longevity? more like poor record-keeping. so says a researcher in england, who claims to have identified a bureaucratic flaw in the world’s blue zones, regions believed to be home to populations with the most longevity.
okinawa, japan, sardinia, italy, nicoya, costa rica, kiaria, greece, and loma linda, calif., are the five areas identified for having sizeable populations living to 100 years or older.
however, saul justin newman, of university college london, contends that all these areas are also home to poor record-keeping and age data that is “junk to a really shocking degree.”
the term ‘blue zones’ was created by explorer dan buettner who, in the early 2000s, travelled the world to find the keys to a long, happy and healthy life.
newman is not buying what buettner is selling and told agence france-presse, per the
new york post, that the key to longevity is to “move where birth certificates are rare, teach your kids pension fraud and start lying.”
as an example, the researcher cited japan’s oldest living person, sogen kato, who pushed to be 111 — allegedly.
officials went to visit kato on his birthday in 2010 and found mummified remains and learned that he had likely died in 1978.