Baby boomers bent on staying forever young
NEW YORK—Baby boomers heading into what used to be called retirement age are providing a 70 million-member strong market for legions of companies, entrepreneurs and cosmetic surgeons eager to capitalize on their “forever young” mind-set, whether it’s through wrinkle creams, face-lifts or workout regimens.
It adds up to potential bonanza.
The market research firm Global Industry Analysts projects that a boomer-fueled consumer base, “seeking to keep the dreaded signs of aging at bay,” will push the US market for antiaging products from about $80 billion now to more than $114 billion by 2015.
The boomers, who grew up in a culture glamorizing youth, face an array of choices as to whether and how to be a part of that market.
Antiaging enthusiasts contend that life spans can be prolonged through interventions such as hormone replacement therapy and dietary supplements. Critics, including much of the medical establishment, say many antiaging interventions are ineffective or harmful.
From mainstream organizations, such as the National Institute on Aging, the general advice is to be a skeptical consumer on guard for possible scams involving purported antiaging products.
“Our culture places great value on staying young, but aging is normal,” the institute says. “Despite claims about pills or treatments that lead to endless youth, no treatments have been proven to slow or reverse the aging process.”
Its advice for aging well is basic: Eat a healthy diet, exercise regularly, don’t smoke.
Hefty price tags
“If someone is promising you today that you can slow, stop or reverse aging, they’re likely trying hard to separate you from your money,” says S. Jay Olshansky, a professor at the University of Illinois-Chicago’s School of Public Health, who has written extensively about aging.
“It’s always the same message: ‘Aging is your fault and we’ve got the cure,’” Olshansky says. “Invest in yourself, in the simple things we know work. Get a good pair of running or walking shoes and a health club membership, and eat more fruits and vegetables.”
But such advice hasn’t curtailed the demand for antiaging products, including many with hefty price tags that aren’t covered by health insurance.
These include cosmetic surgery procedures at $10,000 or more, human growth hormone (HGH) treatment at $15,000 per year and a skin-care product called Peau Magnifique that costs $1,500 for a 28-day supply.
Another challenge for consumers is that many dietary supplements and cosmetics, unlike prescription drugs and over-the-counter medicines, aren’t required to undergo government testing or review before they are marketed.
Exaggerated ads
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) do crack down at times on egregiously false antiaging claims, but generally there’s little protection for people who don’t get hoped-for results.
Mary Engle, director of the FTC’s division of advertising practices, says her agency focuses on the cases that could cause serious harm, such as bogus cancer treatments that might prompt an ill person to forgo proper care.
She says the agency lacks the resources to crack down comprehensively on ads with exaggerated claims that exploit customers’ hopes for better looks or more energy.
“Often, it doesn’t rise to the level of fraud,” she says. “There are so many problematic ads out there and we really have to pick and choose what we focus on.”
Threatened sectors
In contrast to the caution of mainstream organizations, there are many vocal promoters of antiaging products and procedures, including the American Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine. It hosts annual conferences in the US and abroad, and claims 22,000 members, mostly physicians.
In its mission statement, the academy says the disabilities associated with normal aging “are caused by physiological dysfunction which in many cases are ameliorable to medical treatment, such that the human life span can be increased.”
One of the academy’s cofounders is Robert Goldman, a doctor of osteopathic medicine. He contends that much of the resistance to the antiaging movement comes from sectors of the health and pharmaceutical industries that feel threatened financially—for example by the surging use of over-the-counter nutritionalsupplements.
“It all has to do with who’s controlling the dollars,” he says.
Breakthroughs
Though many antiaging interventions were expensive, Goldman says people on tight budgets still could take useful steps such as drinking purified water, taking vitamins and using sunscreen.
“People should be healthy and strong well into 100 to 120 years of age,” Goldman says in a biographical video. “That’s what’s really exciting—to live in a time period when the impossible is truly possible.”
Olshansky, who has been among Goldman’s harshest critics, believes there will be scientific breakthroughs eventually, perhaps based on studies of the genes of long-lived people, that will help slow the rate of aging.
In the meantime, Olshansky says, “I understand the need for personal freedom, the freedom to make bad decisions.”
Major sectors
A look at some of the major sectors in the antiaging industry:
Numerous companies and clinics promote hormone replacement drugs, including testosterone for men and custom-mixed “bioidentical” hormones for women, as a way to slow the aging process.
Many consumers have seen ads featuring muscle-bound Dr. Jeffry Life, now 72. He used testosterone and human growth hormone in his own bodybuilding regimen and recommends hormonal therapy for some of the patients patronizing his age-management practice in Las Vegas.
The FDA has approved hormone replacement drugs for some specific purposes related to diseases and deficiencies, but not to combat aging.
“Finding a ‘fountain of youth’ is a captivating story,” says the National Institute on Aging. “The truth is that, to date, no research has shown that hormone replacement drugs add years to life or prevent age-related frailty.”
Harmful effects
Dr. Evan Hadley, director of the institute’s Division of Geriatrics, says hormone replacement drugs can have harmful side effects. He says there is a need for more research, such as an institute study of testosterone therapy, to identify the potential risks and benefits.
“There is indeed potential that people can be healthier in old age,” Hadley says. “But it still requires evidence about what’s going to help and what’s not.”
Hormone drugs can be expensive. HGH shots can cost more than $15,000 a year, according to the institute. A hormone-based dietary supplement known as DHEA (dehydroepiandrosterone), a precursor of estrogen and testosterone, is marketed online for $12.95 per capsule by Utah-based NutraScriptives.
Some proponents say over-the-counter DHEA supplements can improve energy and strength, boost immunity and decrease fat. The institute says there’s no conclusive scientific evidence of any such benefits.
Daunting costs
Life says he’s a staunch advocate of exercise and healthy eating, but insists that hormone replacement therapy, under a doctor’s supervision, is a crucial addition for some men, and that includes him.
“There’s no way I could look and feel the way I do if all I had done the last 13 years was exercise and eat right,” he says. “Even if you do everything right, if you have a deficiency in testosterone, you will lose the fight.”
Life acknowledges that the cost of testosterone replacement, probably more than $5,000 year and not covered by insurance, can be daunting for some. But he contends the investment pays off in more vitality.
“It’s hard to put on price on good health,” he says.
Cosmetic surgery
According to the American Society of Plastic Surgeons, there were 13.1 million cosmetic plastic surgeryprocedures performed in the United States in 2010, a 77-percent increase over a decade.
One notable trend is increased preference for less invasive procedures that enable patients to get back to work and social settings without a long leave of absence.
The most popular of these is treatment with the wrinkle-smoothing drugs Botox or Dysport. They account for 5.4 million procedures, averaging about $400 per treatment.
Other popular noninvasive procedures include soft-tissue facial fillers, chemical peels and microdermabrasion.
More invasive procedures come at a higher price. Face-lifts can run from $6,000 to $15,000; the plastic surgeons’ academy reported performing 112,000 of them in 2010.
Noninvasive procedures
Dr. Peter Schmid, who runs a cosmetic surgery practice in Longmont, Colorado, says his field is flourishing because of evolving attitudes among appearance-conscious boomers. A recent Associated Press-LifeGoesStrong.com poll found that one in five boomers either have had or would consider cosmetic surgery.
“Cosmetic surgery has become table talk at home. There’s a lot of satisfaction and acceptance from people who’ve had it, friend to friend, word of mouth,” Schmid says.
While the noninvasive procedures cost less than a face-lift, the effects won’t last as long and repeat treatments might be needed several times a year, Schmid says. He advises patients to calculate carefully which type of procedure makes the most sense for them financially.
Schmid, who is on the board of the American Academy of Cosmetic Surgery, cautions against any rush to try new procedures that get a burst of publicity.
“There’s a certain vulnerability because everybody’s looking for that quick fix, that fountain of youth,” he says. “Many people will shop emotionally instead of objectively, before something has been tried and tested.”
Some critics of the antiaging industry are supportive of cosmetic surgery, provided the patient can comfortably afford it.
Robert Binstock, an expert on aging at Case Western Reserve University’s School of Medicine, tells of a recently widowed friend whose spirits lifted after getting the bags under her eyes removed.
“If you feel better looking in the mirror in the morning, fine,” he says. “I have no objection to people being narcissistic.”
Skin care
One of the industry’s booming sectors is antiaging skin care, featuring wrinkle creams and facial serums. By some estimates, the US market for cosmeceutical products—cosmetics with medicine-based ingredients—is approaching $20 billion a year.
The FDA, which oversees cosmetic safety and labeling, doesn’t require manufacturers to prove the effectiveness of cosmetic products before they go on sale, and many ads make claims which critics say are exaggerated or unverifiable.
The American Academy of Dermatology recommends consulting a dermatologist on what skin care products have been proved safe and effective in human studies.
Limited effect
Consumer Reports has ventured into the realm of antiaging cosmetics several times, using high-tech optical devices and other scientific methods to assess the products.
Last year, the magazine tested nine face serums, available at drug stores for prices ranging from $20 to $65 and all claiming to reduce wrinkles.
“After six weeks of use, the effectiveness of even the best products was limited and varied from subject to subject,” according to the review. “When we did see wrinkle reductions, they were at best slight, and they fell short of the miracles that manufacturers seemed to imply on product labels.”
Earlier, the magazine tested wrinkle creams.
“Even the best performers reduced the average depth of wrinkles by less than 10 percent, a magnitude of change that was, alas, barely visible to the naked eye,” it says.
Its top-rated product, Olay Regenerist, costs about $19 at the time of the testing. La Prairie Cellular, the most expensive at $335, is rated among the least effective.
Stem cell technology
Similar conclusions were reached in testing 16 over-the-counter eye creams.
“Even among the best-performing products, wrinkle reduction around the eyes was generally pretty subtle,” the magazine says. “After six weeks of daily use, none came close to eliminating wrinkles.”
It says the most expensive, Perricone MD at $95 a jar, is no better than cheaper drugstore brands.
One recent development in antiaging skin care is the use of stem cell technology. ReVive’s expensive Peau Magnifique is among the new products, claiming to “recruit adult stem cells into brand new stem cells.”
Neither Consumer Reports nor the FDA has conducted any specific assessment of Peau Magnifique’s effectiveness. On a website called Makeupalley.com, some customer reviews raved about it; others trashed it as a waste of money.
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