Region 5 of 5
San Bernardino County, North America
The only Blue Zone in North America, and the only one defined by religious identity rather than geography. Nine thousand Seventh-day Adventists in an ordinary Southern California suburb live 7 to 10 years longer than the average Californian, backed by the longest-running religious cohort study in the world.
At a glance
The story
Loma Linda is an unremarkable town by most external measures: a mid-sized suburb in San Bernardino County, inland from Los Angeles, ringed by freeways and strip malls. What makes it extraordinary is not the terrain or the water or the isolation. It is the roughly 9,000 Seventh-day Adventists who live there and who share a theology that happens to produce some of the most measurably healthy bodies in the developed world.
SDA doctrine treats the human body as a sacred vessel, a reading of 1 Corinthians 6:19 that translates into practice. Members abstain from tobacco and alcohol. Most avoid caffeine. Approximately 50 percent are vegetarian, many lacto-ovo, with a smaller proportion fully vegan. Those who do eat meat avoid pork and shellfish, following Old Testament dietary guidance. The result is a population that has been eating a predominantly plant-based, whole-food diet not as a wellness trend but as a religious practice, sustained across generations.
The Adventist Health Study began tracking this community in 1958 and has since produced a substantial body of peer-reviewed research. The data are striking. Daily nut consumption, a habit the community practiced for decades before nutritional science caught up, correlates with approximately a 50 percent reduction in coronary heart disease risk. Research from the Adventist Health Study found vegetarian Adventists lived significantly longer than their meat-eating counterparts. The signal is not subtle.
Sabbath observance may be the most structurally unusual habit. From sundown Friday to sundown Saturday, work stops. Screens are set aside. Members gather, walk, visit family, and rest. Studies measuring salivary cortisol have found measurably lower stress hormone levels on Sabbath days compared with weekdays. The Adventist community did not design Sabbath for longevity; they practice it because their theology demands it. The physiological benefit arrives as a consequence, not as a goal. That distinction matters: the habit is sustained by meaning, not willpower.
Longevity factors
Each factor is rooted in SDA theology and translated into daily habit. Their compounding effect over decades produces the longevity advantage the data shows.
About 50 percent of Loma Linda's SDA community is vegetarian. Daily legume consumption is near-universal. The diet is calorie-appropriate, low in saturated fat, high in fiber, and rich in phytonutrients. It is not prescribed by a nutritionist; it is the standard SDA eating pattern, embedded in scripture and community culture.
Walnuts and almonds are eaten daily, typically 1-2 ounces. The Adventist Health Study found that people who eat nuts daily reduce their risk of coronary heart disease by approximately 50 percent. SDAs have practiced this for generations, not because they read the research, but because nuts are a staple of the biblical diet their community follows.
A 24-hour rest period from sundown Friday to sundown Saturday is mandated by SDA theology. Work stops. Members rest, worship, walk, and gather. Research has found measurable reductions in physiological stress markers on Sabbath days compared to weekdays. This weekly reset is enforced by conviction rather than discipline, which makes it more durable than any secular wellness practice.
Regular church attendance is supplemented by mid-week study groups and community events. The social infrastructure is dense and consistent. Members share meals, provide mutual support, and maintain long-term relationships within the congregation. This sustained peer contact reduces isolation, one of the most reliably documented risk factors for early mortality.
Full abstention from both is the community norm, not the exception. SDA theology frames tobacco and alcohol as incompatible with care for the body. The result is a population that has essentially eliminated two of the largest contributors to preventable death in the developed world, across nearly every demographic cohort within the community.
Regular volunteering is embedded in SDA community life. Most members contribute time to church, community, or humanitarian projects weekly. The research on volunteering and longevity is consistent: purposeful contribution to others is independently associated with reduced mortality, lower rates of depression, and measurably better cognitive outcomes in older adults.
The food
A plant-centered diet drawn from the "biblical foods" framework: whole grains, legumes, nuts, and vegetables, practiced consistently across generations.
By the numbers
Related regions
Five distinct geographies. Shared patterns worth studying side by side.