How I Invest with David Weisburd - E193: GLP-1s, AI & the End of Sick Care: The Next $10B Health Tech Giant
Episode Date: July 30, 2025What if your healthcare wasn't about just treating sickness, but maximizing your potential? In today's episode on How I Invest, I spoke with Dr. Cameron Sepah, founder and CEO of Maximus, a performan...ce medicine company pioneering a new paradigm in healthcare. Cameron previously helped build Omada Health, now a billion-dollar public company, and coined the term “digital therapeutics.” Now he's productized his unique medical expertise into a next-gen men's health platform. We talked about the evolution of performance medicine, why testosterone and GLP-1s are changing how Americans manage their health, and how AI is reshaping clinical decision-making. We also dug deep into the personal and systemic failures of the traditional healthcare model — and what the next 10 years will look like as proactive medicine goes mainstream.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
So what is Maximus?
It's a great question.
So Maximus is a consumer healthcare technology startup that I started in 2020.
We are basically an online clinic that is pioneering performance medicine, which is a whole new paradigm shift.
As you know, we really don't have a health care system.
We have a sick care system.
So if you break a bone, you have an infection, you have cancer.
We actually have a very high-quality health care system that helps sick people get better.
But that is really not enabled to prevent illness, and it's really not enabled to enhance quality of life and health span, which is the number of quality years that you have.
And so performance medicine is really a new paradigm shift.
A lot of people obviously know that athletes, for instance, use performance enhancing drugs and substances in order to enhance their competitive performance in order to win.
increasingly kind of the thesis of Maximus is that the average consumer also cares about how
they perform, whether as an employee or founder of a company, whether as a father or spouse,
or whether as an amateur athlete, just trying to get the most out of their gym gains.
All of the protocols that we provide are not just for people who have an illness or a medical
condition, but for people who can be completely healthy, essentially, have no major diagnosable
medical problem, but just want to look, feel, or perform their best. And just full disclosure,
I invested multiple times alongside ABC founders fund and others. One of the reasons I invested in you is
you're on the founding team of Omada, which has now gone public and it's a billion dollar public
company. What lessons did you learn from Omada that you apply to Maximus every day?
It's a really great question. I was privileged to be part of the founding.
team at Omada and I was the medical director and led clinical innovation at the company.
And one of the first things that I did was to really establish Amata as a science-backed, science-based
company. There's literally a video of me on Amata's website back in the day talking about how,
you know, we hold ourselves to the highest gold standard of running clinical trials to prove that
what we do works. And you have to remember, you know, I joined the company in like 2012, you know,
online therapy was like not a thing you know people thought it was like this crazy concept i come from
the world of working in hospitals where i'd run in-person treatment programs so shan duffy and i the
CEO of amad at the time flew out to the CDC we met the woman who ran um that particular division
named dr anne albright and we said hey do we have to run a randomized clinical trial to prove that
online therapy is as effective as in-person therapy and she said well we know it's the same thing just
prove that it's comparably efficacious that you know you can get the same weight loss results and we said
all right let's do that so i actually published three papers for omata looking at um does basically an
online weight loss program lead to clinically meaningful weight loss results at one year two years and three
years which we show people lost about five percent of their body weight reduce their a1c or blood sugar
levels and kept off the most of that weight for the course of three years i was actually the first person
to publish the term digital therapeutics in a pub peer-reviewed research paper, that became an
entire field. There's literally conferences now that are dedicated to digital therapeutics,
meaning using software as treatment. That really enabled Amata to do a lot of its early
enterprise sales, because I would go to my counterpart chief medical officers at large health care
systems like Kaiser's or Carolinas or to large self-insured employers like Home Depot and
lows. And they're like, well, how do I know this is going to help my employees or my patients? And I said,
well, we have the research. We published it. Look at the data for yourself. It's as good as any other
basically weight loss treatment out there. But it's incredibly convenient because you can do it all in
the comfort and convenience of your own home. So that lesson was a very powerful one. And that's what
really makes Maximus, I would say, different from the hymns and other telemedicine companies of the world.
None of these companies publish research. They'll just put out products. You have
no idea whether they work and half a time they don't and i'll give you an example of this so the
glp1 medications people probably know ozempic or we govi you've heard the brand names um there
there are selling um oral versions of them they do not work they literally sell them as gummy bears
um it's literally a crime uh that that that should be criminal in my opinion or certainly unethical
or immoral um because none of these companies are actually testing whether they work maximus on the
other hand, we actually run clinical trials. You can go to our website, for instance,
don't take my word on in Chlamophene. There are a lot of pre-existing research studies on
in Chlamophene as they were going through clinical trials. But we also published our own because
we showed, for instance, the lower dosages that we pioneered and innovated on also work. Also,
it works in a healthier population. So we had to do de novo or novel research to prove that.
Same thing with the oral testosterone. We show that oral testosterone counter to everyone's
expectations is not suppressive. It maintains fertility markers such as LH and FSAH. And so you can kind of
have your cake and eat it too, as I was mentioning. Obviously, the health and wellness world is full
snake oil, unfortunately in this day and age. You have crazy people like Brian Johnson, literally
scamming people as a con artist, you know, pretending that you can't die or you'll live forever,
making completely unsubstantiated claims. But I think there are high integrity companies,
Maximus is not the only one. But to me, if I was a consumer, I'd be like, you know,
how do I know this is safe? How do I know this is effective? What is the research that has been
published on this compound, this drug, this therapeutic paradigm? And how do you know your
version of it works if you're using a different delivery system such as an oral or topical
form, a different dosage that's been done in the clinical trials? Show me the data.
So double click on that. Why is it that you're able to, as a startup, without hundreds of
millions of dollars in funding, actually published research? How does that work? That's a great question.
Well, there's the publishing the research and why not go through FDA clinical trials.
So testosterone is a great example.
Zastron as a drug or a compound, it's been around for half a century, maybe a whole century.
Pharmaceutical companies really can't patent something that's been around forever.
It's a generic, essentially.
And so they're no longer kind of doing research on it unless they're developing a completely new sort of delivery system for it.
And then they're trying to patent that and they're trying to protect.
it. Like, for instance, there are companies that have been trying to do this with oral testosterone
coming up with their own special formulations. I believe there's three FDA-approved forms of oral
testosterone as well. But, you know, from our perspective, if something has already been
FDA-approved to known compound, like we understand, you know, the benefits and side effects
of testosterone very well because it's like probably close to a century of use. You know, our job is to
just come up with better delivery systems or, like I said, coming up with different dosage schemes
or using it in healthier populations.
And in that way, we can run very quick trials
because the trials are not designed
to go through a multi-stage FDA approval process.
It's just to prove that something that we already know is safe,
already know is FDA-approved,
can be used for a different sort of purpose.
And in that way, you know, we can do this very, very lean
to you sort of startup speak.
And in a way that's really catered to our target consumer,
which is generally younger, healthier folks
who are not using it, like I said,
for necessarily the treatment of a,
a medical condition, but they just want to enhance themselves. And they want to know that does this
work for me? Last time we chatted, you told me that people are microdosing JLP ones. I looked into
this. I'm now a very happy Maximus customer. In full disclosure, I pay full price. Tell me about
GLP ones. What is the purpose? What's the second order side effects of them? And also, why are people
microdosing them? It's a really great parallel example to the testosterone story that I was telling you about.
that back in the day, you'd only inject testosterone and you'd only inject it if you were drastically
low in testosterone because you have to be dependent on the rest of your life. And so it's kind of a niche thing.
Obviously, with the fertility safe, oral and topical forms, non-injectable forms, and also
protocols that are lower-dosed for healthier populations, basically any adult male that's otherwise
healthy that wants to be better can take testosterone. I really think that there's going to be a
similar paradigm ship with GLP-1s.
If you understand the history of GLP-1s, they're originally medications that were prescribed
for diabetes, which is, you know, the field that I come from at Omada.
GLPs are basically glucagon like peptide 1 receptor agonists, which is just a mouthful
of way of saying they're medications that mimic a natural hormone to increase insulin
secretion, it decreases appetite, it slows digestion, and by doing so, it promotes
weight, loss, and better blood sugar control.
So originally they were using diabetics, they noticed, hey, these guys are losing weight.
We should probably use this for weight loss.
And so they actually went through new FDA approvals, which is why literally the same
drug is called Ozempic and Megubi, which is the generic name is Simaglutide or Semaglutide
because it was approved for diabetes and then it was re-approved for weight loss.
Now, under the sick care system that I was telling you about, it's very hard to get your
insurance to cover it because these are very expensive drugs.
It costs like $1,500 a month.
which is crazy if your insurance is not covering it fully,
but if your insurance is covering it,
you have to have a BMI over 30.
So you have to be essentially obese.
And there's some, you know, provisions if your BMI is over 27,
but you have pre-diabetes or diabetes, they'll let you slide.
You often have to go through a weight loss program like Omada to qualify for it
because they want to prove that you've tried to lose it,
you know, the old-fashioned way, so to speak.
because, you know, insurance is basically in the business of denying care.
They don't want to pay $1,500 a month that they can avoid it.
So they're going to make you jump through a bunch of hurdles and they're going to limit it to the sickest portion of the population ever.
Now, what's happened is because these drugs, the demand was so high and they weren't able to produce enough.
These drugs are basically on shortage.
And then the FDA basically allows compounding pharmacies to produce these drugs at lower costs, essentially as if they were generic.
or if they're being used for personalized dosages.
And so let's say you're not grossly obese.
You obviously, if you're half the body weight of someone who's obese, you may still have
body fat to lose.
You may have excess visceral fat that surrounding your organs.
You may have excess subcutaneous fat that you can see, obviously, if you have sort of the
beer belly that guys have, and you benefit both from a health perspective and maybe even
cosmetically from weight loss.
And so a lot of people, obviously, we're going to private practices, medical
spas, et cetera, who are not limited by insurance, paying cash out of pocket and using GLP
ones to lose weight. Now, these are typically people who are like overweight, but maybe not
obese and wouldn't qualify for their insurance. Interestingly, as a lot of these people were using
GLP ones, they notice a lot of benefits in addition to weight loss. So for instance, a lot of people
noticed improved impulse control. So it was improving their addictions, which is really interesting.
and I think emerging, but early research in terms of like psychiatric and addiction medicine.
And a lot of people who had comorbid medical conditions notice a really significant improvement in
inflammation. So if they had arthritis, if they had PCOS, a lot of these inflammatory mediated
conditions notice, hey, my inflammation is lower. I have less pain. I'm a lot more mobile. And so a lot of
people are using it for sort of these off-label use cases, meaning that the drugs are originally
approved for diabetes in the treatment of obesity, but if you're using it to lose belly fat,
you're using it to reduce inflammation, you're using it to reduce your blood sugar and improve
your metabolic conditions. Those are sort of off-label indications, but a doctor can still
under their clinical discretion and judgment prescribe it for those reasons. So what we did is we had a lot
of, you know, clients coming to us and said, hey, I'm not, you know, overweight, but I still like
to use, I still have some body fat to use or I want to use it for these other reasons. And so
we developed a micro-dosing protocol. So for instance, if your BMI is at least over 22, so you're not
necessarily overweight, but you still have some body fat that you'd like to use because of your,
you know, central adiposity, et cetera, you can take a much lower dose. So for instance, the dose that
we use of somaglutide is 40% lower than the typical starting dose. And we're not titrating it up like
you would on a typical obesity protocol because, you know, those folks often get a little nauseous
because the dose is so high and you have to ramp up basically every single month.
If you're taking a microdose, you don't typically run into as many of the typical side effects
that you do in GLP ones, which often are nausea, as most people have heard about,
slowed gastric emptying.
Sometimes people get a little bit of gastrointestinal distress because obviously that's part of the way that it works.
But on a very, very tiny microdose, it really helps control the food noise, as people call it,
sort of those cravings for late night food and snacks.
And it just helps people kind of fight the willpower battle, I would argue, in helping them make
better choices. Obviously, lifestyle intervention, which is, you know, what I've done my whole
career, including at Omada in terms of getting people to eat, right, exercise, sleep, and
manage their stress are always foundational and first line therapies. But, you know, instead of this
argument of, well, you should do behavior change or you should take a drug, what we find is that
the combination is the most effective. The drugs help people make the necessary behavioral changes,
whether with testosterone or GLP ones, because when you just have more energy, more drive, more
motivation, better appetite control, you're not fighting this willpower battle, as I mentioned.
That's just really hard, obviously, with the stressors of life.
I have a very, you know, kind of radical perspective on kind of what the future of America will
look like.
And here it is.
Number one, the majority of Americans in the next five to 10 years are going to be on a GLP1.
First of all, it's because America is so fat, 70% of the country is overweight or obese.
And so they absolutely from a clinical perspective, that's justified.
But a lot of even the 30% of people who are not, I think increasingly are going to be on it because what's going to happen is I think GLPs are revolutionary in that people are going to take the just right personalized dose to get to their optimal state.
So for instance, if you look at kind of the cross section of America now, right, you have 30% of people who are not overweight, about 35% of people who are overweight, about 35% of people who are overweight, about 35% of people who are.
are obese. So about a third, a third to third. And almost nobody's really at their optimal
level of health or aesthetics. If you include sort of metabolic dysregularities, including
high blood sugar, high blood pressure, high cholesterol or dyslipidemia, 88% of the country has
some metabolic abnormality, meaning only 12% of the country is actually perfectly healthy from
metabolic perspective. Are these comorbidities to being overweight? This is 88% or are they
unrelated? Yes. Being fat makes everything else worse, as you kind of common sense dictates.
The major driver for why people, for instance, have high blood sugar is being overweight. That's why
the treatment for pre-diabetes and diabetes, as we did in Amata, is to lose 5 to 10% of your body weight.
Now, obviously, there are genetic factors as well. Some people with certain racial categories
and genetic predispositions can be kind of skinny fat.
They're not overweight or obese, but they're still prone to diabetes.
So there are multi-factors.
But in America, if you look at the prevalence of diabetes, hypertension, it's mostly
lifestyle driven in terms of being overweight and obviously the sleep and stress that you
sort of talked about.
So if we start with the paradigm of like basically only one in 10 people are healthy, how do we
get the other 90% of people on board?
Obviously, I spent my whole career trying to get people to change their behavior.
I do think on an individual level, it's absolutely possible.
All of us know people who have turned their lives around through pure willpower,
coaching, therapy, and made changes.
At a population-wide level of 300 plus million people, it has not worked.
We have not made a dent.
We have failed, essentially, as a medical system, as a society, public policy, et cetera.
What I think is going to happen is if you offer these medications at personalized dosages,
there's going to be a contingent of people who don't need them at all, right?
They're the thin coastal elites, highly educated, high willpower people, great.
If you can do it without medications, perfect ideal case scenario for the rest of the country,
the 92% of people who need some help, I think there's going to be some people who need it
to kickstart a weight loss journey.
They'll maybe take it for 12 to 16 weeks.
They'll lose the weight and they'll highly motivated.
And then once they're able to fit into their jeans or their high school dress, they won't
need it for the rest of their lives.
There'll be a contingent of people who, they'll lose the weight, life stress happens, you go through a divorce, you're starting to gain the weight back, you'll go back on it whenever you need it to just get back down to the ideal weight.
And for the rest of the population, probably the majority of the population, they'll take a higher dose to get down to their ideal weight.
And then they might need a microdose or a maintenance dose to maintain the weight loss forever.
But no matter how much you need, which is zero, occasional use or chronic use of the medication,
I think the majority of the people who literally have at least the financial means and the psychological willingness
can all get down to an ideal state of low body fat, metabolic health, and are looking and feeling
their best. And it's really the medications that in combination with the behavior change is that it's going to get us there.
What I observed in myself, the way that I kind of look at the GLP ones, it's essentially puts,
your body into cruise control. They kind of like take over your body. And it shows to you that if you
don't eat as much, you could lose weight, which sounds like the most obvious thing, except people
kind of have this learned helplessness list that they could never lose weight, almost like it's
impossible for them specifically. But it kind of takes over your body, shows you that it's possible.
And then you know, okay, if I eat once a day or I eat these types of foods, I'm going to lose
waste. You reconnect yourself to cause an effect when it comes to foods and its effect on your body.
Absolutely. And I'm really glad that you share that sort of personal anecdote. I've spent my career working with people and helping them lose weight. And the struggle is real because, you know, I actually, I take also kind of a little bit of a radical point of view that basically all obesity is psychologically driven. There's very few people, maybe a few percentage of people where there is some genetic serious medical condition that's that's driving it. But if you look at how quickly, literally over two generations, the rate of obesity has skyrocketed. You can't say that.
that's genetic. That's an environmental illness essentially because we essentially 66% of the American
diet comes from ultra-processed foods. That's really the root cause. The problem is we're not getting
rid of it. People are not going to eat 100% whole foods. People don't cook anymore. The lifestyles
that we have, the convenience and the cost, you know, issues that are driving all this, you know,
definitely should be addressed on a public health level. It's not going to happen anytime soon in
any way that's sort of going to save America. So if you're basically, you know, out in the
world and you have these designer drugs, if you will, these ultra-processed foods that are
constantly tempting us, you can't just sit there and shame people and say, well, just avoid
temptation, avoid addiction, when essentially the majority of the country is to some degree
addicted or reliant on packaged processed foods.
Literally, the only time you can't be is you buy anything with a nutritional label,
right?
Anything that has a nutritional label is by definition processed, right?
If you think about meats, fruits, and vegetables are basically the only produce that doesn't
have a nutritional label because there's one ingredient, it's a banana. You know what it is.
But I don't know anyone, even like the people who have a lot of, you know, means, personal
chefs that eat nothing that's processed. And obviously there's some things that are minimally
processed that can be healthy, yogurt, you know, et cetera, things that you theoretically could make
at home. But that world is gone. Except, like I said, on an individual level, but on a societal
level, given that we have these things that are not optimal, there has to be something that
help support choice and willpower so that we don't overeat, right? And fundamentally, weight loss is
about a caloric balance issue. You know, it's an excess calorie issue. Obviously, it's like easier
said than done, though. When you have sort of emotional, psychological, and environmental factors that are
driving people to eat excess amounts, you know, if you can regulate your appetite, to me, that is
essentially in some way addressing the root cause, not an environmental root cause, but individual
root cause in that it helps just avoid that temptation and really help people make better choices.
Tell me about the research, what the research says in terms of people going on these GLP-ons and
then they come off them. How much of that weight do they regain? And in what cases do they regain
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this is a fascinating thing having been a published you know weight loss treatment um you know author
and researcher if you look at any treatment for weight loss including behavior
behavioral treatments,
pharmacological treatments,
the majority of the people
will regain the weight
if they stop the treatment.
But that kind of makes common sense.
It's like if you tell people,
well, I'm going to put you on a 16 week exercise plan.
Are you going to get in shape?
Of course.
And if you stop exercising,
are you going to stay in shape?
Of course not.
Same thing with vitamin D.
It's like if you're deficient
and you get sunlight slash supplementation,
your levels will go up and then the last,
well, do I need to be on this forever?
Of course you do.
If you need to maintain everything
in order to maintain the benefits.
So for the majority of people, they will need to remain on medications to some degree
or some dosage to maintain the weight loss gains that they have.
Now, again, individual results always vary.
There are lots of people that I know, even personally, that have lost the weight and
have used that as a catalyst to make the behavioral changes.
But I would argue they're not getting off of everything.
What they've done is they've kind of used the weight loss medication.
to be the catalyst, and then they're switching to another therapeutic, which is lifestyle
slash behavioral medicine, and that they've, for instance, significantly increased their
protein intake, significantly decrease the refined carbohydrate intake, and that's what's
maintaining them over time.
So I think we need to get out of this paradigm of, oh, I have to be reliant on these medications
forever.
It's a crutch, and somehow it's a stigma or a problem to be on something forever.
like the realities most people should be on a vitamin D supplement for the rest of their lives.
Why is that? Because we don't, we're not laborers who are outside in the sun all day.
We actually did a research study where we looked at men in Los Angeles.
It's sunny here. I literally go outside and tan on purpose.
66% of people were literally deficient in vitamin D and 100% were suboptimal.
Our lifestyles and our modern environments are not conducive essentially to that.
So yeah, you got to take a vitamin D pill for the rest of your life if you want to be optimal.
But there's no issue with that unless you want to radically like become, you know, an agrarian farmer like your ancestors.
So I think the same thing with GLP ones.
Like I said, if you can not take it through because you've substituted it with behavioral medicine, more power to you and you should actually do that.
But if you need to occasionally take a dose to get kind of back on the train or you need to take a micro or maintenance dose to maintain it forever, to me, it doesn't matter.
Whatever gets you to that end goal of looking, feeling your best, maintaining a six pack, maintaining optimal health, you should do that.
And so to me, I leave it up to the individual patient.
I'm like, hey, you want to get off the medication?
I fully support you.
If you can do it, do it.
And if you can't, there's nothing wrong with you.
It's the same boat, the majority of people in.
Take the minimal effective dose.
I call it the med in order to get you to the optimal state.
Rather than thinking about this black and white, like, I'm going to be on or off forever.
Most effective people that I know, they pick their battles.
Some want to spend all their willpower on getting into good chage.
some want to work, some want to spend time with their kids, in many ways, not choosing what to be bad at
as a way to be bad at everything. So not choosing what to kind of outsource or what to put into
autopilot hurts your ability to do other things to a high degree. But also, if you substitute
medications for behavioral interventions, you realize how silly that logic is. It's like saying,
oh, I got to be dependent on exercise for the rest of my life in order to be healthy.
Duh. And what's wrong with that? If you think about modern instantiations of exercise are a completely weird and foreign invention. Nobody was lifting weights at a gym. We used to just physically labor through our work. Like jogging was essentially invented by, I believe, a New Zealand coach named Arthur Littered in the 1960s. He published a book called jogging. And then like nobody used to jog. Even in the 1990s when I ran track and cross country and I was running through the neighborhood, people thought it was weird back then. People thought you stole something.
if you were running. They're like, what are you doing? Right? Like this, people forget,
we have very short-term memories as a society that these, these interventions are essentially
modern, you know, concoctions or inventions. But obviously, they're really healthy. There's nothing
wrong with exercise. It's probably the best health intervention, essentially that you can do for
anything, including the prevention of Alzheimer's and dementia in particular. But nobody thinks,
oh, I'm dependent on it for the rest of my life. Of course you are. Everything needs maintenance,
right? Our bodies need maintenance, whether it's through.
food, food, supplementation, medication.
I think it's a particularly male paradigm.
I just want to actually point this out.
This is kind of a downside of guys is guys are obviously have this kind of rugged American
Marlboro notion of self-reliance.
I don't want to be reliant on anything, right?
I should be a self-sustaining man is kind of the machismo paradigm.
That comes from that sick care system because back in the day, if you were on a medication,
again, it means something's wrong with you.
Under the Maximus paradigm, where you're not.
taking medication because anything's wrong with you. It's because you just want to be better.
You want to be more optimal. You want to be enhanced in terms of your performance. That's the
great thing. A lot of our clients literally, they go tell their friends, hey, I'm on testosterone.
Not because I particularly need it. It's because I want it and I'm better for it. And you should look
into this too. As opposed to, I think a lot of companies out there, the traditional telemedicine
companies that push a lot of erectile dysfunction and premature ejaculation medications, no one is
going to want to tell their friends about that. Because it means obviously there's something,
there's nothing wrong with you in that particular case.
As the shift happens from sort of stigmatized sick care to, you know, pro-social
performance medicine, I think people are going to get over the stigma of medications.
And in fact, it'll be bragging right.
I'll tell you a funny anecdote.
In certain Middle Eastern countries, getting a rhinoplasty or a nose job is no longer stigmatized.
In fact, people fake getting surgeries by putting a band.
on their nose to pretend that they got the surgery because it basically means you have
money, right?
So it's almost become a badge of honor or prestige that you have the, you know, the means
essentially to get cosmetic surgery.
And now you can argue whether that's a good or bad thing, but essentially it's been
completely destigmatized and maybe even it's become prestigious.
I think the same thing will happen essentially.
It's happened with personal training.
It doesn't just mean you're fat anymore.
A lot of people are literally professional athletes that have a lot of people.
trainer or coach. It's a prestigious thing to have one because it also means you have the means to do
so, but it also means that you know, you're someone who prioritizes their health. I think that's
happening with psychotherapy. It used to mean that you had a mental illness. Starting in the 1960s,
a lot of people started doing psychotherapy for self-actualization, for personal growth. It's become a
badge of honor. In fact, a lot of women on dating apps will say, I want a guy, green flag, if they're in
therapy, because it means that they've worked on themselves. I literally think it's the same thing
of pharmacology. You're not going to be hiding it from your wife or girlfriend or your boyfriend or
husband, you're going to be like, hey, help me inject my GLP ones because, you know, I'm not going
to have a dad bod or a mom bought for the rest of my life. In fact, I will maintain my weight forever.
And I actually think it's going to help a lot of relationships in the long term. I do think we'll
see it probably within this decade. So as I mentioned, nothing on the market right now is really
efficacious orally. There is one version of semaglutide. There is an oral version actually on the
market, it's not very popular. I think like the benefit to side effect ratio is just not as good
as the injection. And the other thing, too, I just want to point out this. Most people are afraid of
injections who've never injected themselves. I even had this notion. I was like, I'm a healthcare
practitioner. I'm not afraid of needles. I've got my blood drawn like literally like over a hundred
times. I don't have any problem with it, but I just didn't like the idea of injecting myself
on a regular basis. The thing that people don't realize is unfortunately people's association with
injections is getting vaccines. It's usually the only time that people get injections. It's an
intramuscular injection. It's in the shoulder. It kind of goes deep. The paradigm shift is, as opposed
to using these big, scary needles that you kind of hurt, you can use insulin needles. They're
very thin. They're very small and they're very painless. And the other thing is you don't inject
it into your muscle for most of these things, including testosterone and GLP-1s, you can inject it
into your subcutaneous fat. Literally, you just pinch your belly fat. You inject it right
into there, I would say the pain is like a one to two out of 10. It really doesn't hurt. And most
the time when people do it, unless they literally have like a needle or blood phobia, which is
rare, they get over it. It's literally exposure therapy. We know this is from psychotherapy. The idea is
worse than the reality of it. And so I think most people, in fact, they don't mind it, actually.
Oral GLP will be a game changer. And like I said, in the next maybe five years, probably a new one will
come to the market. That's pretty efficacious. And a lot of people will take it. But the injectables are
are really not as bad, and I think there's something for everyone. And we know this from testosterone.
There's some people who just prefer the convenience of injecting once a week. That's great. We offer
injectable testosterone. And there's a lot of people who are like, great, I just like the oral form
don't like sticking myself. And I think the best, you know, paradigm is that if you offer both,
there's going to be something for everyone, and you're going to address the largest population
possible. Obviously, AI is disrupting every industry. We just saw Grock 4 come out with their new
LLM. For a company like Maximus in the healthcare space, how does AI change the projections and
the future of your space? That's a great question. I'm very bullish on AI. If you kind of understand
the history of AI, it was actually psychologists who pioneered artificial intelligence,
you know, like 50 years ago. Because, you know, a lot of these concepts, like for instance,
like a neural network is based on how the brain works. The concept of reinforcement learning is literally
based on behavioral psychology. GPUs allow us to have sort of the computational horsepower to make
a lot of the vision of sort of the early AI pioneers and psychologists come true. For instance,
the Turing test of being able to have, you know, pass a test of how do you tell if, you know,
how you're having a conversation with a human being a robot and being indistinguishable,
essentially is passable now with chat GBT. So there's a couple examples in which we use AI. So first
of all for internal research purposes, as I mentioned, like we're an R&D-driven company.
We repurposed essentially FDA approved drugs for novel optimization use cases.
It's very efficient as opposed to using going into PubMed, finding research studies,
to trawl the existing essentially research and very, very quickly come up with insights,
pull data, help us write our research papers once we've collected the data.
It makes the kind of the research and publication process a lot faster, which allows,
us to obviously innovate on a faster time scale. So that's a huge paradigm shift that's happened.
The second thing is increasingly, I think AI will supplement and support doctors, not completely
replace them. I think people still want a human being that's in charge of their health,
especially when things go wrong. AIs are not perfect in handling, especially like emergencies,
edge cases, et cetera. For instance, we are the largest prescriber of inclamophine in the United States.
We have the largest database.
So we know, in fact, what dosages tend to work.
And so the doctors have kind of learned, for instance, through the art of medicine,
that maybe if you're heavier to start with, your lower testosterone to start with,
you probably need a higher dose.
So they're probably using maybe like a couple different variables looking at patients' charts
and medical histories in order to decide with the initial doses.
We measure their baseline testosterone levels.
We measure it again after 30 days.
And then we look, okay, you doubled your left.
levels, or maybe you got up to like 1.5x, so you might need a little bit of a higher dose.
Or maybe someone triples their levels, but they're starting to run into some side effects.
Okay, maybe we need to decrease your dose.
And so usually we'll take two or three iterations to get people to the optimal dose through kind of
trial and error because, you know, you're testing labs, you're listening to patients in terms of
their symptomatic improvement, side effect response.
But because we have all this data, you can train an AI model and say,
okay, input all of the data that we have on this, this patient, not just basic demographic variables
like their weight and starting testosterone level, and then suggest the dosage that is most likely
to result in the optimal outcome. And they can suggest it to the doctor. The doctor can obviously
choose to accept it or override it. So increasingly we're going to instantiate essentially like AI to
help with dosing and dose titration so that we can get it right perhaps on the second iteration
versus the third iteration, right, and get people to an optimal state even faster.
And then the third thing is I'm particularly excited about its use in coaching.
So at Amata, I trade over 150 health coaches, human beings, your nutritionists, nurses,
that would provide individualized one-on-one coaching to patients because the social
accountability, the social support are a big part.
And obviously a lot of people, they know they need to eat last and eat better.
But having that sort of social reinforcement is particularly effective in helping people get
of those outcomes. Obviously with, you know, GPT and conversational, you have a 24-7 health coach in your
pocket that is smarter, quite frankly, than most PhDs nowadays. Can analyze, you know, I was talking
to Google like 10 years ago about can you take a picture of your food and analyze the contents
and the macronutrients and micronutrients. This is all reality nowadays, right? And so it can
provide even more specific coaching than ever. So one example of this that we're working on right now,
is using visual AI to analyze people's body fat.
So you can take front and side pictures or like a three-dimensional scan,
just literally using your phone and doing this.
That is within 2% accuracy of a Dexas scan,
which you have to go to a clinic, pay 50 to 100 bucks.
And now through AI, essentially,
you can give you a very accurate assessment of your body composition,
which is obviously useful if you're tracking.
You know, are you gaining muscle on testosterone?
Are you losing body fat on a GLP?
So all of these are example use cases in which AI,
is going to really complement the pharmacological means because it'll help the coaching,
it'll help the tracking, it'll help the dose titration, and just providing an ecosystem where
it just makes the entire process better. What diagnostic tests should a otherwise healthy male
or somebody that's not obese or morbidly obese be doing in order to optimize their health?
It's a really great question. First of all, I actually encourage everyone to have a primary care
physician. It's crazy, like the percentage of people who don't have a doctor at all. I think you need
a basic doctor. And the utility of, I think, a primary care physician that you can see in person
is, like, literally when you're sick and, you know, you need to have someone, like, listen to your
lungs, prescribe you an antibiotic if necessary, determine if an antibiotic is necessary. It's really important
to have that. Unfortunately, a lot of people don't. I encourage people, you know, obviously use your
health insurance. If not, you can kind of find people to have that. But, you know, like, they're not
going to do performance medicine, right? They're going to just make sure that you're not sick.
So take care of the foundation, take care of the fundamentals first.
It's not a replacement for basic sort of health care.
Now, on top of that, the problem is, like, the traditional health care system doesn't do routine
blood testing.
They'll really only blood test you if you're sick.
And then the crazy part is they don't test for routine things.
Like, I'll give you a personal example.
You know, I have a family history of diabetes.
My doctor never asked to ever check my blood sugar levels, right?
Even though they knew my family history.
I had to literally ask them.
I'd say, hey, like, my dad has to.
type of diabetes, I should know what my blood sugar levels are because I want to obviously avoid it.
They're like, okay, sure, you know, but I had to literally convince them to do so.
Same thing. Unless you're like, feel like you're dying, no one's going to check your testosterone levels,
even though obviously hormonal health is fundamental to your health. So unfortunately,
our sick care system, and the reason for this, honestly, is because insurance companies don't want to pay for testing.
They're like, unless you're falling over, you're, you know, deathly symptomatic, there's probably
nothing wrong with you. That's obviously foolish, right? We know that, like, 37,
percent of Americans are pre-diabetic. And 89% of them don't know it because they've never tested
their blood sugar levels. And similarly, a ton of people are low testosterone these days that nobody
knows because nobody ever checks. And so what I tell people is like, look, get an annual physical exam
from your primary care physician. You know, they have to be checking your prostate, make sure
you don't have testicular cancer. These are the in-person exam stuff that you need. But you can go
to a company like Maximus, and there's other companies too. I don't want to just promote our own
and do an annual blood test.
At the very least, every six to 12 months,
you should get a blood test done.
We'll get right back to interview,
but first, we're looking for the next great guest.
If you or someone you know is a capital allocator
and would make for a great guest,
please reach out to me directly at David at Weisprudcapital.com.
There's basic things.
There's called a CBC, CMP, comprehensive, you know,
blood count, comprehensive metabolic panel.
And this measures the basic things,
including your blood sugar levels, for instance.
You should get that done.
I do think it's helpful to get a hormone panel done.
So you should be measuring your total testosterone, your SHBG.
Use those things.
You can calculate your free testosterone.
You want to measure your LH and FSAH, which are essentially your fertility markers.
That's the signal from your brain to your testes to produce testosterone and sperm.
Probably measure your thyroid and your lipids so that you don't have high cholesterol.
and other kind of risk factors.
Those are, I would say, like, a basic blood panel.
A lot of times people can do that through their primary care physician,
but like I said, they usually won't measure all of those things.
And so you can go pay out of pocket for a company like us,
or there's a lot of lab testing companies,
get that done every six to 12 months and just make sure that you're obviously maintaining.
And if there are problematic things, like, for instance,
your blood sugar is high, your testosterone is low, your vitamin D is low.
That's another one, by the way, almost like I mentioned,
most people aren't aware that they're vitamin D deficient or at least suboptimal, get that measured.
And then you can do an intervention.
So for instance, we offer a prescription multivitamin called building blocks.
It has a prescription dose of vitamin D, which is 10,000 I use.
So people are deficient, which is below 30, I believe it's nanograms for milliliter, or suboptimal,
which is below 50, you know, we put people on the overwhelming majority of people get above 50,
which has been shown, by the way, to, like, reduce the incidence of COVID-related death to basically
zero there was literally a paper came out that said if we gave everyone vitamin D supplementation
almost nobody would die from COVID except for like maybe this super you know immunocompromise
essentially yeah that's basically the best thing to do routine blood testing I don't think you
need to go crazy I think there are some companies that are promoting these like oh you got to test
like 100 plus markers all the time it's sometimes interesting to do once maybe to see for
instance do you have like heavy metal toxicity if you're I don't know exposed to a lot of it
But most of the time, people are fine.
You can test it once.
I really am more of a fan of just kind of like routine testing the basic things, the things
that I mentioned before and making sure that those are really dialed in because those are the
things that are most responsive to lifestyle intervention.
Like obviously, your lipids are influenced by what you eat.
Your blood sugar levels are influenced by what you eat.
Your hormone levels are influenced by this amount of sun exposure, your stress, and your sleep.
And so these are modifiable things.
The other things are a little bit exotic markers and they're not very actionable.
I've seen a lot of like founder colleagues is pay 500 bucks to get this humongous panel done.
They're like, what do I do with this information?
I don't even know what's a problem, what's not.
I do think AI is helpful in helping people understand their biomarkers.
But like I said, you want to really kind of measure the ones that are critical for health span
and the ones that are really modifiable.
One of the big paradigm shifts of Maximus is getting blood testing is a pain in the ass.
You got to go to a Quest or lab core.
They stick a giant needle in your arm.
It's painful.
It's hard to get an appointment.
or you've got to sit in a waiting room when you walk in.
It is helpful to do when you do comprehensive testing.
Like you're measuring like 50 plus markers.
But if you're measuring a handful of markers, we've really innovated at home blood testing.
We use a little device.
It looks like a CGM.
You stick it on your shoulders.
It uses actually microneedle technology.
It doesn't hurt because it's not going into your veins.
It's literally actually superficially just going into your fat and drawing out capillary blood.
And you can get about a half of pinkies full of blood.
And obviously you can't measure a million things.
We're not trying to be like Theranos here.
You can measure about up to about a dozen markers.
So like I said, if you need to measure 50 plus, go get a traditional blood draw.
But if you're just trying to measure your hormones, you can do that completely at home.
And you can literally mail it off.
It's mailed off via next day air to a lab.
And it's 99% as accurate as being a punctured draw through Quest and LabCorp.
So this has been validated.
It's way better than the fingerprint test,
but way better than the saliva tests that are out there
in terms of its accuracy, reliability, validity.
And so this is a huge paradigm shift for us as well in that.
Cam, I don't know if I ever told you.
The reason I invested in you,
because I was very excited when you started Maximus
that you essentially productized yourself.
You were talking about all this and then you turned into a business.
It's one of my favorite thesis is,
and I've seen a lot of success investing to people
that productize themselves into a company.
So it's thank you for having me along the journey.
and I look forward to sitting down live soon.
Thank you so much for your support.
Yeah, I mean, Maximus is a labor of love.
Like, you know, I've been practicing as a clinical psychologist and as a
psychiatry professor, you know, like working with CEOs and VCs,
like kind of a concierge practice, like a half day a week where I've been optimizing their
health and performance.
It's never meant to be scalable.
But Maximus, essentially, to your point, is a scalable version of that.
You know, as opposed to paying thousands of dollars to see a concierge doctor,
how do you democratize essentially performance medicine?
And that's really what we've done with Maximus.
And I really appreciate the support of great investors like yourself
in helping us realize that vision.
Thanks, Cam.
Thanks for listening to my conversation.
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