Health and longevity are goals many aspire to in modern life. Family physician Dr. Li Sihsien shared that experts studying the world’s longest-living populations found that residents in these regions do not follow a low-sugar diet. In Okinawa, for example, up to 90% of their food comes from sweet potatoes, a naturally sweet starch. Moreover, over 90% of their diet is plant-based, making it almost vegetarian.
Dr. Li explained on his Facebook that National Geographic author Dan Buettner coined the term “Blue Zones” in 2005 to describe areas with unusually high longevity, including Okinawa (Japan), Nicoya Peninsula (Costa Rica), Sardinia (Italy), Loma Linda (USA), and Ikaria (Greece).
Analysis of these regions reveals several common lifestyle and dietary habits: over 90% of food from plants, physical activity naturally integrated into daily life, periods of fasting, low stress, and strong social connections.
Diet-wise, Blue Zone residents do not avoid sugar—Okinawans consume significant amounts of sweet potatoes—but most of their nutrition comes from plants. Meat is rarely eaten, reserved mainly for special occasions, while protein comes from legumes and, in coastal regions, fish. Nuts also provide essential nutrients.
People in Blue Zones tend to eat less overall and often spend much of the day in a mild fasting state, effectively practicing intermittent fasting. Physical activity is embedded into daily routines—farming, walking, and manual labor replace formal exercise like gyms or marathons.
Stress levels are generally low, thanks to rural living environments that promote better sleep and a slower pace of life. Most importantly, strong social bonds are a hallmark of Blue Zones. Residents maintain warm, close relationships with family and friends, fostering emotional well-being and a positive, loving atmosphere that supports both physical and mental health.

