Blue Zones are regions of the world where people tend to live remarkably long lives and have lower rates of heart disease.
Wood is a medical journalist and author. Her most recent novel is “The Leap Year Gene of Kit McKinley.” Topol is a cardiologist, executive vice president, and professor, at Scripps Research. When ...
Put down the phone and pick up the ladle. While you were busy grinding for that promotion, grandmothers in Italy were busy grinding meat to make homemade sausage. They were busy taking long walks to ...
A new study by World Depopulation, a global demographics analytics tool, reveals new Blue Zone cities, urban areas where residents have the highest odds of living past 100. This voice experience is ...
The Peninsula Health Care District, in partnership with Blue Zones, the global leader in longevity research and community well-being transformation, will officially launch a major new health ...
The Blue Zones Project Tuolumne County is wrapping up five years of activities, events and community-building actions to improve the health and well-being of the community. After leading 60 months of ...
The University of Texas Medical Branch President Jochen Reiser speaks at the launch event for Blue Zones Project in Galveston on March 5, 2026. The mountainous highlands of inner Sardinia and the ...
GALVESTON – A global blueprint for living longer, healthier lives is coming to Galveston, and leaders say it could transform both public health and the local economy. UTMB has partnered with the Blue ...
MILWAUKEE — Blue Bat Kitchen and Tequilaria in Milwaukee's Historic Third Ward has reopened after it was temporarily closed by the Milwaukee Health Department. Chris Adams, a spokesperson for Blue Bat ...
With the temperatures below freezing across the US and spring still weeks away (thanks, Groundhog), it’s easy to get lost in the midwinter blahs. But who says the winter blues have to be a bad thing?
GALVESTON, Texas, Feb. 20, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- The University of Texas System Board of Regents today approved an agreement between The University of Texas Medical Branch (UTMB) and Blue Zones.
Galveston residents could soon see more bike lanes, healthier school lunches and other lifestyle changes as part of a plan that will use $9.5 million in university funds to help people live longer, ...