What we don't promise
Longevity medicine is full of promises that science doesn't support. We prefer to say first what we cannot do. It's the fastest way to explain what, instead, we really do.
Honesty is part of the method
It's not modesty: it's method. If we measure validated predictors and follow the data over time, then we must also distinguish what has evidence from what does not.
A promise that science cannot uphold is not aggressive marketing — it's an error of method. That's why we put it in writing.
What we do NOT promise
- —We don't promise to extend your life.We measure factors associated with lower risk. Association and prediction are not a guarantee of individual outcome.
- —We don't promise to "reverse" or "rejuvenate" your biological age by X years.The signals that lifestyle may influence biological ageing are real but yet to be consolidated, and a single measure has margins of noise. We use biological age as monitoring over time, not as a goal to "win".
- —We don't promise miracle cures or "regenerative" anti-aging therapies.Treatments such as intravenous infusions in healthy people, ozone therapy, hyperbaric oxygen therapy, PRP, exosomes or stem cells presented as anti-aging have, to date, no proof of effect on longevity. Where they exist, they are clinical services for specific indications, under medical responsibility — not "longevity science".
- —We don't promise that a supplement will "activate", "regenerate" or make you longer-lived.Our products are food supplements, with the claims permitted by regulation. Studies on individual ingredients explain the rationale of a formula; they are not proof of efficacy of the finished product.
- —We don't promise an AI that predicts or cures.Our intelligence platform is a correlation engine on your personal data (N=1), in development. It finds patterns over time; it does not issue diagnoses and does not replace the physician.
- —We don't promise that a single number tells you everything.The Longevity Score is a useful summary, not a verdict. Clinical decisions remain a matter of the individual values, read by a physician.
- —We don't promise results we don't yet have.Our own facility is at start-up: we describe what is validated and what is under construction, without passing one off as the other.
What we do, instead, promise
- —To measure predictors with solid, citable evidence.
- —To explain what your data means and what it doesn't.
- —To always distinguish what has proof from what is preliminary.
- —To follow you over time with re-tests, not leave you with a report.
- —To tell you when something isn't yet known.
In our content we use only verbs we can defend — measures, predicts (attributed to research), is associated with, monitors, flags, interprets, follows over time. We avoid as a promise those we cannot demonstrate — cures, rejuvenates, extends life, reverses ageing, guarantees. If you find any of our text that breaks this rule, it's our mistake: write to us.