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16 Temmuz 2014 Çarşamba

Do Humans Reside As well Prolonged?

“Public health fundamentally changed what it means to be human,” S. Jay Olashansky argues in a short video explaining the jump in human life expectancy in the mid-19th Century. For more than 200,000 years, most humans died by 30 and infant mortality was endemic. But over the last two centuries human life expectancy has more than doubled. In the last century the average American life expectancy rose from 47 to 78, largely attributable to improved understanding of personal hygiene, effective treatments for childhood diseases, and shifts toward safer working spaces.


If you accept that it doesn’t inherently mean anything to be human, the extension of life expectancy has expanded the existential vacuum in which human imagination has begun to invent many different meanings for itself with increasingly industrial efficiency. Paradoxically, this drive to fundamentally change what it means to be human has also become a catalyst for deepening categorical differences between people and rationalizing a menagerie of deprivations by making them seem like the statistical inevitabilities of progress.  The first fissures of this obsolescence have become visible in the recent distinctions in life expectancy between rich and poor. In the last two decades the life expectancy of the poor has begun falling.Today, college educated white men live to 80, while those who failed to graduate high school live to 67. A white male without a high school diploma will die three years earlier today than he would have two decades ago, according to a 2012 report from Health Affairs. White female high school dropouts will die five years earlier than their counterparts would have in the early 1990s.


The irony of increased life spans is that the majority of that found time ends up being used for work, the one social burden we keep expecting technology to deliver us from. The more time they spend occupying on a job, the more finicky and competitive the labor market becomes, making it difficult it becomes for the young and poor to break through the fog of nepotism and prejudicial eligibility requirements. “The succession of generations could be obstructed by a glut of the able,” bioethicist Leon Kass wrote in a report on aging for The President’s Council on Bioethics. “The old might think less of preparing their replacements, and the young could see before them only layers of their elders blocking the path, and no great reason to hurry in building families or careers-remaining functionally immature ‘young adults’ for decades, neither willing nor able to step into the shoes of their mothers and fathers.”


This widening differential adds new pressure to America’s already strained political and economic structures. According to George Dranitsaris, a healthcare consultant and research scientist, the ideal ratio for an economy is four active workers for every retired person, but this has already dropped to 3.5 workers for every retiree, and could reach three to one within a decade. “As people live longer the data shows they put greater strain on resources,” he told me. “There certainly won’t be enough people working for governments to pay to look after elderly people who won’t be working, especially for countries like the United States, which has a pretty generous social security system.”


Get back to work. Image via Creative Commons/Victor Casale.

Get back to work. Image via Creative Commons/Victor Casale.



Meanwhile, the quest to further lengthen one’s life has created a new cottage industry of speculative research into technology that could further distance the beneficiaries of furthered human life expectancy technology from those whose share of those gains is dwindling. And now that most of the old causes of mortality attributed to pathogens and environmental factors have been theoretically resolved, the project of extending lifespans appears to be reaching a fundamental limit within the body itself. The most basic determinant of aging is thought to be the natural limit on somatic cell division, called the Hayflick Limit after UCSF evolutionary biologist Leonard Hayflick. Cell division that drives human life eventually comes to an end, either because the genetic material in them becomes progressively unstable after each division, or because the mitochondria that provide energy for division eventually oxidize


Ray Kurzweill is perhaps the most famous immortalist, insisting that when described as a series of molecular mechanisms there is no reason to believe death can’t be stopped or reversed, something that would only contribute to overall human productivity. “Our initial reaction to hearing that someone has died is a profound loss of knowledge and skill and talents and relationships,” he said in an interview with Wired. “It’s not the case that there are only a fixed number of positions, and if old people don’t die off, there’s no room for young people to come up with new ideas, because we’re constantly expanding knowledge. Larry Page and Sergey Brin didn’t displace anybody– they created a whole new field.”


Absent from these claims are any practical ideas about how the young should be accommodated. The transition to a knowledge economy as embodied by Page and Brin depends on its ability to command greater profits with significantly smaller operational costs than preceding industries, something that only intensifies the competitive pressure on the young and in-need and worsens their chances at a longer life. Google earned more than twice the net income of General Motors in 2013, and yet it employed less than one-fourth as many people. Apple earns more than six times as much net income than GM and employs less than half as many people. These are economic structures of disenfranchisement, and using the profits sprung from them to rationalize an industry of speculative longevity research is self-abnegation imposed from above.


The conception of death as tragic is, likewise, not wrong but incomplete. Death is also mundane, peaceful, relieving, and in some cases an act of definitively human generosity. Whatever meaning there is in humanity, it lies not in the capacity of the individual to prolong its own encounter with the world, but in the overwhelming number of perpetually regenerating individuals who thrive when driven toward interdependence rather than categorical fragmentation.


Instead of using technology to eliminate death, we might use it to better be able to manage its inevitability for the benefit of the community instead of the individual ego that can’t accept its end. Earlier this year a 70 year-old New York woman, Sandy Bem, invited her family to her home and killed herself. Five years earlier she’d been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease and decided that when she reached the point where she could no longer care for herself she would take her own life. “She talked about it a lot,” her daughter Emily told NPR. “It was just sort of sprinkled throughout life. She would often say, ‘Well, in two years I’m going to do it,’ and then two years would go by and she hadn’t declined enough where it warranted it. Then she would say, ‘Well, two more years.’”


After she turned 70, Bem determined that her time had come, there weren’t any remaining years to be bargained for. So she called her family over one last time. They took a long walk, watched Mary Poppins together spoke among themselves, and then she went into her bedroom and asked for her husband of 49 years to come lie beside her in bed after she’d taken a fatal drug overdose, self-administered to avoid New York’s laws against assisted suicide. And while the event was unquestionably somber Bem’s daughter says she wouldn’t have had it any other way.  “It made it less like a grieving process and less like a sort of horrible thing that had happened,” she said, “and more like something that made sense and felt right and actually had some joy to it in its own way.” One of the few studies of the effects of prepared suicide on surviving family members found that in some ways it left loved ones slightly better prepared to deal with the grieving process.


To the victor go the spoils. Image via Creative Commons/Ralph Aichinger.

To the victor go the spoils. Image via Creative Commons/Ralph Aichinger.



That we have so effectively insulated ourselves from death should not be mistaken for evidence that death is, or should be, eradicable. The quest for a long life is a distraction of luxury, the uneven distribution of which points to the ways in which our collective schemes for utopian self-improvement smuggle the violent social divisions of our present into each subsequent generation, building up an industry of normalized depravity with empirical battlements of objective data.


There is no secret to immortality. We live in a borderless expanse of immortal matter, in which our alien plumes of consciousness are the anomaly. Everything in us is already bound to an immortal existence save the unreliable ghost of our egos. We will not have solved the problem of death by postponing our ego’s confrontation with it, nor is there a coherent explanation for why death of individual consciousness is a problem. Death produces heartbreak and sorrow, which weigh down life for those left behind, but like hunger sorrow is a need expressed through inarticulate urges, something that should point us to structures of community in the way hunger points us toward food. We don’t answer the need by making its sensory signals imperceptible.


The longer we drive ourselves to live, the more we make a taboo of death, narrowing our ability to think about it in personal, plausible terms. Instead, it becomes a phantom, symbolic of an subjective dread that makes every form of struggle to outpace it seem noble and rational. We define ourselves by the lengths we are willing to go to be anything other than ourselves, and the basis of all such efforts require a baseline population against which to measure our progress, people whose suffering becomes proof that we were right to be afraid and should press onward at any cost, until what it fundamentally means to be human can be claimed as a product of our own making, the distribution of which will depend on the imperial generosity of those who invented it.


Mastering control of the biological arc of death does not mean people will no longer die, but only that some people will have successfully dissociated themselves from all the rest. And as our lives continue to grow longer for no meaningful reason, it’s possible to see how far apart we’ve already grown.



Do Humans Reside As well Prolonged?

17 Haziran 2014 Salı

How Sitting For Prolonged Periods May possibly Contribute To Certain Cancers

Sitting for extended periods of time has been a sort of 21st century epidemic – TV-gazing isn’t new, but streaming movies and tablets aren’t helping our habit of sitting. In research, sedentariness has been connected to obesity, metabolic syndrome, cardiovascular ailment and diabetes it’s even linked to an earlier death. Now, a new research in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute suggests that sitting is also linked to cancer – not all types, but to colon and endometrial (uterine) cancer. And it is not just because sitting requires us away from doing exercises – even individuals who sit a lot and exercising have an elevated danger for these cancers. This indicates that there is some thing intrinsic about the unhealthiness of sitting apart from lack of physical exercise.


To study this query, the group from University of Regensburg carried out a meta-evaluation of 43 earlier studies, such as above four million folks. The research had all periodically queried the participants on how significantly time they invested sitting – Television-related sitting, occupational sitting, and complete sitting time. More than the years, there had been almost 69,000 cancer cases.



English: A child watching TV.

English: A little one watching Tv. (Photo credit score: Wikipedia)




The more a particular person sat, the increased the cancer chance for two varieties of cancer: Endometrial and colon. Sedentariness was linked to a 24% increased threat of colon cancer and a 32% increased chance of establishing endometrial cancer. For every single two-hour boost in total sitting time, the danger of cancer rose 8% for colon cancer and ten% for endometrial cancer (it rose 6% for lung cancer, but the association was just borderline).


On the upside, breast, rectal, ovarian, prostate, abdomen, esophagus, testicular, kidney, and non-Hodgkin lymphoma had been not linked in any way to sitting.


Of course, the famously negative pastime of sitting-although-watching-Tv was associated with the biggest chance: a 54% improved threat of colon cancer and 66% higher chance for endometrial cancer. But it’s very most likely that physique weight plays a part here, given that Tv-viewing is often accompanied by snack foods and soda – and bodyweight is a acknowledged danger issue for particular cancers (much more on this below).


“We identified that Tv viewing was connected with an enhanced risk of cancers of the colon and the endometrium,” says lead author Daniela Schmid. “We additional observed that the outcomes have been independent of physical action, displaying that sedentary habits represents a prospective cancer danger factor distinct from physical inactivity.”


And this final level she makes is the more striking locating – that the connection amongst sitting and cancer was evident regardless of the workout a individual received. In other phrases, even individuals who sat a great deal and exercised had the elevated danger. This means that there is anything intrinsically negative about sitting, apart from lack of workout.


What are the mechanisms that could probably make clear this? Schmid tells me that portion of the connection could definitely be mediated by entire body bodyweight. “Obesity could mediate carcinogenesis via a number of pathways, like insulin resistance…and reduced-grade systemic inflammation,” she says. She adds that in postmenopausal women, excess fat tissue represents the primary source of estrogen obese and obesity are a effectively-identified threat aspects for endometrial cancer


“Moreover,” Schmid adds, “vitamin D deficiency, which far more typically happens in obese folks compared to normal excess weight individuals poses a risk for improvement of colon cancer.”


But there seems to be one thing else going on, because even holding physique bodyweight consistent, there’s even now a website link between sitting and cancer. One possibility might be that lack of motion triggers an inflammatory cascade that contains a rise in the biomarkers C-reactive protein (CRP) and interleukin-6 (IL-6).


“In experimental trials, 14 days of bed rest in youthful volunteers elevated C-reactive protein and pro-inflammatory interleukin six levels,” says Schmid. Animal studies have arrived at comparable results, she adds.


Much more research will be necessary to comprehend why a lack of motion may be connected to cancer development. But at least we know what the remedy is. Exercising a lot more isn’t adequate – you have to punctuate extended intervals of sitting with normal periods of movement.


“Cutting down on Tv viewing and sedentary time is just as important as turning out to be far more energetic,” says Schimd. “For these whose jobs demand them to sit at a desk for most of the day, we advocate breaking up the time spent sitting by incorporating quick bouts of light bodily activity into the everyday program.”


Here are a number of much more ideas:


- Walk over and speak to your colleagues rather than emailing or calling.



How Sitting For Prolonged Periods May possibly Contribute To Certain Cancers

16 Nisan 2014 Çarşamba

Pensioners to be offered suggestions on how prolonged they will dwell

But critics worry that folks could end up struggling financially if they devote all their funds soon right after retiring.


Mr Webb stated that men and women often underestimated their daily life expectancy.


“The idea is that you come to believe about retiring, [but] you really do not know how long that retirement is going to be,” Mr Webb stated.


“What we do know is people get it wrong and they underestimate how long they’re going to dwell.


“At 60 most folks will have dad and mom even now alive so the greatest guide they’ve got about how lengthy they are going to dwell is their grandparents. That is two generations ago so they have a tendency to underestimate how prolonged they are going to dwell.


“My notion … is to say to somebody, ‘Look, an individual of your generation, residing in this element of the country, you’ve not smoked, a person like you could simply live for 27 years’.”


Newly launched figures display that daily life expectancy is growing steadily in the Uk with females born now projected to live 82.seven many years on regular. Regular male lifestyle expectancy is now 78.9 years.


However, for those who reach the age of 65, existence expectancy is substantially greater, as the total figure is an typical brought down by the number who are very likely to die young.


The new figures, from the Office for National Statistics, also suggest that youthful men and women with healthy lifestyles from poorer elements of the Uk are moving to a lot more prosperous areas.


Mr Webb said that the advice would be given face to face by cost savings advisers to any pensioner who requests it.


He promised that the programs would not be “crass and insensitive”.


“I don’t consider it would be tailored to the individual,” he explained. “You would potentially have a table … with gender, in which you live … and you could then say, ‘This is the variety on the chart for you’.”


He has mentioned that he is “relaxed” about the thought of the retired purchasing Lamborghinis with their pension cost savings. “It’s completely people’s own choice what they do with their cash,” Mr Webb stated. “This is not the Government telling them what to do with their very own money. But what it is saying is that when they make their personal choices, we want to make positive they do it on the basis of total details.”


He additional that individuals would have “longer operating lives” in potential and could take on a 2nd or third occupation just before reaching retirement.


“The Chancellor has talked about pension ages of 69 and past, so the thought that people will leave greater education at 21 or 22 or leave college at 18 or whatever and just do 1 task for 50-odd years is implausible,” he mentioned.


“That indicates carrying out diverse items, retraining, moving from anything a lot more physically demanding to some thing much less demanding [or] gradually easing your way out of function.”


The ONS figures also showed stark regional divisions in existence expectancy and recommended that the migration of wholesome young individuals to prosperous regions in search of much better paid jobs is widening the north-south existence-expectancy gap.


Estimates propose that a lady born these days in Purbeck, Dorset can anticipate to reside to 86.six years on regular, 14 years longer than a boy born in inner-city Glasgow.


General existence expectancy is rising across the Uk with girls born now projected to live a complete yr far more than was the case 4 years in the past. Men are narrowing the gap rapidly, gaining nearly 17 months.


In a handful of places in southern and eastern England, the overall figure for male life expectancy has passed 80. It is highest in East Dorset, at 82.9 years.


Glasgow City has the lowest figure for each males and females at 72.six and 78.five many years respectively.


But the greatest current gains have been in London, which has one of the youngest and fastest increasing populations.


Typical male lifestyle expectancy in the capital has leapt by more than 19 months in the previous 4 many years. Female lifestyle expectancy is up by effectively more than a 12 months.


The ONS mentioned in a commentary that patterns of north-south migration appeared to be generating what volume to ghettoes of poorer health in some areas and healthy pockets elsewhere.


It said many variables may possibly be accountable which includes wealth, working problems, education and lifestyles.


But it extra: “One aspect that has received much less attention is the selective migration of wholesome people from poorer health places into far better wellness regions or vice versa.”


Life expectancy right after 65 for guys and females, by area


ENGLAND: guys 18.6 years ladies 21.1 years


North East: 17.6 20


North West: 17.eight twenty.2


Yorks/Humber: 18 20.five


East Midlands: 18.3 21


West Midlands: 18.four 21


East: 19.one 21.5


London: 18.9 21.six


South East: 19.2 21.6


South West: 19.one 21.seven


WALES: 18 20.six


SCOTLAND: 17.two 19.five


NORTHERN IRELAND: 17.9 20.six



Pensioners to be offered suggestions on how prolonged they will dwell

13 Mart 2014 Perşembe

Even Government does not know how prolonged care system can cope with cuts - paying watchdog

Meanwhile strain on councils to minimize cots is threatening the monetary viability of personal companies, such as care homes and property care companies, it adds.


They in flip are passing on the costs to the middle class consumers who do not have their care provided by the state, successfully utilizing them to “subside” the rest, it notes.


“Rising needs, decreasing regional authority spending, and reductions in benefits may possibly be putting unsustainable pressure on informal carers and acute health solutions,” the report concludes.


It adds: “National and neighborhood government do not know regardless of whether the care and overall health systems can carry on to soak up these cumulative pressures, and how long they can carry on performing so.”


Caroline Abrahams, director of Age Uk, stated: “This independent, authoritative report underlines the accurate scale of the crisis in care and reaches some possibly devastating conclusions, contrasting the uncertainty about how powerful the Government’s policies will be for strengthening the good quality and reach of social care with the every day actuality of growing demand and falling council funding.


“As a consequence, the NAO says neither central or nearby government can be positive the technique will be capable to cope.”


Sandie Keene, president of the Association of Directors of Grownup Social Solutions, stated the report’s warning that it was unclear how lengthy the method could cope was an “understatement”.


“[It] is a easy, stark warning of how badly the circumstance may possibly have deteriorated in excess of the past twelve months, and how it may well deteriorate even more in the years to come if the same monetary restraints which have been promised us are maintained on local government and adult social care spending,” she added.



Even Government does not know how prolonged care system can cope with cuts - paying watchdog

26 Ocak 2014 Pazar

Finding out About American Medicine From A Poignant Portrait Of A Prolonged Island Jeep Dealership

The brilliant Ira Glass managed the impossible in the penultimate This American Existence episode of 2013 – humanizing automobile salespeople to the level the place you  begin to empathize with them, even if you carry on to dread (probably even more so) your next pay a visit to to a showroom.


Glass takes us by way of a month in the daily life of the Town and Country Jeep dealership in Levittown, Lengthy Island, introducing us to an eclectic group of males and a single female who are making an attempt to hit their target of 129 vehicles, and earn a handsome bonus from Chrysler.  There are person bonuses obtainable as nicely.  Glass explains how the technique performs:



“So there in fact is a place at Town &amp Nation in which they maintain score of who has sold what. It is in Freddie’s workplace, the common manager’s office. It’s a white board with every single person’s sales for the month to date on it.


Each vehicle or truck that they’ve offered is represented by a small magnetic rectangle that’s roughly the dimension of a nine volt battery. Everybody calls these chips. And the distinct colours of the chips stand for different designs of autos and trucks.


And all through the day, salesmen come and they hover about whiteboard, seeing in which everybody stands. And normally, everybody is shooting for at least 15 product sales a month. At 15 sales, your commission for the next month jumps from 20% to 30%.”



The easy availability of information has armed and empowered clients, which means that dealerships now anticipate generating less funds on every single transaction, and hope to make up the big difference in volume, even more ratcheting up the stress.


You listen to the experiences of the salespeople – the divorces, the missed possibilities to observe a son’s football game, the excess weight obtain, the rituals — and are overwhelmed by the extreme pressures of the work, and by the extent to which it evokes the poignant desperation of Death of Salesman, and the violent urgency of Glengarry Glen Ross.  The manager actually reminds his personnel to, “Always Be Closing,” and the contemporary equivalent of the magical Glengarry prospects look to be buyers drawn from the internet.  By any measure, it appears like a brutal way to make a living.


In the month or so because the episode aired, I’ve been struck by the unflattering parallels amongst the expertise of Glass’s automobile salespeople and the reports I’ve heard from physicians in a selection of practice settings.


I’ve heard from doctors employed by for-profit businesses that their productivity – in terms of patient encounters – is monitored employing a virtually identical communal chart to the one particular the Lengthy Island dealership employs to track Jeep revenue.  Companies are explicitly urged to increase their productivity, getting bonuses if they hit a pre-specified number of patient encounters, and warnings about their future job prospects if they fall quick.


I’ve heard from doctors at foremost academic health-related centers that their lives are more and more revolving close to RVUs, a billing metric (see this piece and this piece by Uwe Reinhardt, and this one particular by my Forbes colleague Dan Munro).  An academic surgeon tells me “every meeting we have is about RVU targets.”  Suppliers who fall brief of their target may be docked a portion of their salary, even though higher-executing companies may have an simpler time currently being promoted.


Perhaps some of the unhappiest physicians I’ve encountered (admittedly a very aggressive category) may possibly be individuals working at Kaiser, who complain that it feels more and more like “a patient mill” centered on throughput.  Most Kaiser physicians I know invoked some sort of factory analogy when describing their task – and they’re not thrilled by the comparison.


My takeaways:



  1. The thought that medication is or will quickly be targeted on worth rather than volume looks, in the memorable words of Al Michaels, “totally farcical.”  Although there’s a great deal of lip services around a shift away from charge-for-support in policy circles, I know few doctors working in the trenches who received the memo.  As Dave Chase eloquently observed, sufferers proceed to be perceived as “a vessel for billing codes.”

  2. It’s miserable to be a patient in this technique – present as an object to be efficiently processed –  and it is deeply dissatisfying, and typically ego-dystonic, to be a medical doctor.  Medicine is predicated on alignment with this patient, an affinity that looks rising challenged.  1 of Glass’s salesman invokes Sun Tzu’s The Artwork Of War (quite popular in some company circles), and describes his daily fight to take down clients.  This standpoint is intrinsically anathema to most doctors (at least at the begin of their careers), who are more inclined to invoke war analogies in the context of a shared battle against ailment.  Perhaps this helps clarify why so numerous doctors, and individuals who can afford it, are migrating towards concierge or subscription-based mostly practices (like OneMedical), producing (several would say even more exacerbating) a de facto two-tiered technique.

  3. The doctor top quality in greatest economic demand seems to be speed – primarily a process metric.  Other measures of doctor top quality have turn into efficiently devalued, so extended as they don’t right away lead to a bad final result (no 1 would like a hack surgeon).  Doctors lament that the system does not care if you are really excellent any longer.  Some skeptics may possibly say there’s minor evidence that physicians typically regarded as “good” actually provide much better outcomes, so this devaluation is actually appropriate.  Other skeptics may possibly assert that the concept you can meaningfully and consistently hyperlink physician habits with outcomes far in the long term is a dubious premise, with a number of essential exceptions like checklists as a result, the idea of having to pay for value, and assigning worth to each supplier action, could be theoretically attractive, but generally divorced from our messy and uncertain reality.  Even now other individuals may possibly level out that it’s tough to really feel too sorry for medical professionals, since staff in most professions are scrambling for a paycheck, and U.S. physicians are paid comparatively properly (however some physicians retort that this seems to be much less rosy when you aspect in debt and time for coaching).

  4. A couple of years ago, when technologists like Vinod Khosla appeared to recommend that a lot of a physician’s function could be carried out by algorithms and machines, freeing up physicians to do what they do very best, physicians have been skeptical, concerned that the essence of medicine would be threatened.  Today, medicine’s core appears imperiled even with no the algorithms, raising the question of no matter whether improved engineering could in fact aid physicians, in significantly the way Khosla proposed.

  5. Healthcare entrepreneurs banking on the arrival of worth-based mostly care would do well to heed Steve Blank’s suggestions, and do some serious buyer development – i.e. “get out of the building” and figure out what the individuals you hope to sell to are really asking for – what is it they in fact want?

  6. The core issue in medication stays reimbursement, and fee-for-support seems for the minute to have simply survived however another assault on its dominance.  As I’ve noted, the most most likely catalyst for change could be transitioning of staff to personal exchanges, coupled with a tethering of employer healthcare contributions to the buyer price index (CPI), as my Tech Tonics co-writer Lisa Suennen has explained.  This would quickly make personnel significantly far more price (and worth) sensitive, and produce the sort of industry circumstances most likely (or at least, much more likely) to motivate meaningful adjust.



Finding out About American Medicine From A Poignant Portrait Of A Prolonged Island Jeep Dealership