Longevity Events CEO Martin O’Dea on the Indian Ocean island nation positioning itself as longevity’s next frontier.
The implementation gap nobody wants to talk about
What happens when a middle-income nation decides it won’t wait for wealthy countries to solve aging – and instead becomes the laboratory for implementing what already works?
That’s exactly what’s happening in Mauritius. And if you care about seeing longevity science move from lab bench to real-world benefit, it’s worth paying attention.
The longevity industry faces an implementation gap. We have brilliant science, promising therapeutics, and predictive diagnostics – but limited translation into scalable care. Meanwhile, the demographic clock is ticking: Mauritius has a life expectancy of 75 and an aging population. Like most nations, its healthcare system was built for acute care – patching people up after they get sick rather than preventing decline.
Behind those statistics lies human reality: people in their 70s losing independence, giving up activities they love, watching their final decades defined by limitation rather than possibility. Ask anyone what they want from their 80s, and you’ll hear not “lower biomarkers,” but “mobility, clarity, purpose, dignity.”
These goals are achievable – but only with early, systematic intervention.
A national experiment in implementation
The inaugural Mauritius Longevity Summit (November 13–15, 2025) isn’t just another conference. It’s the opening move in an audacious national strategy: to become the Indian Ocean’s first longevity-optimized nation.
Organized in cooperation with the Ministry of Health and Wellness and the Association of Private Clinics, the Summit bridges public health and private innovation – making it a coordinated national effort rather than boutique medicine for the few.
Who’s leading the conversation
When you attract Dr Mehmood Khan (Hevolution Foundation), Dr Brian Kennedy (National University of Singapore), Dr John Newman (Buck Institute) and Dr Matt Kaeberlein (Dog Aging Project), you’re not running a motivational event – you’re convening the people building longevity science and policy frameworks that work.

Dr Kennedy, for example, brings Singapore’s real-world playbook for health transformation – a small-island success story Mauritius can adapt.
Why Mauritius could actually pull this off
Three reasons stand out.
Institutional alignment: With both government and private healthcare on board, there’s the buy-in to scale new models nationally.
Strategic geography: Mauritius is well connected, bilingual, and already established in medical tourism.
Training infrastructure: Through the Advanced Medical Learning Centre (AMLC), which already delivers advanced clinical training across local hospitals, Mauritius has the practical platform to roll out longevity protocols nationwide.
From vision to implementation
The Summit’s structure mirrors its mission: Vision → Science → Implementation.
- Day 1: National strategy – Framed by Dr Khan’s keynote positioning Mauritius as a global testbed, followed by Dr Kennedy’s adaptation of Singapore’s strategy and panels on building a national longevity movement.
- Day 2: Science meets local reality – Dr Kaeberlein on the hallmarks of aging, with sessions linking cellular science to Mauritius’s biggest health burdens – NCDs, diabetes, and population wellbeing.
- Day 3: Practitioners become longevity leaders – Focused on practical delivery: how aging clocks, nutrition, sleep, wearables, and AI can be integrated into clinical workflows.
A centerpiece is the ICOPE Monitor, a digital tool based on the WHO’s Integrated Care for Older People framework. Designed for primary care, it screens cognitive, mobility, sensory, vitality, and psychological capacities – enabling early detection and targeted interventions.
The AMLC will deploy ICOPE Monitor across both public and private healthcare systems – an unusual dual-track rollout that directly addresses the “implementation gap.” By combining standardized measurement with practitioner training, Mauritius gains the infrastructure to detect decline early and act before it becomes crisis care.
The action agenda
Unlike many conferences, this one closes with a concrete roadmap:
- Regional longevity clinics implementing evidence-based interventions
- Practitioner training through AMLC
- ICOPE Monitor in primary care
- AI-driven health monitoring and precision nutrition pilots
- Research collaborations between Mauritian and international institutions
- Digital infrastructure to support systematic screening and follow-up
These are measurable, near-term initiatives – not aspirational slogans.
The economic case
Mauritius already thrives as a medical tourism destination. Positioning as a longevity hub adds a premium, attracting high-value medical travellers seeking interventions unavailable at home. Yet the deeper return lies in population healthspan.
Reducing chronic disease burden increases workforce participation and reduces healthcare costs. For Mauritius’s demographics, this could be transformative – boosting productivity while lowering expenditure.
As founder Damien Adam notes: “We’re willing to implement evidence-based interventions ahead of the curve.”
The global amplifier
A highlight of the Summit will be a virtual call to action from Peter Diamandis, founder of the X Prize Foundation. His message: Mauritius isn’t just building a national longevity strategy – it’s creating a replicable global model.

Diamandis’s X Prize approach – using competition to accelerate progress – has spurred breakthroughs from space travel to carbon capture. Applying that mindset to longevity could make Mauritius the prototype for scalable healthspan innovation, sparking a worldwide race to implement proven science at population level.
The test case that matters
Can a middle-income nation adapt its healthcare system to aging populations – not as a burden, but as an opportunity for human flourishing?
Mauritius is betting yes. It’s not waiting for new biology or miracle drugs; it’s implementing what already works – systematic screening, evidence-based interventions, robust training, and public-private delivery.
The obstacles are real – regulation, funding, cultural resistance – but if successful, Mauritius will prove that longevity leadership doesn’t require wealth, just strategic commitment and the will to move first.
The island has assembled the right components: government support, clinical training via AMLC, assessment tools like ICOPE Monitor, and partnerships with global longevity leaders. With Diamandis’s global lens amplifying the experiment, the stakes – and potential impact – extend far beyond its shores.
The tools to extend healthy human lifespan already exist. The challenge is implementation.
A small island nation in the Indian Ocean is stepping up to show how it’s done – and the world is watching.
Registration information
Limited places remain available for the Mauritius Longevity Summit.
Visit longevitysummit.mu
About Martin O’Dea

Martin O’Dea is CEO of Longevity Events Limited and Applied Longevity Intelligence Services (ALIS), and the driving force behind the annual Longevity Summit Dublin. With over a decade of experience in the longevity space, he is an author and one of the early contributors to the International Longevity Alliance.
Martin’s interests span human advancement through both technological and biological innovation.
Main photograph: fokkebok/Envato
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