Efficiency Rates Pertaining To Extended Longevity
Living Younger Longer Using The Psychology of Longevity,
... where natural healing comes naturally

h1 align=center title="Path of Great Shortcuts and Psychology of Longevity Header One">How To Live Longer and Stronger

Numbers always tell the story best as long as they remain unvarnished.

Looking at different rates of efficacity, a nice word close to identically expressing what we mean by efficiency rates. So your efficiency rate is a good measure of your efficacity.

Having gotten that out of the way, let's take as close to neutral position as possible to study the efficiency rates in a variety of professions and even near-professions in the United States, you may find some surprises. Of 416 career fields examined, 315 are all within a range of what we can comfortably call ' the norm.'   No cause for alarm there.

Of the remaining 101 fields, we find a wide range of effectiveness in job attempted vs. job accomplished.

For example, one of the most efficient career fields is oil fire control. Those who cut from the same cloth as, for example, the internationally-renowned Red Adair, who fight often-explosive fires at oil drilling sites, enjoy a 100% efficiency rate because they ultimately get the job done every time.

Certain career fields, such as teaching, are difficult to qualify for quality of their effectiveness, and easier to quantify by way of graduation rates, and what their students end up doing five, ten, and twenty years later. Sadly, there's only one career field numerically identifiable as 'least efficient' in America, although enjoying a higher rate of efficiency in at least nine other nations. What makes it scarier is a double-whammy:

  1. The margin of its inefficiency is enormous: no other field comes close.
  2. Money, then death and life, at the center of it all.

If you're even moderately well-read, there's a chance that you already know that,, comparing attempted job to successfully completed job, no career field has a lower rate of efficacy than the U.S. medical profession. Leading the way is, of course, psychiatry, designed to bring the patient back hundreds of times in order to pay for the psychiatrist's many luxuries.   (It's worth noting that behavioral psychologists and "inspirational motivators" have demonstrated a greater consistency and repetition of success with their clients)

Following right behind psychiatrists in the contest for "Most Inefficient"Are the general practicioners and surgeons. These are, by margins larger than we can disregard without personal penalty, the two most inefficient fields in America, where, ironically, their persistent failures nevertheless gain for these practicioners enormous financial rewards and respect in the community despite their undeniably enormous failure rates, with thousands of people killed every week JUST through doctor error. This fact has been thoroughly documented here in America.

We can dislike this fact, and can find no shortage of debate on how to best fix it, or why this is so.
It is not, however, reasonable to argue the fact itself.   Numbers do not lie, only people do.

Shortcuts

We humans develop shortcuts, both ethical and unethical shortcuts, in every human effort. We find and create and refine shortcuts for every human task or goal we ever aspire to, every heroic effort we every display courage in acting upon. When it comes to staying young for longer, there are many great shortcuts. You need not use them all. Just grab those that do work for you and do not stop. It is only the first time that's really tough. Everything after that is a matter of character. Those who pioneer a