Cut through the noise in modern healthcare.
A physician-guided approach to improving healthspan through evidence-based care and long-term partnership.
Limited patient panel serving Southern California via telemedicine.
Philosophy
The biggest challenge in health today is not a lack of information. It is knowing which information deserves your attention.
Patients today have access to more health advice than ever before — and much of it, without context, creates more uncertainty than clarity. Competing recommendations, overstated claims, and conflicting expert opinions can make even motivated patients feel overwhelmed rather than empowered.
Signal Health Practice is built around a different approach.
The goal is not to add more information to your life. The goal is to help you understand what actually matters — to identify the highest-leverage interventions for your specific situation, and to focus your energy there.
In practice, this means starting with what evidence consistently shows moves the needle: sleep, nutrition, body composition, cardiovascular risk, hormonal health, and movement. It means knowing which data deserves your attention and which can be set aside. And it means the discipline to prioritize — distinguishing the interventions that produce meaningful change from those that simply produce noise.
Health is not an end in itself. It is the physical and cognitive capacity to pursue what matters most — to remain capable, engaged, and present throughout your life. That is what this practice is designed to protect.
Areas of Focus
-
Cardiovascular disease develops silently — often for decades before symptoms appear. That window is where meaningful prevention happens.
Evaluation goes beyond standard cholesterol panels to include advanced markers such as ApoB, lipoprotein(a), and inflammatory markers that more accurately reflect individual risk. When appropriate, imaging tools including coronary artery calcium scoring and coronary CT angiography can further clarify that picture. Treatment is individualized — addressing statin intolerance, incorporating non-statin therapies when indicated, and prioritizing the interventions most likely to produce long-term benefit.
-
Weight is a single number. Body composition tells a more useful story.
The focus here is on meaningful, sustainable change — improving metabolic health, reducing visceral fat, and building the lean mass that supports long-term function. Treatment is individualized and may include GLP-1–based therapies with careful initiation, titration, and long-term planning. Nutrition and exercise are structured deliberately, with emphasis on adequate protein intake and resistance training. Progress is tracked using tools such as DEXA body composition scanning to assess changes in muscle mass and fat distribution over time.
-
The goal of longevity medicine is not simply to add years. It is to preserve the function, strength, and cognitive capacity that make those years worthwhile.
Care centers on what evidence most consistently supports: resistance training and the prevention of sarcopenia, mobility and fall prevention, and the metabolic and cardiovascular factors that influence energy and vitality over time. Interventions are selected deliberately — prioritizing those that meaningfully support independence and physical capacity across decades.
-
Sleep is among the highest-leverage interventions in medicine — with direct effects on metabolic health, cardiovascular risk, cognitive function, hormonal balance, and longevity. It is also among the most commonly overlooked.
Care begins with identifying the specific factors disrupting sleep quality: circadian misalignment, sleep-disordered breathing, stress physiology, or behavioral patterns that undermine recovery. Management is integrated into the broader health picture rather than treated in isolation, because what happens during sleep affects nearly everything else.
-
Sexual health is a meaningful component of overall wellbeing — and one that is often inadequately addressed in standard care settings.
This practice offers evaluation and management of sexual health concerns in a setting that is unhurried, discreet, and integrated with broader health goals. Care is individualized and approaches these concerns with the same clinical rigor applied to every other area of the practice.
-
Hormonal changes are a normal part of aging — but their effects on quality of life, metabolic health, cardiovascular risk, and bone density are real and deserve careful attention.
Care includes evaluation and individualized management of perimenopause, menopause, and hypogonadism in both men and women. Treatment emphasizes symptom management alongside long-term health considerations — including effects on cardiovascular, metabolic, and skeletal health over time. Options are discussed thoroughly, with attention to appropriate routes of administration, fertility goals when relevant, and ongoing reassessment as needs evolve. The approach is evidence-based, longitudinal, and never one-size-fits-all.
-
Many of the behaviors that most significantly affect long-term health — how we eat, drink, move, and rest — are not simply choices. They are patterns, often deeply ingrained, that require more than willpower to change.
This practice brings formal training in addiction medicine to the evaluation of alcohol use, compulsive patterns, and other behaviors that undermine health goals. Care is outpatient-focused and does not involve withdrawal management, but may include targeted pharmacologic support alongside a structured, longitudinal approach to sustainable behavior change.
-
The problem in modern medicine is rarely a lack of data. It is knowing what the data means — and which numbers actually warrant action.
Evaluation includes detailed review and interpretation of laboratory findings in the context of your full clinical picture. Testing is used selectively, with emphasis on markers that meaningfully inform decisions rather than adding complexity. The goal is clarity — not an overwhelming list of values, but a coherent understanding of what your results indicate and what, if anything, should be done about them.
Care Model
This practice operates outside the traditional insurance model, allowing for longer visits, direct communication, and a more thoughtful, continuous approach. Visits are conducted quarterly via secure video, with communication between visits available by email, text or phone. Ongoing care may include scheduled check-ins and periodic in-depth assessments.
Care is delivered through a limited membership model designed to support continuity, access, and meaningful progress over time. Due to federal regulations, Medicare beneficiaries are not eligible for enrollment at this time.