INTERNATIONAL LONG-TERM CARE FUND


APPROVED

By the World Academy of Human Health

Official Name:

Longevity Trusteeship Fund

(Under the auspices of the World Academy of Human Health)

Abbreviation: LTF

General Goal (Mission)

To preserve the dignity, health, and unique life experience of individuals who have achieved exceptional longevity (ages 90+ and 100+) through a system of systematic observation, comprehensive support, scientific study, and social protection.

The Fund regards every long-lived individual as a national and global treasure, a bearer of priceless knowledge, adaptive strategies, and the spiritual and moral experience of humanity.

Vision

By the year 2040, to create a global system in which every long-lived person on the planet has the opportunity to:

  • Live in safety and with dignity;
  • Receive top-tier personalized medical and social support;
  • Pass on their experience to future generations in a structured and honorable manner.

Organizational Structure

Higher Governing Bodies

  • Board of Trustees (Supreme Body)
  • International Expert and Scientific Council
  • Fund Directorate (Executive Body)

Key Structural Departments

1. Department of the Longevity Registry (International Registry)

  • Head: Chief Registrar of the Fund
  • Functions:
    • Creating and maintaining the voluntary, confidential “International Longevity Registry” (90+/100+).
    • Multilevel data collection: biographical, genealogical, medical, biochemical, psychological, nutritional, behavioral, social, and environmental.
    • Developing the Longevity Phenotype Database.
    • Conducting comparative analysis of living conditions, nutrition, physical activity, social inclusion, and psychological profiles.
    • Preparing the annual “State of Global Longevity Report.”
    • Developing longevity maps and atlases (Blue Zones 2.0).

2. Department of Medical and Social Monitoring

  • Head: Chief Curator of Longevity Health
  • Functions:
    • Organizing regular (at least twice a year) comprehensive medical and gerontological observation.
    • Coordinating individual prevention and treatment programs.
    • Identifying and promptly addressing needs for medical, rehabilitative, psychological, and social assistance.
    • Establishing the “Personal Longevity Curator” institute (specially trained professionals).
    • Monitoring quality of life using international methodologies (WHOQOL-OLD + the Fund’s proprietary scales).
    • Interacting with families, attending physicians, and regional health and social protection authorities.
    • Developing and implementing “Dignified Medical Support for the Long-lived” standards.

3. Department of Heritage and Wisdom Preservation (“Heritage”)

  • Functions:
    • Organizing in-depth biographical and oral history documentation (Life Story Documentation).
    • Creating the “Living Library of Humanity” multimedia archive (video, audio, and text).
    • “Wisdom in Schools” program — transferring the experience of the long-lived to children and youth.
    • Publishing the book series “Confessions of the Long-lived” and “Lessons from Centenarians.”
    • Creating digital avatars and neuro-interviews to preserve personality (following ethical protocols).

4. Department of Scientific Research and Analytics

  • Functions:
    • Conducting fundamental and applied research on the phenotype of exceptional longevity.
    • Coordinating international scientific consortia.
    • Developing predictive models for healthy longevity.
    • Preparing recommendations for national healthcare systems and social policy.

5. Department of Social Protection and Trusteeship

  • Functions:
    • Establishing a system for the legal and social protection of the long-lived.
    • Material support programs (as needed).
    • “Foster Family for the Long-lived” and “Honorary Home” programs.
    • Protection against exploitation, fraud, and age discrimination.
    • Developing the International Convention “On the Rights and Dignity of the Long-lived.”

6. Department of International Development and Strategic Partnership

  • Liaising with governments, the WHO, academic institutions, foundations, and businesses.
  • Establishing national branches of the Fund.

Fundamental Operating Principles

  1. Voluntariness and Respect for Autonomy — the highest value.
  2. Confidentiality and Data Protection (GDPR compliance + special protocols).
  3. “Do No Harm” — the primum non nocere principle in an expanded gerontological sense.
  4. Dignity and Respect Above All.
  5. Heritage Over Biology — a person’s experience is more valuable than their biomarkers.
  6. Strict Political and Religious Neutrality.

Status and Symbolism

The Fund operates as an independent international charitable organization under the auspices of the World Academy of Human Health.

Fund Motto:

“Preserving the Past, Creating the Future: Virtue, Health, and the Experience of Generations”

Symbol: An ancient tree with a powerful canopy and deep roots, at the base of which are human figures passing light to the next generation.


1. FUND CHARTER (Summary)

APPROVED: By resolution of the Board of Trustees of the International Charitable Foundation “Longevity Trusteeship Fund.”

1. General Provisions

1.1. The Fund is a non-profit charitable organization established under the auspices of the World Academy of Human Health.

1.2. The Fund is guided by the principle that every long-lived individual (90 years and older) is a national and global treasure.

2. Goals and Scope of Activities

Primary Goal: Monitoring, comprehensive support, scientific study, social protection, and preservation of the life experience of the long-lived, as well as improving their quality of life and medical care.

3. Governing Bodies

  • Board of Trustees (Supreme Body).
  • International Expert and Scientific Council.
  • Director of the Fund (Sole Executive Body).
  • Audit Commission.

The full text of the Charter (15 pages) is available in Word format upon request, with legal adaptation for specific jurisdictions (Switzerland, UK, UAE, etc.).


2. ETHICAL CODE OF THE FUND

Preamble: We recognize that working with individuals of exceptional age requires the highest ethical standards. Every long-lived person is a living history of humanity.

  • Article 1. Principle of Dignity: Every individual has the right to respect and the preservation of personal dignity in all situations.
  • Article 2. Principle of Voluntariness: All forms of participation and data collection are based on free, informed, and revocable consent.
  • Article 3. “Do No Harm” (Primum non nocere): Actions must not worsen the physical, mental, or social state of the individual.
  • Article 4. Absolute Confidentiality: Data is classified under the highest level of protection.
  • Article 5. Scientific Integrity: Data must not be distorted for scientific, political, or media interests.
  • Article 6. Heritage Principle: Life experience belongs primarily to the individual; the Fund acts only as a custodian.
  • Article 7. Prohibition of Exploitation: No commercial or political use of an individual’s image or name without express consent.

3. 10-YEAR DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY (2025–2035)

Phase 1 (2025–2027) – Foundation: Official registration, pilot Registry in 12 countries, and formation of a world-class Board of Trustees.

Phase 2 (2028–2030) – Scaling: Reaching 5,000 registered participants, launching the “Personal Curator” program and the “Living Library of Humanity.”

Phase 3 (2031–2035) – Global Influence: Coverage of 25,000+ individuals in 60+ countries. Adoption of the International Convention on the Rights of the Long-lived.


4. REGISTRY APPLICATION FORM

Section 1. Personal Data

  • Full Name: _______________________________
  • Date of Birth: __________ Current Age: ______
  • Location (Country/City): _____________________
  • Contact Info: _______________________________

Section 2. Consent

I, ____________________________, voluntarily express my desire to be included in the International Longevity Registry. I understand my rights, including the right to withdraw at any time.

Section 3. Participation Format

  • [ ] Registry only (anonymous)
  • [ ] Full participation (medical and biographical data)
  • [ ] Heritage Preservation program (interviews/video)
  • [ ] Medical monitoring program

Signature: ______________________ Date: __________