The Russian Ministry of Health has requested that research institutes report on their anti-aging work as soon as possible.
Russian scientists from the Kremlin are tasked with developing anti-aging products. The Times writes about this, noting that Vladimir Putin will be 72 in October. Most senior Russian officials are of the same age, and the average life expectancy for men in Russia is 67 years.
It is reported that the Ministry of Health has requested that research institutes report as soon as possible on their work in combating cognitive and sensory disorders, cellular aging and osteoporosis, as well as strengthening the immune system.
“We were asked to send all our developments immediately, and the letter arrived, let’s say, today, but everything should have been sent yesterday,” Medusa quoted one of the researchers as saying.
The urgent need to study the anti-aging research comes as it is reportedly involving Mikhail Kovalchuk, one of Putin’s closest friends. Kovalchuk, 77, heads the Kurchatov Nuclear Research Institute and is a leading member of the Russian Academy of Sciences. He also oversees a state-funded genetics research program that includes Putin’s eldest daughter, the endocrinologist Maria Vorontsova.
An employee of the national medical research center also suggested that Kovalchuk or Putin were involved in promoting life extension research. “Kovalchuk is obsessed with eternal life… and he ran for president [с этой идеей]”, a Kremlin source told the publication.
Despite his high-quality medical care, Putin is said to regularly bathe with blood extract extracted from the antlers of Siberian deer. Those who take such baths believe that the extract has stimulating properties and can work wonders on male potency. Antlers are cut from live deer once a year.
But not only traditional methods are used. In January, one of Russia’s leading longevity researchers, Professor Vladimir Khavinson, died in St. Petersburg at the age of 77. The head of Russia’s Institute of Bioregulation and Gerontology, Khavinson is known for his anti-aging drugs, which he claims were taken by Soviet leaders such as Leonid Brezhnev.
It is believed that the Federation Council Speaker Valentina Matvienko and Alina Kabaeva drank his drugs. It is not known whether Putin accepted them. Critics say there is no evidence that they are effective.
It was previously reported that Putin and former Russian gymnast Alina Kabaeva have two sons who live in the presidential residences and do not leave them.
House in Valdai and income from vodka. How Putin lives
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Source: korrespondent
I am David Wyatt, a professional writer and journalist for Buna Times. I specialize in the world section of news coverage, where I bring to light stories and issues that affect us globally. As a graduate of Journalism, I have always had the passion to spread knowledge through writing.