The Boring Secret to Living Longer
Information floods our lives — from government agencies, chatbots, social media influencers, and celebrity wellness gurus. We're told that this supplement will make us stronger, that bio hack will make us happier, and some new longevity protocol will help us live to 100.
We desperately want these promises to be true. But the facts point to an uncomfortable reality: almost none of them are validated by evidence. And while we're chasing the latest fad, we're ignoring the unsexy interventions that actually save lives.
Consider this: In the United States, 25% of us will die before reaching age 70. The main culprits? Heart disease, stroke, cancer, car accidents, and lung disease. Notice something? Most of these are preventable.
This doesn't have to be our reality. In countries like Japan, Switzerland, and Spain, far fewer — only 15% — of people die before 70. Even more striking, some nations with far fewer resources than ours — Costa Rica, Thailand, Vietnam — have better health outcomes than we do.
Their secret? It's universal access to primary care and a commitment to prevention — the policies and services that keep you from getting sick in the first place. We're talking about routine immunizations, blood pressure management, and prenatal care. Basic medicine that works.
Our system has essentially given up on primary care. It's not an attractive field for most doctors in training — specialists earn much more. The result? Nearly one-third of Americans don't have a primary care physician who knows them, their history, and their risks.
Yet we spend more on healthcare than any nation on Earth. Where does that money go? Into state-of-the-art ICUs and massive emergency departments that deliver expensive care late in the disease process. We excel at dramatic interventions when someone is already sick. But we often fail at the front end — managing hypertension before the stroke, controlling diabetes before the amputation, treating hepatitis before the liver failure, and helping people quit smoking before the lung cancer.
And there is another irony: Those who survive these preventable diseases often live with significant disabilities. The mark of a healthy society isn't just longevity — it's how we support people living with disabilities.
Of course, we're not the worst off. In countries like Nigeria, Sierra Leone, and Mozambique, 65% of people never reach age 70. In some nations, 80% of the population never live that long.
American health outcomes are better than that, but worse than they should be. We can change — not through unproven longevity potions and expensive bio hacks, but through something far less glamorous: sound, evidence-based healthcare built on a foundation of accessible primary care. That would mean universal health care in which profit isn’t driving the system, and success is measured by meaningful outcomes, such as how many people live to age 70.
The fountain of youth isn't exotic. It's ordinary medicine, done well, available to everyone.
— Dr. Michael Wilkes with a Second Opinion
Further Reading: