If these medical advancements become approved for use in humans, just HOW LONG could we live?
December 27, 2022 by Sheryl J. Moore
You always hear me say that “annuities will guarantee a paycheck for life, even if the annuitant lives to be 150 years old.”
This is because I read a “Time” magazine article, over a decade ago, which indicated that the first person to live to be 150 years old was already walking the earth at that time.
At the time I read it, I believed it. I mean, I had just watched a “60 Minutes” where some doctors were able to regrow a Veteran’s lost ear, using pig’s blood and a laser printer. Medical advancements over the past two decades have been crazy!
I had witnessed the advancements personally, as my son required surgery every year, from the time he was born. Each of his surgeries seemed to be an improvement over the last.
I initially started reading this article because my son was put on life support for four days, after he killed himself. I kept hoping he would “come back to life,” but he was eventually declared “dead” when the doctors found that he had no brain activity.
However, my thoughts now turn to the retirement industry. While everyone is discussing advanced longevity, and the need to prepare for a longer retirement, how does the technology in this article change things?
This article shows that today, doctors are able to bring any organ in the human body “back to life,” even when death has occurred hours, and even days, before.
If these medical advancements become approved for use in humans, just HOW LONG could we live?
Give it a read, if you have the time.
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