An Historically Important World Health Organization, Physician’s Portable Demonstration Model Of Human Senescence
Before improvements in management of wild-type genetic information humans aged and died. General improvements in hygiene in the early twentieth century and in low-invasive, corrective medicine and surgery in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries improved both quality of life (QOL) and delayed death. By the middle of the twenty-first century average age of death in developed health economies was 109.24Y (males) and 117.01Y (females) and BQOL or best quality of life for both sexes was: 90-100Y. And by the end of the twenty-first century death was avoidable.
Including early information transfer experiments in Japan in 2079 human ex-corporeal existence was possible two decades before the end of the century and firmly established by 2110.
The Physician's Portable Demonstration Model preserved here, an early, "bug-eye" model, shows the degenerative effects of human ageing on the face.