That headline is not scientifically valid. It’s a classic viral claim that mixes a bit of truth (health matters for longevity) with oversimplified fear-based messaging.
There is no list of “5 diseases you must have after 60” that predicts whether someone will live to 100.
🧠 What science actually says about living longer
Longevity is influenced by many factors, such as:
- Genetics
- Lifestyle (diet, exercise, smoking, alcohol)
- Social connection
- Access to healthcare
- Chronic disease management
Research in Gerontology shows that it’s not about having or not having specific diseases—it’s about overall health and how well conditions are managed.
⚠️ Why the claim is misleading
- It assumes you “need” certain diseases to predict longevity (false)
- It ignores severity (mild vs severe illness matters a lot)
- It ignores people who live long without major disease
- It oversimplifies complex biology into a checklist
❤️ What actually predicts a higher chance of long life
Studies consistently show better odds of reaching advanced age when someone has:
- Normal blood pressure and controlled heart health
- No smoking history
- Regular physical activity
- Healthy body weight
- Good mental health and low chronic stress
- Strong social relationships
These matter far more than any fixed “disease list.”
🧠 Important reality
Many people reach 90–100:
- With no major chronic diseases, or
- With well-managed conditions like diabetes or hypertension
So disease presence alone does not determine lifespan.
🧠 Bottom line
There is no guaranteed disease checklist for living to 100. Longevity depends on a combination of genetics, lifestyle, and healthcare—not viral rules.
If you want, I can explain real, evidence-based habits of people who live to 90–100 in “Blue Zones” regions.