We strive for a world where the average healthy life expectancy exceeds 100 years, and aging becomes a manageable process rather than an inevitable decline. Our Global Mission integrates the principles of the Academy’s Doctrine but focuses on an international scale, including partnerships with the UN, WHO, governments, and NGOs. it is divided into key components: goals, strategies, target groups, success indicators, and challenges.
Primary Goals of the Global Mission
The Academy’s Global Mission pursues the following key objectives, each supported by specific actions and implementation timelines:
1. Promoting Longevity as a Global Development Goal:
- Goal: To integrate the concept of “long-lived youth” into the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), particularly SDG 3 (Good Health and Well-being) and SDG 10 (Reduced Inequalities).
- Details: We lobby for the adoption of international resolutions emphasizing aging prevention through genetics, biotechnology, and lifestyle. By 2030, we plan to cover at least 50 countries with national longevity programs based on our protocols.
- Examples: Development of a global “Healthy Longevity Index” (HLI), similar to the Human Development Index (HDI), to evaluate countries based on criteria such as average healthy lifespan, access to anti-aging technologies, and health preservation education levels.
2. Dissemination of Knowledge and Education:
- Goal: To provide access to protocol-based educational resources to 500 million people by 2040.
- Details: Creation of a multilingual online platform featuring courses in nutrition, kinetic fitness, the art of meditation, and personalized biohacking. Courses will, in most cases, be adapted to autochthonous cultural contexts: for example, integrating applied Ayurveda for Asia, a Modified Mediterranean diet for Europe, and modulated traditional indigenous practices for Russia and the Americas.
- Examples: Partnerships with platforms such as Coursera or edX for free MOOCs (Massive Open Online Courses), as well as mobile applications with AI coaches that analyze fitness tracker data to provide personalized recommendations.
3. Support for Scientific Research and Innovation:
- Goal: To fund and coordinate global research to double the healthy lifespan by 2050.
- Details: Establishment of an international grant fund of at least $1 billion (through donations and partnerships). Focus on breakthrough areas: regenerative medicine (stem cells), epigenetics (gene management), nanotechnology for drug delivery, and AI for predictive medicine.
- Examples: Annual “Longevity Summit” global conferences featuring Nobel laureates, presenting discoveries such as new senolytics (drugs that remove “senescent” cells) or CRISPR therapy to prevent age-related diseases.
4. Building a Global Community and Networks:
- Goal: To unite approximately 50 million members by 2035 into a network of local and virtual communities.
- Details: Developing branches in every region (Africa, Asia, Europe, Americas, Oceania) with an emphasis on local issues: fighting malaria in Africa, stress in Asian megacities, or obesity in the US.
- Examples: Academy social networks for sharing success stories, virtual challenges (e.g., “30 Days of Healthy Eating”), and volunteer programs where members help implement healthy practices in schools, universities, and local communities.
5. Advocacy and Political Influence:
- Goal: To influence global policy to reduce inequality in access to health.
- Details: Campaigns for healthcare system reform, including subsidies for healthy food, bans on harmful food additives, and the integration of longevity into school curricula.
- Examples: Partnerships with specialized organizations for environmental initiatives (planetary health = human health) and government structures to protect the rights of the elderly.
Implementation Strategies
To achieve these goals, the Academy utilizes a multi-level approach:
- Multi-level Partnership: Collaboration with governments (e.g., ministries of health), corporations (pharmaceutical companies like Pfizer for joint research), and NGOs (Red Cross for humanitarian programs in developing countries).
- Technological Integration: Utilizing AI for big data analysis of population health, blockchain for secure medical record storage, and VR/AR for immersive learning (e.g., virtual yoga simulations).
- Monitoring and Adaptation: Annual reports with KPIs (Key Performance Indicators), such as the number of people reached, reduction in morbidity, and participant feedback. The mission is adjusted based on data, accounting for global events such as pandemics.
- Funding: A combination of donations, grants (from the EU, USAID), and crowdfunding. We aim for self-sustainability through premium services (personalized health plans).
Target Groups
The mission is oriented toward all age and social groups, with an emphasis on the vulnerable:
- Youth (18–35): Prevention to lay the foundation for longevity.
- Middle Age (35–60): Lifestyle correction to prevent chronic diseases.
- Seniors (60+): Reversing aging through therapies.
- Developing Countries: Access to basic healthy living resources (clean water, nutrition, etc.).
- Local Adaptation: Accounting for local gender and cultural specifics.
Success Indicators
- Short-term (up to 2030): Increasing membership to 10 million, publishing 100 research studies, launching the platform in 20 languages.
- Mid-term (2030–2040): 20% reduction in global morbidity in partner countries, integration into 100 national policies.
- Long-term (after 2040): Achieving an average healthy lifespan of 100+ years, receiving a Nobel Prize for contributions to medicine.
Challenges and Risks
- Inequality: Access in poor regions—addressed through mobile clinics and free resources.
- Skepticism: Combating myths through evidence-based science.
- Ethical Issues: Ensuring that technologies do not exacerbate social stratification.
- Global Crises: Adapting to climate change and pandemics.
Conclusion
The Academy’s Global Mission is not merely a declaration, but a roadmap to a better future. We invite everyone to join: register on the website, become a volunteer, or a partner. Together, we will make longevity the norm for humanity.
For additional information: contact@humanhealth.academy
Approval Date: August 22, 2025
Signature: Dr. Ruslan Kozaev, Founder and Director
