If I told you there’s already something on pharmacy shelves that could help protect your brain, slow the wear and tear of aging, and spare you a truly miserable disease — you’d probably assume I was about to sell you bogus supplements on Instagram or something. I promise I’m not. I’m talking about the shingles vaccine.
In Vox health correspondent Dylan Scott’s latest story, he reveals a miraculous medical development that’s flown under the radar: a growing body of evidence suggesting the shingles shot might be doing far more than we ever intended. New studies are finding links to lower dementia risk, slower biological aging, and reduced inflammation — the kind of systemic damage that quietly shapes how we age.
What makes this story feel urgent — and honestly, a little tragic — is how close we are to something big, and how easily it could slip through our fingers. The newer, more effective shingles vaccine hasn’t been properly studied for these anti-aging effects yet. Researchers want to run rigorous clinical trials. They’re struggling to get funding.
Meanwhile, fewer than a third of eligible Americans are getting the shot at all, thanks to access gaps and a rising tide of vaccine skepticism.
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—Paige Vega, senior editor, climate and Future Perfect