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While you were reading this sentence, a dozen people just died, worldwide. There. Another dozen people have perished. I think this is an outrage. I want to tell you why I think so, and what nanomedicine can do to help.
This article is taken from a lecture delivered by the author at the Fifth Alcor Conference on Extreme Life Extension, 16 November 2002, Newport Beach, CA. More extensive original lecture materials are also available online at the my web site.
Published on December 08 2002.
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While you were reading this sentence, a dozen people just died, worldwide.
There. Another dozen people have perished. I think this is an outrage. I want to tell you why I think so, and what
nanomedicine can do to help.
Let's look at the dimensions of the human holocaust that we call "natural death."
The death toll in the Year 2001 was worst in India. Almost 9 million casualties. The bodies were piled nearly as high in
China. The United States fell in third, with 2.4 million fatalities. 21 nations lost over half a million lives, each. These
21 countries represented all cultures, races, creeds, and continents. The human death toll in the Year 2001 from all 227
nations on Earth was nearly 55 million people, of which about 52 million were not directly caused by human action, that is,
not accidents, or suicides, or war. They were "natural" deaths.
Even the most widely recognized greatest disasters in human history pale in comparison to natural death. For example, the
typhoon that struck Bangladesh in 1970 washed away a million lives. In 1232 AD, Genghis Khan burned the Persian city of Herat
to the ground. It took his Mongol horde an entire week to slaughter the 1.6 million inhabitants. The Plague took 15 million
per year, World War II, 9 million per year, for half a decade each. The worldwide influenza pandemic of 1918 exterminated
less than 22 million people – not even half the annual casualties from natural death.
But natural death took 52 million lives last year. We can only conclude that natural death is measurably the greatest
catastrophe humankind has ever faced.
Of course we're outraged by natural death because of the obvious personal consequences. But the cost to humanity of our
individual deaths is rarely appreciated, truly staggering, and equally heartbreaking.
Each one of us carries within us a complex universe of knowledge, life experience, and human relationships. Each
individual is gifted with unique insights possessed by no one else. Almost all of this rich treasury of information is
forever lost to mankind when we die. This lost treasury is truly enormous. If the vast content of each person's life can be
summarized in just one book, then every year, natural death robs us of 52 million books, worldwide. But the U.S. Library of
Congress, the world's largest collection of physical books, holds only 18 million volumes. So each year, we allow a
destruction of knowledge equivalent to three Libraries of Congress.
It is as if in 2001, somebody burned the Library of Congress to the ground. Once in January. Then again in May. Then again
in September. 52 million books go up in flames. And then in 2002, they burn it down again. Three more times. And then again
in 2003.
What's even worse is that if you agree with me that the sum total of each human mind would really fill many, many books,
and not just one, then you must accept that the devastation of knowledge is actually far greater than I've suggested here.
Besides this staggering sacrifice of information, natural death also destroys wealth on a grand scale. According to the
Lasker Foundation, a dozen or so studies since the mid-1970s have found the value for human life is in the range of $3 to $7
million dollars, using many different methodologies. More recently, Murphy and Topel at the University of Chicago drew this
chart (which I've updated to Year-2000 dollars) showing the value of human life at every age. It recognizes that fewer years
remain to us at older ages. But this is only half of the equation.
This chart shows estimates from the Census Bureau of the number of people that died in the United States in the Year 2000,
in each age cohort, year by year. If you multiply the death rate at each age, from this chart, by the dollar value at each
age, from the previous chart, you get the economic loss at each calendar age, due to natural death. The sum of these economic
losses divided by the total number of deaths gives you the average economic value of a human life lost.
The result is an average value of about $2 million dollars for each human life lost. If we conservatively assume that the
population age structure and the age-specific mortality is the same worldwide as in the United States, then the worldwide
natural death toll of 52 million people in the Year 2001 represents an economic loss of about $100 trillion dollars. Every
year.
How big of an economic calamity is this? Taking Federal Reserve figures for the total tangible wealth of the United
States, including all financial assets, all real estate, and all consumer durables, net of debt, and applying the ratio of
U.S. to world GDP gives us an estimate of total global tangible net worth of $91 trillion dollars. So this means that every
year, natural death robs us of human capital equivalent in value to the entire tangible wealth of the world.
It is as if in the Year 2001, someone took out a giant broom and swept up all the physical assets of human civilization
into a cosmic trash can, and then threw it all away. That's $100 trillion dollars of financial assets, real estate, and
durable goods. Gone. And then in 2002, the giant broom sweeps again. Another $100 trillion dollars of human capital is
destroyed, or three times larger than the $33 trillion dollars of annual economic activity represented by world GDP. Then it
happens again in 2003.
But the economic disaster caused by natural death is even worse, if you go back through history. Since the modern human
species first emerged, perhaps 25 millennia ago, 34 billion people have ever walked the Earth, and 28 billion of us have
already died. The equivalent total information waste is more than 28 billion books, enough to fill almost 2000 Libraries of
Congress. The equivalent total economic waste is about $60 thousand trillion dollars, enough to rebuild our current tangible
civilization 600 times over. If you carry the tally back a million years, to the very dawn of man, all these figures about
double. Natural death is a disaster of unprecedented proportions in human history.
So ... what's being done about this? Let's take a statistical look at the progress to date.
This chart, compiled from Census Bureau data, shows that for the last one-and-a-half centuries, life expectancy at birth
has risen dramatically in the United States. A newborn child in the Year 1850 could only expect to live to 38 years, but
should reach almost 75 years today. To measure longevity, I'm using the Expected Age at Death, which is just your current age
plus your remaining life expectancy.
But 20th century medical technology has mainly improved the longevity of the very young. Since 1850, the Expected Age at
Death of a 40-year-old has only improved from 68 years to 77 years. The Expected Age at Death of a 70-year-old has only
improved from 80 years to 83 years. In other words, a 70-year-old's chances of living another 10 years were about as good in
1850 as they are today. Not much progress. But let's take a closer look at the data.
This chart shows the rate of Change in Life Expectancy at birth since 1850, as measured in years of extra life expectancy
achieved by medical technology per decade of calendar time. If we could get to a rate of 10 years of life extension per
decade, then medical technology would be extending life exactly as fast as we're aging, postponing natural death, on average,
indefinitely. We see from the chart that the Change in Life Expectancy improved at only 1 year per decade up until 1890.
After 1890, the Change in Life Expectancy of newborns jumped dramatically, reaching more than 6 years per decade at its peak
in 1925. This was due to the rapid introduction of several basic medical breakthroughs, like public sanitation, comprehensive
vaccination programs, and later, antibiotics.
Note that the rate of Change jumped from 0.8 to 4 years per decade during 1890 to 1900, a fivefold increase in a 10 year
calendar span. The rate soared from 2 to 6 years per decade during 1910 to 1925, a threefold increase in a 15 year calendar
span. So we know it's possible to see very rapid increases in the rate of Change in Life Expectancy, when new technology is
brought to bear on the problem. In other words, history tells us that the current 2.3 year per decade rate of progress could
plausibly quadruple to the "magic" 10 years per decade threshold, in the space of just 10-20 years from today, if new
resources and new medical technologies are focused on improving longevity.
Worried parents and life insurance salesmen often complain that the young think they're immortal. Well, in a sense, the
young are almost right! There are age groups for which it can validly be said that extreme life extension has already been
achieved, using existing medical technology. To better appreciate this accomplishment, we need to talk about death rates for
a few minutes.
The chart shows the aggregate death rate for all males, at all ages, in the United States, from 1850 to 2000. In 1850,
each male had a 2 percent chance of dying in the next year. By 2000, each male had a 1 percent chance of dying in the next
year. So over this 150-year time span, the death rate was cut in half. As a result,...
...the life expectancy from birth has approximately doubled, from 38 years in 1850 to almost 75 years in 2000, as shown by
the black curve.
A very simple formula, written in red below, can be devised for estimating the Expected Age at Death. This formula encodes
the simple truth that, roughly speaking, cutting the death rate in half doubles the life expectancy, as measured from the
current age of the individual. The formula assumes a single net death rate, for a whole population of mixed ages. This is an
important point, because the natural death rate in humans depends on our physiological age. Death rates typically rise with
advancing age, except at the oldest ages.
Medical technology has had its greatest impact to date in preventing infant mortality, especially between the ages of 1 to
4. In the Year 1850, a young child in this age cohort had a 2.4 percent probability of dying in the next year. Today, the
probability of dying in the next year for these children has been reduced from 2.4 percent to 0.04 percent. That's a
phenomenal 60-fold reduction.
What if future medical technologies permit us first to arrest, and later to reverse, the biological effects of aging? In
such an era, our bodies would no longer tumble down a staircase of degeneration and frailty. Instead, our statistical death
rate would take on some approximately fixed value that's appropriate for our physiological-age cohort, not our calendar-age
cohort. Biological age would no longer march in lockstep with calendar age. So, how much longer might we live, if we could
just keep the bodies we had when we were young?
Well, in the Year 1850, the death rate for a U.S. male between the ages of 1 and 4 implied an Expected Age at Death,
according to our formula, of only 31 years. That is, in 1850, a child that could remain perpetually 1-4 years old
physiologically, would have died, on average, after 31 calendar years. Early childhood was still very unhealthy and dangerous
in those days.
As medical technology slowly improved, childhood became far less dangerous. Most of the specific medical causes of early
childhood death have now been analyzed, and conquered. As a result, a child that could remain perpetually 1-4 years old
biologically today would not die, on average, until he or she reached the calendar age of 1800 years. Death would usually
come from some form of non-medical accident, which is the leading cause of death up to age 44.
Of course, most of us aren't 1-4 years old. How long would we live if we could halt any further biological aging of our
bodies right now, at our current age?
Here's the answer for various biological age cohorts up to 44 years old.
The 10-year-olds among us would fare the best, reaching an average Expected Age at Death exceeding 3000 calendar years.
The 20-year-olds would make it to 600 calendar years. Life has even become less dangerous for the 40-year-olds, who could
survive to an average calendar age of 300 years in today's medical environment, if further biological aging could be
immediately halted. These are remarkable achievements of medical technology compared to the Year 1850, a time when none of
these groups would have survived more than 80-100 calendar years. Note that all of these curves – and most especially the
youngest cohorts – began their steep climbs into extended longevity during the latter half of the 19th century.
If you're over 45, the picture is not yet so bright. Non-aging biological 50-year-olds would live to a calendar age of 178
years. Non-aging 60-year-olds could only expect to survive to 113 calendar years in the current medical environment.
But the news is not all bad for the elders. The death rate for 80-year-old U.S. males fell by 45 percent during the last
century. So some progress is definitely being made. The problem is that the absolute natural death rate is still so high
among the elderly that the Expected Age at Death has not yet significantly improved.
Now, you remember those Expected Age at Death curves for the youngsters that began their steep climb into extended
longevity in the late 19th Century? The biggest gains were in the 1-10 year old cohorts, where death rates fell 30- to
60-fold. These gains began at a time when this age cohort made up 20 to 30 percent of the U.S. population. Early deaths in
this gigantic demographic bulge were of great concern to medical researchers at the time, who lavished their resources on
solving this problem.
I think history is about to repeat, this time at the opposite end of the age scale. In the United States, people over 60
years of age already make up the single largest cohort at 16.5 percent, and this cohort grows to 20 to 30 percent of the U.S.
population after 2015, and for decades beyond. As before, this demographic bulge will focus research scientists and research
dollars towards solving the problem of premature death among the very old.
And there's another societal motivation to reduce death rates. As nations become more industrialized, their birth rates go
down. In the developed world, the birth-to-death ratio has been declining for decades. In many countries, there are already
more deaths each year than births, which, in the long run, is a prescription for national extinction. To avoid a Population
Implosion, these nations must get busy and reduce their death rates to below their falling birth rates.
The greatest advances in halting biological aging and preventing natural death are likely to come from the fields of
biotechnology and nanotechnology. That is, nanomedicine. Nanomedicine is most simply and generally defined as the
preservation and improvement of human health, using molecular tools and molecular knowledge of the human body.
In the near term, say, the next 5 years, the molecular tools of nanomedicine will include biologically active materials
with well-defined nanoscale structures, such as dendrimer-based organic devices and pharmaceuticals based on fullerenes and
organic nanotubes. We should also see genetic therapies and tissue engineering becoming more common in medical practice.
In the mid-term, the next 5 or 10 years or so, knowledge gained from genomics and proteomics will make possible new
treatments tailored to specific individuals, new drugs targeting pathogens whose genomes have now been decoded, stem cell
treatments to repair damaged tissue, replace missing function, or slow aging, and biological robots made from bacteria and
other motile cells that have had their genomes re-engineered and re-programmed. We could also see artificial organic devices
that incorporate biological motors or self-assembled DNA-based structures for a variety of useful medical purposes.
For more information on the way in which we think such devices would work, you can view the original lecture materials. My website contains links to more advanced material, including my technical designs for
nanomechanical devices for medicine.
The end result of all these nanomedical advances will be to enable a process I call "dechronification" – or, "rolling back
the clock." I see no serious ethical problems with this. According to the volitional normative model of disease that is most
appropriate for nanomedicine, if you're physiologically old and don't want to be, then for you, oldness and aging are a
disease, and you deserve to be cured. After all, what's the use of living many extra hundreds of years in a body that lacks
the youthful appearance and vigor that you desire? Dechronification will first arrest biological aging, then reduce your
biological age by performing three kinds of procedures on each one of the 4 trillion tissue cells in your body.
- First, a nanodevice will be sent to enter every tissue cell, to remove accumulating metabolic toxins and undegradable
material. Afterwards, these toxins will continue to slowly re-accumulate as they have all your life, so you'll probably need
a whole-body cleanout to prevent further aging, maybe once a year.
- Second, chromosome replacement therapy can be used to correct accumulated genetic damage and mutations in every one of
your cells. This might also be repeated annually.
- Third, persistent cellular structural damage that the cell cannot repair by itself such as enlarged or disabled
mitochondria can be reversed as required, on a cell by cell basis, using cellular repair devices.
We're still a long way from having complete theoretical designs for many of these machines, but they all appear possible
in theory, so eventually we will have good designs for them.
Using these annual checkups and cleanouts, and some occasional major repairs, your biological age could be restored once a
year to the more or less constant physiological age that you select. I see little reason not to go for optimal youth – though
trying to maintain your body at the ideal physiological age of 10 years old might be difficult and undesirable for other
reasons.
A rollback to the physiology of your late teens would be easier to maintain and more fun. That would push your Expected
Age at Death up to around 900 calendar years. You might still eventually die of accidental causes, but you'll live ten times
longer than you do now.
How far can we go with this? Well, if we can eliminate 99 percent of all medically preventable conditions that lead to
natural death, your healthy lifespan should increase to about 1100 years. It may be that you'll find it hard to coax more
than a millennium or two out of your original biological body, because deaths from suicides and accidents have remained
stubbornly high for the last 100 years, falling by only one-third during that time.
However, one can hope that the rate of suicides might be greatly reduced, with so much to look forward to, and with new
nanomedical treatments for unhealthy mental states. Nanotechnology can also improve the overall safety of our material
environment, leading to far fewer deaths from accidents.
Finally, genetic modifications or nanomedical augmentations to the human body may extend healthy lifespans still further,
to a degree that cannot yet be accurately predicted.
In closing, I hope you'll agree with me that natural death is an outrage. Indeed, it is humanity's, and history's,
greatest outrage. Now, at long last, maybe we can finally do something about it. So let's get on with it!
Thank you.
For more information about my writings on nanomedicine, please visit the following websites:
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Copyright © Robert A. Freitas Jr. 2002. (Author's personal note: This was my first major public lecture on medical nanotechnology and life extension, nanomedicine, and medical nanorobotics.)
Note: The original lecture (V1.06, 15 November 2002) totals 442 MB so it is impractical to put all materials (especially
movies) online here. Copyright issues also preclude many other images from appearing here although some of these may be found online at the author's Nanomedicine Art Gallery.
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