Dubai Telegraph - The secret to living to 110? Bad record-keeping, researcher says

EUR -
AED 4.244814
AFN 72.802804
ALL 95.914677
AMD 436.246704
ANG 2.068623
AOA 1059.686486
ARS 1612.008363
AUD 1.638291
AWG 2.082972
AZN 1.962345
BAM 1.969574
BBD 2.328475
BDT 141.855734
BGN 1.97528
BHD 0.436297
BIF 3432.136637
BMD 1.155602
BND 1.483243
BOB 7.989252
BRL 6.063493
BSD 1.156105
BTN 107.709447
BWP 15.776079
BYN 3.574902
BYR 22649.790599
BZD 2.325171
CAD 1.587086
CDF 2628.993471
CHF 0.913988
CLF 0.026713
CLP 1054.763637
CNY 7.97417
CNH 7.960725
COP 4269.832208
CRC 540.913237
CUC 1.155602
CUP 30.623441
CVE 112.151229
CZK 24.481386
DJF 205.373253
DKK 7.47086
DOP 67.978235
DZD 152.576569
EGP 60.372554
ERN 17.334023
ETB 181.657116
FJD 2.588804
FKP 0.867479
GBP 0.862477
GEL 3.13749
GGP 0.867479
GHS 12.593607
GIP 0.867479
GMD 85.514573
GNF 10143.290905
GTQ 8.843733
GYD 241.874076
HKD 9.052001
HNL 30.704397
HRK 7.533481
HTG 151.647087
HUF 392.943851
IDR 19565.490032
ILS 3.613959
IMP 0.867479
INR 107.442864
IQD 1513.838045
IRR 1519760.503236
ISK 143.791825
JEP 0.867479
JMD 181.624669
JOD 0.819309
JPY 182.423841
KES 149.763421
KGS 101.054924
KHR 4633.962204
KMF 494.597345
KPW 1040.027513
KRW 1724.007673
KWD 0.353926
KYD 0.963484
KZT 555.984674
LAK 24816.543481
LBP 103484.119913
LKR 360.370478
LRD 211.937779
LSL 19.449397
LTL 3.412191
LVL 0.699012
LYD 7.372499
MAD 10.814987
MDL 20.260655
MGA 4813.080507
MKD 61.61802
MMK 2426.462186
MNT 4143.804949
MOP 9.328119
MRU 46.350722
MUR 53.741226
MVR 17.853738
MWK 2007.279745
MXN 20.551813
MYR 4.551849
MZN 73.838926
NAD 19.44871
NGN 1568.150995
NIO 42.433955
NOK 10.997704
NPR 172.329658
NZD 1.976252
OMR 0.444335
PAB 1.156145
PEN 3.992022
PGK 4.971446
PHP 69.284099
PKR 322.586743
PLN 4.27635
PYG 7512.308906
QAR 4.211707
RON 5.093891
RSD 117.455653
RUB 99.556773
RWF 1686.022678
SAR 4.338713
SBD 9.300955
SCR 17.161078
SDG 694.516441
SEK 10.775205
SGD 1.478315
SHP 0.867
SLE 28.485234
SLL 24232.399446
SOS 660.428353
SRD 43.337431
STD 23918.619165
STN 24.845434
SVC 10.116052
SYP 127.727213
SZL 19.448949
THB 37.709593
TJS 11.069987
TMT 4.044605
TND 3.364245
TOP 2.782411
TRY 51.186048
TTD 7.836174
TWD 36.808226
TZS 3001.680884
UAH 50.840265
UGX 4369.74838
USD 1.155602
UYU 46.828911
UZS 14092.560843
VES 525.435424
VND 30380.765043
VUV 137.988555
WST 3.157358
XAF 660.611205
XAG 0.01622
XAU 0.000251
XCD 3.123071
XCG 2.083589
XDR 0.821585
XOF 660.428833
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.668443
ZAR 19.4876
ZMK 10401.796193
ZMW 22.631445
ZWL 372.103231
  • CMSC

    0.0200

    22.85

    +0.09%

  • BCC

    -1.9800

    69.86

    -2.83%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    22.9

    +0.04%

  • NGG

    -1.8700

    85.53

    -2.19%

  • RIO

    -2.0700

    85.65

    -2.42%

  • BTI

    0.6300

    58.72

    +1.07%

  • GSK

    0.3100

    52.37

    +0.59%

  • BCE

    -0.0200

    25.73

    -0.08%

  • BP

    1.2500

    45.86

    +2.73%

  • JRI

    -0.1630

    12.16

    -1.34%

  • AZN

    0.5100

    188.93

    +0.27%

  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • RYCEF

    -0.5900

    16.01

    -3.69%

  • VOD

    0.0500

    14.42

    +0.35%

  • RELX

    -0.0400

    33.82

    -0.12%

The secret to living to 110? Bad record-keeping, researcher says
The secret to living to 110? Bad record-keeping, researcher says / Photo: Daniel SLIM - AFP/File

The secret to living to 110? Bad record-keeping, researcher says

Most of what we know about humans living to very old age is based on faulty data, including the science behind the "blue zones" famous for having a high proportion of people over 100, according to one researcher.

Text size:

The desire to live as long as possible has driven a booming lifestyle industry selling supplements, books, tech and tips to those wanting to learn the secrets of the world's oldest people.

But Saul Justin Newman, a researcher at University College London's Centre for Longitudinal Studies, told AFP that most extreme old age data "is junk to a really shocking degree".

Newman's research, which is currently being peer-reviewed, looked at data about centenarians and supercentenarians -- people who live to 100 and 110 -- in the United States, Italy, England, France and Japan.

Contrary to what one might expect, he found that supercentenarians tended to come from areas with poor health, high levels of poverty -- and bad record-keeping.

The true secret to extreme longevity seems to be to "move where birth certificates are rare, teach your kids pension fraud and start lying", Newman said as he accepted an Ig Nobel prize, a humorous version of the Nobel, in September.

Just one of many examples is Sogen Kato, who was thought to be Japan's oldest living person until his mummified remains were discovered in 2010.

It turned out he had been dead since 1978. His family was arrested for collecting three decades of pensions payments.

The government then launched a review which found that 82 percent of Japan's centenarians -- 230,000 people -- were missing or dead.

"Their paperwork is in order, they're just dead," Newman said.

This illustrates the problem Newman has sought to shine a light on -- that confirming ages in this field involves triple-checking very old documents that could have been wrong from the start.

The industry that has popped up around blue zones is one "symptom" of this problem, he said.

- 'Only alive on pension day' -

Blue zones are regions around the world where people are said to live disproportionately longer and healthier lives.

The term was first used in 2004 by researchers referring to the Italian island of Sardinia.

The following year, National Geographic reporter Dan Buettner wrote a story that added the Japanese islands of Okinawa and the Californian city of Loma Linda.

Buettner admitted to the New York Times in October that he only included Loma Linda because his editor told him: "you need to find America's blue zone".

The reporter teamed up with some demographers to create the Blue Zones lifestyle brand, and they added Costa Rica's Nicoya Peninsula and the Greek island of Ikaria to the list.

However, as seen in Japan, later government records have cast doubt on old age data in these regions.

In Costa Rica, 2008 research showed that 42 percent of centenarians had "lied about their age" in an earlier census, Newman said.

For Greece, he found 2012 data suggesting that 72 percent of the country's centenarians were dead or imaginary.

"They're only alive on pension day," Newman said.

Several prominent blue zone researchers wrote a rebuttal earlier this year, calling Newman's work "ethically and academically irresponsible".

They accused Newman of referring to broader regions of Japan and Sardinia when the blue zones were smaller areas.

The demographers also emphasised they had "meticulously validated" the ages of supercentenarians in blue zones, double-checking historical records and registries dating back to the 1800s.

Newman said this argument illustrated his point.

"If you start with a birth certificate that's wrong, that gets copied to everything, and you get perfectly consistent, perfectly wrong records," he said.

- A clock to measure age -

The only "way out of this quagmire" is to physically measure people's ages, Newman said.

Steve Horvath, an ageing researcher at the University of California, told AFP he had created a new technique called a methylation clock "for the express purpose of validating claims of exceptional longevity".

The clock can "reliably detect instances of severe fraud", such as when a child assumes their parent's identity, but cannot yet tell the difference between a 115- and 120-year-old, he said.

Horvath has offered to test a DNA sample of France's Jeanne Calment, who died at 122 in 1997 and holds the record for the oldest confirmed age.

Newman's analysis "appears to be both rigorous and convincing", Horvath said, adding that several blue zones are overseen by rigorous scientists.

"I suspect both opinions hold some truth," he said.

So what can people at home take away from this debate?

"If you want to live a long time, step number one: don't buy anything," Newman said.

"Listen your GP (doctor), do some exercise, don't drink, don't smoke -- that's it."

Y.Rahma--DT