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Nanomedicine 
One  can  hope  that  the  rate  of  suicides  might  be  greatly 
reduced,  with  so  much  to  look  forward  to,  and  with  new 
nanomedical treatments for debilitating mental states becom-
ing available. Nanotechnology can also improve the overall 
safety of our material environment  e.g., by making possi-
ble virtually crash-free, crash-safe cars and aircraft, buildings 
(including  houses)  that  incorporate  active  safety  devices, 
advanced nanomedicine for severe trauma anticipation and 
recovery, and the like  leading to vastly fewer deaths from 
accidents. Finally, genetic modifications or nanomedical aug-
mentations to the human body [20] may extend healthy life 
spans still further, to a degree that cannot yet be accurately 
predicted.
References
1) Freitas RA Jr; Section 1.2.2 Volitional Normative Model 
of Disease, in: Nanomedicine, Volume I: Basic Capabilities, 
Landes Bioscience (1999); pg. 1820 http://www.nanomedi-
cine.com/NMI/1.2.2.htm
2) de Grey, AB & Ames, BN & Andersen, JK & Bartke, A 
& Campisi, J &. Heward, CB & McCarter, RJ & Stock, G; 
Time to talk SENS: critiquing the immutability of human 
aging, in: Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 959 
(2002); pg. 452462, 463465 // de Grey, AD & Baynes, 
JW & Berd, D & Heward,  CB & Pawelec, G & Stock, G; 
Is human aging still mysterious enough to be left only to 
scientists? in: Bioessays 24 (2002); pg. 667676, Bioessays 
25 (2003); pg. 9395 (discussion) // de Grey, AD; An 
engineers approach to the development of real anti-aging 
medicine, in: Sci. Aging Knowledge Environment. 2003 
(2003):VP1 // de Grey, AD; Challenging but essen-