Rethinking What "Longevity" Actually Means: The Compressed Morbidity Framework
By Dr. John Spencer Ellis, Leading Men's Longevity Expert Ask a man over 50 whether he wants to live longer, and the answer is often complicated. He wants more time with family. He wants to see grandchildren grow. He wants to accomplish what he set out to accomplish. What he does not want is to spend an additional decade in the specific decline he has watched his own parents or grandparents experience — years of chronic illness, reduced function, and dependency before death finally arrives. This is why the most important concept in modern longevity medicine is not lifespan extension. It is compressed morbidity. What Compressed Morbidity Really Means Introduced by Dr. James Fries at Stanford in 1980, compressed morbidity describes the goal of shortening the period of chronic illness and decline that typically precedes death. Rather than a long slow slide from full function at 60 to death at 80, the compressed morbidity model envisions sustained function into the late 70s and 80...