Okinawa, Sardinia, Nicoya, Ikaria, and Loma Linda. Five populations with extraordinary longevity. The common threads are not supplements or biomarkers — they are movement, purpose, community, and plants.
The term 'Blue Zone' was coined by demographer Michel Poulain and journalist Dan Buettner to describe geographic regions with unusually high concentrations of centenarians. The five identified zones are: Okinawa, Japan (highest concentration of female centenarians globally); Sardinia, Italy (highest concentration of male centenarians); Nicoya Peninsula, Costa Rica; Ikaria, Greece; and Loma Linda, California (a Seventh-day Adventist community). Despite their geographic and cultural differences, these populations share a remarkably consistent set of lifestyle characteristics.
Vitaei verdict
The Blue Zones data is observational and subject to confounding, but the consistency across five geographically and culturally distinct populations is striking. The common threads — natural movement, purpose, community, legumes, and stress reduction — are all independently supported by mechanistic and interventional evidence. The lesson is not to move to Okinawa; it is to engineer your environment to make healthy behaviours the default.