is brought to you thanks to the collaboration ofThe European Stingwith theWorld Economic Forum.

Author: Jim Flatt, CEO & Co-founder, Brightseed

The COVID-19 pandemic didnt just transform how we work and communicate. It also accelerated the need for more proactive health measures for chronic health problems tied to diet. Such problems have emerged as a top risk factor for coronavirus and people with poor metabolic health accounted for half of COVID-19 hospitalizations in some regions around the world. The resulting high numbers led the authors of a report in The Lancet to issue a call for more resources to tackle metabolic health to avoid needless deaths.

Thankfully, new tools have been developed to offer comprehensive understanding of nutrition. This expertise and technology wont just help us tackle metabolic health it could help us finally fully realize the power of plants to improve health and wellness outcomes.

coronavirus, health, COVID19, pandemic

The first global pandemic in more than 100 years, COVID-19 has spread throughout the world at an unprecedented speed. At the time of writing, 4.5 million cases have been confirmed and more than 300,000 people have died due to the virus.

As countries seek to recover, some of the more long-term economic, business, environmental, societal and technological challenges and opportunities are just beginning to become visible.

To help all stakeholders communities, governments, businesses and individuals understand the emerging risks and follow-on effects generated by the impact of the coronavirus pandemic, the World Economic Forum, in collaboration with Marsh and McLennan and Zurich Insurance Group, has launched its COVID-19 Risks Outlook: A Preliminary Mapping and its Implications a companion for decision-makers, building on the Forums annual Global Risks Report.

Companies are invited to join the Forums work to help manage the identified emerging risks of COVID-19 across industries to shape a better future. Read the full COVID-19 Risks Outlook: A Preliminary Mapping and its Implications report here, and our impact story with further information.

We know that plants are critical for health, but do not fully understand why. Humans have not mapped the breadth of what plants offer, nor have we pinpointed the specific biological mechanisms of action triggered in our bodies when we eat them. This knowledge gap exists at the molecular level, with a need to understand how phytonutrients tiny plant molecules with anti-inflammatory, cardioprotective and neuroprotective properties work in our bodies. In fact, the scientific community refers to the vast world of phytonutrients as the dark matter of nutrition because less than 1% of these molecules have been catalogued to date. The opportunity to learn more about phytonutrients and further tangibly connect their impact to health is massive.

Technologies, such as Artificial Intelligence, are helping researchers learn more about the biological connections between plants and humans. For instance, Brightseed has created a powerful artificial intelligence called Forager, which coupled with advanced metabolomics instrumentation, systematically identifies unknown plant compounds and predicts their likely roles in human health. Thus far, the technology has predicted beneficial phytonutrients for many important health conditions.

Recently, in collaboration with leading biomedical researchers, Brightseed discovered a powerful phytonutrient with the potential to improve metabolic health. This phytonutrient helps restore proper function of a central metabolic regulator, including maintaining healthy lipid and sugar levels in the bloodstream and key organs such as the liver, whose function is impaired by a poor diet. Brightseed will start clinical studies on this phytonutrient before the end of this year.

The impact of this discovery could be wide reaching and have profound implications for more than two billion people worldwide at elevated risk of chronic metabolic diseases. Elevated levels of fat in the liver (which are directly caused by chronic overeating) afflict between 25% and 30% of the global population. These individuals with fatty liver disease are 57% more likely to die prematurely and much more like to develop other debilitating metabolic diseases, including diabetes. The discovery of this phytonutrient is a glimpse into the positive change deeper nutritional understanding could bring.

Just as 1918 pandemic led to creation of the modern medicine industry, we now are at a similar tipping point with nutrition, on the precipice of developing a much more complete understanding of how plants are connected to human health.

The first step is improving our foundational knowledge. In the U.S., there is a broad-based effort among leading academic, non-profit and industry stakeholders to create a National Institute of Nutrition (NIN) to accelerate nutrition science and uncover the role of human nutrition in improving public health and reducing disease. The NIN, similar to institutes that exist in other countries, can support and incentivize higher-quality, more rigorous nutrition research at the molecular level. This research will provide a stronger foundation for nutrition recommendations and guidelines, which is essential to developing consensus in both the scientific and consumer communities.

The second step is a mindset shift. Modern food and agricultural systems have largely focused on and solved the problem of food insufficiency. However, preventable diet-driven chronic diseases have emerged instead. We need to pivot from merely increasing the supply of food to leveraging technologies that can help improve the nutritional quality of what we consume.

We need to pivot from merely increasing the supply of food to leveraging technologies that can help improve the nutritional quality of what we consume.

Jim Flatt, Brightseed

Healthier food options can be the center of a new proactive health industry and provide the food industry the opportunity to make important contributions to health and longevity, while benefiting economically from the capture of existing healthcare investment that currently is directed to treating chronic disease. Our current treatment-focused healthcare system is increasingly unaffordable and poorly suited to addressing the needs of individuals at heightened risk of developing chronic diseases that are largely preventable through lifestyle modifications, especially those related to diet.

No changes will be possible without forging new collaborations between public and private entities. Through cooperation we can develop more nutritious options and greatly influence policy change. Partnerships are also how well create a more nourished world and maximize our impact.

For the first time, we have the tools to explore the plant kingdom at the molecular level and answer questions such as How does what we eat really affect us? or How can food become medicine?

Technology is exponentially improving our understanding of how plants are connected to health. Together, we can goal shift the healthcare model from one squarely focused on treatment of disease to one that promotes health and natural resilience.

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How AI is bringing the dark matter of nutrition to light, unlocking the power of plants - The European Sting

Australian-first commission explores community building through art and architecture – Mirage News

The University of Queenslands iconic sandstone towers will be reflected in the colours of Athens-based artist and architect, Andreas Angelidakiss latest high-profile project.

DEMOS (Sandstone) will be launched at The University of Queensland Art Museum on 3 August and comprises 50 large, lightweight, vinyl-covered blocks which will be reconfigured to form seating, a stage, study spaces, walls, monuments, archways and ruins.

UQ Art Museum Senior Curator Peta Rake said that while the term demos refers to the Athenian foundations of democracy, where only some citizens were allowed to speak, Angelidakiss project disrupts that legacy.

Throughout 2020/21, UQ Art Museums creative program Union is considering how people can come together and think through ideas via the lens of common purpose and collective action, she said.

DEMOS is the perfect vehicle for us to do that conceptually to contemplate how we inhabit different spaces and architectures in our 2020 context, and how we make safe community spaces from a social distance that create sites of human exchange whether its conversations, meetings, demonstrations or protests.

Were excited to be working with Andreas and to be the first Australian institution to commission this body of work thats been shown at a number of significant international venues, particularly as it encourages campus engagement.

UQ Art Museum Director Dr Campbell Gray said the colour of Angelidakiss work commissioned for the UQ Art Museum is Australian sandstone and reflects the sandstone synonymous with UQ.

DEMOS approaches architectural and colonial legacies through satire, Dr Gray said.

While the appearance of marble and concrete surfaces imply longevity these blocks are actually light enough to lift.

The fact that the blocks can be manipulated, moved and changed, despite their heavy appearance, causes us to ask questions about the histories and conventions of UQ and of universities in general.

It also prompts us to consider the nature of art museums environments where typically, precious things are presented and people are required not to touch them.

In the case of DEMOS, were inviting people to engage with the work, to rearrange it, to think about it and to participate with it, which is an exciting prospect for students on campus too.

Within the spaces and structures DEMOS offers, students from any discipline can engage with the work in endless ways to explore ideas and conversations.

DEMOS will be ongoing at UQ Art Museum from 3 August.

Download images for print and web here.

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Australian-first commission explores community building through art and architecture - Mirage News