Regular physical movement:
Of all the lifestyle factors studied in longevity research, regular physical activity has the strongest and most consistent evidence for extending healthspan.
Exercise maintains mitochondrial function.
It preserves muscle mass, which is the amount of muscle in the body.
It reduces chronic inflammation.
It supports cardiovascular health.
It maintains cognitive function, which means the ability to think, remember, and reason.
It reduces the risk of virtually every age-related disease.
Research published in
The Lancet found that physical inactivity is responsible for approximately 5.3 million deaths per year globally.
That figure is comparable to the deaths caused by smoking.
The type of exercise matters too.
Resistance exercise, which means exercise that puts the muscles under load, is particularly important with age because it directly combats sarcopenia, which is the age-related loss of muscle.
Aerobic exercise, which means exercise that raises the heart rate and breathing rate, such as walking, swimming, and cycling, supports cardiovascular health, brain function, and mood.
Both types together provide the most comprehensive protection.
Nutrition:
The dietary pattern, which means the overall way a person eats rather than individual foods, most consistently linked to healthy ageing is the Mediterranean pattern.
This pattern is built around abundant vegetables, fruits, legumes, which are foods like lentils, beans, and chickpeas, whole grains, extra virgin olive oil, and oily fish.
It is associated with lower rates of cardiovascular disease, cognitive decline, which means a gradual reduction in memory and thinking ability, type 2 diabetes, cancer, and all-cause mortality, which means death from any cause.
Caloric restriction, which means eating fewer calories than usual while maintaining adequate nutrition, has been studied extensively in animals and shows strong anti-ageing effects.
The evidence in people is less clear.
But eating in a way that avoids chronic overeating and supports a healthy body weight is consistently beneficial.
Sleep:
Sleep is when the body conducts its most intensive repair work.
It is when the glymphatic system, which is the brain’s waste clearance system, flushes out toxic proteins including amyloid beta, which is a protein that builds up in the brain and is linked to Alzheimer’s disease.
Alzheimer’s disease is the most common form of dementia, a condition that progressively destroys memory and thinking ability.
Chronic sleep deprivation, which means consistently sleeping too little, accelerates biological ageing at the cellular level.
It shortens telomeres, which are the protective caps on chromosomes, the structures inside cells that carry genetic information.
It increases inflammageing.
It impairs the brain’s waste clearance process.
Seven to nine hours of consistent sleep is one of the most powerful anti-ageing interventions available.
Stress management:
Chronic psychological stress accelerates biological ageing through multiple pathways.
A pathway in biology means a sequence of events or processes that leads to a specific outcome.
Stress accelerates telomere shortening.
It increases inflammageing.
It impairs sleep.
It promotes harmful behaviours like smoking, poor eating, and physical inactivity.
Research published in the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences found that caregivers, which means people who provide long-term care for a sick family member, who experienced high levels of chronic stress had significantly shorter telomeres than caregivers with lower stress levels.
Actively managing stress is an anti-ageing strategy.
Social connection:
Loneliness, which means feeling socially isolated and disconnected from others, accelerates biological ageing.
Isolation activates the stress response, which keeps cortisol, the stress hormone, elevated.
It promotes inflammageing.
It impairs sleep.
It reduces motivation for healthy behaviours.
A major meta-analysis, which is a study that combines the results of many individual studies to draw broader conclusions, published in
PLOS Medicine found that people with strong social connections had a 50 per cent greater likelihood of survival over the follow-up period compared to those who were isolated.
Social connection is not a soft addition to longevity.
It is one of its most powerful biological drivers.
Not smoking:
Smoking accelerates ageing at the molecular level, which means at the level of the tiny chemical structures inside cells.
It shortens telomeres.
It promotes inflammageing.
It causes direct damage to DNA, which is the molecule inside cells that carries genetic information.
It significantly increases the risk of virtually every age-related disease including heart disease, stroke, lung disease, and at least 12 types of cancer.
Stopping smoking at any age produces measurable benefits.
Limiting alcohol:
Alcohol accelerates biological ageing.
It shortens telomeres.
It promotes inflammation.
It damages the liver, which is the organ that filters toxins from the blood.
It impairs sleep quality.
It increases the risk of cancer.
Reducing or eliminating alcohol slows these processes proportionally, which means the more you reduce, the more you benefit.