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Sign up todayMayo Clinic on Healthy Aging
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Learn moreHealthy aging isn’t simply a roll of the dice. But it also doesn’t happen by accident. How people age is a choice. Mayo Clinic on Healthy Aging discusses the biology of aging—why we age and how to slow the aging process. It delves into common health and lifestyle concerns and outlines steps that listeners can take to enjoy longer and more purposeful lives. Researchers are finding that genes play a smaller role in overall health than most individuals realize. More often, the life people lead in their later years is a culmination of personal attitudes, decisions made, and actions taken beginning in young adulthood. The book covers a variety of topics including responding to personal risks, how to challenge the brain and body, healthy diet, physical activity, resiliency, retirement planning, and living a fulfilling life. Listeners also will find practical tips to keep their minds, bodies, and spirits in top shape. Think of this book as an instruction manual that provides the tools needed to live life to its maximum—ensuring that the later years are some of the best years. The advice comes from a wide range of Mayo Clinic specialists, including staff of the Kogod Center on Aging, where discoveries being made suggest aging may be a modifiable risk factor—a process that can be controlled. The Center’s efforts are focused on the goal of increasing human “health span”—the number of years spent living independently and free of age-related diseases and disabilities.
Nathan K. LeBrasseur, Ph.D., is the director of the Robert and Arlene Kogod Center on Aging, the co-director of the Paul F. Glenn Center for Biology of Aging Research, and the scientific director of the Office of Translation to Practice at Mayo Clinic. A professor of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation and associate professor of Physiology in the Mayo Clinic College of Medicine and Science, he also serves as the chair of the NIH Cellular Mechanisms in Aging and Development Study Section.
Christina Chen, M.D., is a geriatrician at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. The host of the Mayo Clinic podcast Aging Forward, she is the course director for the geriatrics curriculum at the Mayo Clinic Alix School of Medicine, the didactic core curriculum leader for the Geriatrics Medicine Fellowship, and the course director for the Care of the Older Adult CME. Her research focuses on transforming dementia care through integrative therapies and environmental redesign.
Daniel Henning is an experienced writer, director, actor, producer, and audiobook narrator who has lent his talents to MTV, HBO, Comedy Central, and ABC. An advocate for LGBTQ equality and the arts, he is a graduate of NYU's Tisch School of the Arts and the founding artistic director of The Blank Theatre in Hollywood.