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Birthday buddies and next-door neighbors turn 101 on same day

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Birthday buddies and next-door neighbors turn 101 on same day

Imagine living next door to a neighbor who is exactly your age and who shares the very same birthday.

Josie Church and Anne Wallace-Hadrill know all about this. They also know about longevity — and a lot of luck. 

The two women have lived side-by-side since the 1980s.

MAN KNOWS THE SECRETS OF LIVING A LONG, HAPPY LIFE, AND IT’S ALL ABOUT ONE ACTIVITY

The great-grandmothers were also born on the same day in 1924 — April 1 — according to news agency SWNS. 

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Said Josie Church, “I think life has gone quite quickly.”

Anne Wallace-Hadrill (left) and Josie Church are pictured outside their homes in Oxford, Oxfordshire, on March 26, 2025. (SWNS)

She added of her neighbor in Oxford, in the U.K., “Anne was very busy when she was younger — so was I — and was very productive and creative. She did a lot of painting and tapestry, and she was always busy, and I was always busy doing something else, somewhere else, because that’s the sort of life we live.”

She also said, “I don’t think we’ve thought much about the time passing. It’s just passed.”

“I don’t think we’ve thought much about the time passing. It’s just passed.”

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Both women were very involved in volunteering and creative activities after their husbands died, said the same news source.

Church’s husband, Peter, passed away in the 1990s and the women formed a friendship.

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Wallace-Hadrill, who grew up in Hampshire, first moved to the house following the death of her husband, John Michael Wallace-Hadrill, a historian.

She taught English at St. Hilda’s College, Oxford University, and served in the Women’s Royal Naval Service as a radio mechanic during World War II.

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While St. Hilda’s was an all-female college at the time, Wallace-Hadrill said, “We weren’t forbidden from seeing men. We were expected to live decent lives.”

Next-door neighbors Anne Wallace-Hadrill (left) and Josie Church will celebrate their shared 101st birthday on April 1. (SWNS)

She said she enjoyed being at the university, adding that it was both “a lot of fun and a lot of work,” said SWNS.

After graduating, Wallace-Hadrill worked as a lexicographer for the Oxford English Dictionary. “I was always interested in words,” she said. “It was my trade.”

She was quite proud, she said, to receive a medal for her service from the Royal Navy last year; it was described as “long overdue” by the representative who gave it to her.

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Originally from Manchester, Church did her training at Preston Royal Infirmary and remembers the introduction of the National Health Service (NHS). She said the training was “three years of hard work.”

Said Church, “In those days, you had to live in, and you couldn’t get married, and it was very strict. People wouldn’t put up with that sort of life now.”

Her time in nursing during World War II included a “chilling” experience of caring for SS German soldiers. “They weren’t very nice,” Church said. “They didn’t wish to be taken care of by us. They were very difficult patients.”

Josie Church (left) and Anne Wallace-Hadrill have lived side-by-side in Oxford since the 1980s. “You just go on from one thing to another,” Church said. (SWNS)

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She moved with her husband to Oxford so he could continue his degree at University College — which was interrupted by the war — and they “lived the life of an undergraduate.”

Half of the undergraduates had been to war, she said, while the other half were young students who were just matriculating.

“Oxford was very strange because each college had a large intake of older people who’d gone through the war and were taking up their university places,” said Church. “So you’d get the old men and then the young 18-year-olds coming in from school.”

SECRETS OF LONGEVITY FROM THE WORLD’S ‘BLUE ZONES’

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After marrying, Church worked for a while and looked after her family. Her husband was a housemaster at a boys’ boarding school and she was the house nurse — so she had an “interesting” few years looking after 120 boys.

She has three “wonderful” children, she shared: Chris, Pamela and Andrew.

Meanwhile, Wallace-Hadrill’s son James lives in Poole and her son Andrew in Cambridge.

“It was wonderful. We had a lovely day,” said one of the women about a birthday party thrown for them by their neighbors. (iStock)

The two women said they don’t remember the moment they discovered they share the same birthday — but they enjoyed the celebrations arranged for them last year, SWNS reported.

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“We live on the most amazing road. It’s like one big, extended family,” said Church. “Everybody knows everybody else. If you have a problem, you just give a shout and somebody will come.”

“It was wonderful. We had a lovely day last year,” she said, referencing the women’s 100th birthday celebration. “It was quite unexpected because I didn’t know anything about it. It’s just an amazing street. I think we are lucky.”

“We live on the most amazing road. It’s like one big, extended family.”

As for tips about leading a long life: “Just live,” advised Church. “There’s not much you can do. You just go on from one thing to the next.”

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She added, “You do what seems to need doing, and then you do that, and then something else takes its place. You just go on from one thing to another.”

She also said, “We don’t engineer our lives. I think they’ve just engineered us.”

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GLP-1 Drugs Linked to Osteoporosis and Gout: Here’s How To Stay Safe

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GLP-1 Drugs Linked to Osteoporosis and Gout: Here’s How To Stay Safe


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Ozempic-style drugs could slash complication risks after heart attacks, research suggests

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Ozempic-style drugs could slash complication risks after heart attacks, research suggests

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A popular class of weight-loss drugs may prevent life-threatening cardiac complications by opening microscopic blood vessels that often remain blocked after a heart attack, according to a study published this week in Nature Communications.

The research, led by the University of Bristol and University College London, identified a biological brain-gut-heart signaling pathway. 

This discovery appears to explain how GLP-1 drugs — which mimic glucagon-like peptide-1, a hormone that helps regulate blood sugar and appetite — protect heart tissue from a condition known as “no-reflow.”

“In nearly half of all heart attack patients, tiny blood vessels within the heart muscle remain narrowed, even after the main artery is cleared during emergency medical treatment,” Dr. Svetlana Mastitskaya, the study’s lead author and a senior lecturer at Bristol Medical School, said in a press release.

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“This results in a complication known as ‘no-reflow,’ where blood is unable to reach certain parts of the heart tissue.”

In nearly half of all heart attack patients, tiny capillaries (blood vessels) remain narrowed even after the main blocked artery is cleared. (iStock)

This lack of blood flow increases the risk of heart failure and death within a year. GLP-1 medications could prevent this, according to the researchers.

How it works

When the GLP-1 hormone is released in the gut or administered as a drug, it sends a signal to the brain, which then sends a signal to the heart that switches on special potassium channels in tiny cells called pericytes.

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When these channels open, the pericytes relax, which allows the small blood vessels (capillaries) to widen and improve blood flow to the heart muscle, the researchers noted.

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The new study used animal models and cellular imaging to track how GLP-1 interacts with heart tissue. When the researchers removed the potassium channels, the drugs no longer protected the heart — confirming they play a key role.

The findings suggest that existing GLP-1 medications, already used for type 2 diabetes and obesity, could be repurposed as emergency treatments. (iStock)

The findings suggest that existing GLP-1 medications, already used for type 2 diabetes and obesity, could be repurposed as emergency treatments during or immediately after a heart attack to reduce tissue damage.

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The researchers noted several limitations, including that the study relied on animal models.

Clinical trials are necessary to determine whether the brain-gut-heart pathway operates with the same timing and efficacy in humans.

While the study highlights the drug’s immediate benefits during a heart attack, it des not establish whether long-term use of these drugs provides a pre-existing level of protection. (iStock)

Additionally, while the study highlights the drug’s immediate benefits during a heart attack, it does not establish whether long-term use of the medication provides a pre-existing level of protection.

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The research was primarily funded by the British Heart Foundation.

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Do collagen supplements really improve skin? Major review reveals the truth

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Do collagen supplements really improve skin? Major review reveals the truth

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Collagen supplements have exploded in popularity, touted as everything from an anti-aging miracle to a muscle recovery booster.

But a sweeping new review conducted by U.K. researchers suggests that while collagen may help improve skin elasticity and ease arthritis pain, it does little for athletic performance or wrinkle reduction.

Researchers from Anglia Ruskin University analyzed 16 systematic reviews and 113 randomized controlled trials involving nearly 8,000 participants worldwide, which they say is the most extensive evaluation of collagen’s health effects to date. 

The review found consistent evidence that collagen supplementation improves skin elasticity and hydration over time and provides significant relief from osteoarthritis-related joint pain and stiffness, according to findings published in Aesthetic Surgery Journal Open Forum. 

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A large U.K. review found that collagen supplements may improve skin elasticity and hydration over time. (iStock)

The researchers, however, did not find meaningful improvements in post-exercise muscle recovery, soreness or tendon mechanical properties (strength, springiness and stretch resistance).

“Collagen is not a cure-all, but it does have credible benefits when used consistently over time, particularly for skin and osteoarthritis,” co-author Lee Smith, professor of public health at Anglia Ruskin University, said in a statement.

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“Our findings show clear benefits in key areas of healthy aging, while also dispelling some of the myths surrounding its use,” Smith added.

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Collagen, the most abundant protein in the body, supports skin, bones, tendons, cartilage and connective tissue, according to experts. Natural collagen production begins to drop in early adulthood and declines more sharply with age.

The study found that collagen supplements may help reduce joint pain and stiffness in people with osteoarthritis. (iStock)

The review found that long-term collagen supplementation was linked to improved skin firmness and hydration, but did not help skin roughness — a proxy for visible wrinkles. 

Benefits appear to accumulate gradually, suggesting that collagen should not be viewed as an “anti-wrinkle ‘quick fix,’ but as a foundational dermal support for individuals seeking holistic skin maintenance,” the researchers said.

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“If we define anti-aging as a product or technique designed to prevent the appearance of getting older, then I believe our findings do support this claim for some parameters,” Smith told the BBC. “For example, an improvement in skin tone and moisture is associated with a more youthful-looking appearance.”

Collagen supplementation was linked to reduced pain and stiffness in people with osteoarthritis, with stronger benefits seen over longer periods of use, and showed modest improvements in muscle mass and tendon structure that may support healthy aging. 

Collagen did not significantly improve skin roughness, a marker of visible wrinkles. (iStock)

However, it did not show meaningful results when used as a fast-acting sports performance supplement, and evidence for benefits related to cholesterol, blood sugar, blood pressure and oral health was mixed or inconclusive.

Dr. Daniel Ghiyam, a California-based physician and longevity specialist, said the findings align with what he sees in clinical practice.

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“Collagen is a targeted support tool, not a foundation of health or performance,” Ghiyam, who was not involved in the study, told Fox News Digital. “When marketed that way, it makes sense. When marketed as a cure-all, it doesn’t hold up to the data.”

The authors noted that while many previous collagen studies have received financial support from the supplement industry, the current review did not receive industry funding.

Experts say collagen supplements may offer modest benefits for skin hydration and joint comfort, but they are not a cure-all. (iStock)

The team called for more high-quality clinical trials examining long-term outcomes, optimal dosages and differences between collagen sources, such as marine, bovine and plant-based alternatives. 

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Among its limitations, the review could not determine whether certain forms of collagen work better than others or what the optimal regimen should be. 

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While the review included randomized controlled trials, the quality of the studies varied, with newer research generally showing stronger results.

Experts say more data and studies are needed to build on the findings. They also noted that diet plays a crucial role in skin health.

Collagen supplements, often sold as powders or pills, may improve skin elasticity and ease joint pain, experts say. (iStock)

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Dr. Erum Ilyas, a Pennsylvania-based dermatologist and chair of dermatology at Drexel University College of Medicine, noted that the review analyzed previously published meta-analyses rather than generating new primary data.

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“At this time, I have not seen sufficiently strong independent evidence to routinely recommend collagen supplements to my patients,” Ilyas, who was not involved in the review, told Fox News Digital.

“Although some studies show modest improvements in markers such as hydration and elasticity, there remains limited independent, biopsy-confirmed evidence demonstrating sustained increases in dermal collagen content,” she added.

Fox News Digital has reached out to the researchers for comment.

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