Tuesday 15 October 2013

Health and Wellness

The face of medicine as we know it today is changing, and in just a few years it will look completely different than it does today. The change that it is undergoing is driven in large part by the development of stem cell therapies that will make much of how we treat disease and degeneration of bodily parts today appear barbaric. Additionally these therapies will enable us to treat conditions for which we have no effective treatments today.

The same science of stem cells is also at the very beginning stages of cosmetic enhancement, from facial reshaping and breast enhancement, to long lasting treatments for conditions like erectile dysfunction. But even more promising is the potential for extending our lives in years as well as in vibrant health. There is absolutely no doubt that extending our “healthspan” is one of the most exciting promises that stem cells hold.
 
Doctors around the world, who have been treating patients for other conditions, have observed a common set of alternative physical changes. Age markers in these patients have often slowed down and even reversed. Gray hair turning back to its original color; fine lines and wrinkles fading or disappearing; increased mental acuity and restoration of sexual function are but some of the changes that have been seen. Just recently doctors in the US have shown these and other age reversals in animal studies. And this is just the beginning.

As 70-million baby boomers reach retirement age in the next decade, the demand for these services will drastically increase as medical science’s knowledge and understanding grows exponentially. One of the largest opportunities that has occurred in our lifetime exists now by positioning companies in the proper place and developing the strategies that will enable those companies to be among the world’s leaders in those business sectors.


To your health,

Steven Marshank

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