Centre for Policy on Ageing
 

 

Anti-aging medicine and research
 — a realm of conflict and profound societal implications
Author(s)Robert H Binstock
Journal titleJournals of Gerontology: Series A, Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences, vol 59A, no 6, June 2004
Pagespp 523-533
Sourcehttp://www.geron.org
KeywordsAlternative medicine ; Preventative medicine ; Biological ageing ; Research.
AnnotationBiogerontologists have recently launched a war of words on anti-ageing medicine. They seek to discredit what they judge to be fraudulent and harmful products and therapies, and to distinguish their own research from what they regard as the pseudoscience of anti-ageing injections, special mineral waters. and other services and products. Yet, many of these biogerontologists are themselves trying to develop interventions that will actually slow or arrest the fundamental processes of human ageing and substantially extend average life expectancy and maximum life span. Achievement of these biogerontological goals would drastically alter the nature of individual and collective life, radically transforming virtually every social institution and norm. Biogerontologists who are engaged in anti-ageing research need to undertake more active leadership in helping the public to understand their goals, to deliberately consider the implications of their fulfilment, and to begin thinking about ways to shape those ramifications to constructive fashion. (RH).
Accession NumberCPA-040817205 A
ClassmarkLK3: LK2: BH: 3A

Data © Centre for Policy on Ageing

...from the Ageinfo database published by Centre for Policy on Ageing.
 

CPA home >> Ageinfo Database >> Queries to: webmaster@cpa.org.uk