
Nigel Girgrah
Chief Wellness Officer at Ochsner Health and a transplant hepatologist focused on liver transplantation, physician well-being, workforce resilience, and organizational culture in healthcare.
South Texas Longevity Project Could Reach 1 Million Residents
Methodist Healthcare Ministries chief executive Jaime Wesolowski and Blue Zones founder Dan Buettner argue that a longevity effort in South Texas should start from the Rio Grande Valley’s existing strengths, not from a deficit model. In an Aspen Ideas: Health session, they make the case that poverty, uninsurance, chronic disease, and infrastructure gaps coexist with family, faith, social connection, and food traditions that can support longer, healthier lives if local institutions change the environments shaping daily behavior. The project, initially imagined for one city, may expand to seven cities and reach at least 1 million people.
South Texas Cities Test Blue Zones Prevention at Million-Person Scale
Methodist Healthcare Ministries chief executive Jaime Wesolowski and Blue Zones founder Dan Buettner argue that South Texas can become a large-scale test of longevity work built around prevention rather than clinical care. In a session at Aspen Ideas: Health, they described a potential seven-city Rio Grande Valley effort that would use local institutions, city policy, food environments, walkability, faith groups and social networks to make healthier daily choices easier for roughly 1mn people. Their case is that the region’s severe chronic-disease burdens coexist with cultural assets — family, faith, connection and traditional foodways — that could be amplified rather than replaced.