First of all, think about what EXACTLY you mean by someone's "rate of ageing". You will probably be able to see that the phrase, without further qualification, actually has NO meaning at all.
There's no way that any particular person can perceive his own rate of ageing as anything other than what it IS. It's somewhat analogous to a computer "perceiving" the passage of time only as how many cpu cycles have occurred since some previous "incident" ... if the computer's clock is slowed down, there's no way for the computer to "perceive" that occurred. Or, another analogy is that, to a surgical patient on an operating table, there is NO perceived time between when he loses consciousness from the anesthesia and when he wakes up.
The ONLY way the phrase "the rate of someone's ageing" has any meaning is when his ageing is compared with someone else's ageing. There IS meaning to the question, "Is person A ageing faster than person B, at some given instant in person A's life?". But, in special relativity, there is NOT just one answer to that question ... person A will generally come to a different conclusion about the answer to that question than person B will. And they are BOTH correct.
Once you have asked the question properly, the answer is that, according to person A, it is possible for person B to be ageing at an arbitrarily greater rate, or at an arbitrarily lesser rate, then person A. It is even possible for person A to conclude that person B is getting YOUNGER at an arbitrarily large rate, as person A is getting older.
If you want to pursue these issues further, I recommend that you start with these links:
https://www.physicsforums.com/showpost.php?p=2934906&postcount=7
https://www.physicsforums.com/showpost.php?p=2923277&postcount=1
Mike Fontenot