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Friday, February 14, 2025

Concierge medicine booming — some New Yorkers willing to pay almost anything for it

The doctor will see you — whenever you want.

More and more wealthy New Yorkers are spending big for concierge medical care that goes way above and beyond annual check-ups.

“I’m 70% doctor, 15% psychologist, 10% rabbi, 4% hairdresser and 1% friend,” Dr. Jordan Shlain told NYNext. His team is also on call pretty much 24/7, with clients able to reach them via email, text or phone at all hours.

Shlain is the founder of Private Medical, an on-call physician service he started in 2002 in Silicon Valley. There are now outposts in New York City, Miami, San Francisco, Silicon Valley, Beverly Hills and Santa Monica, and none of them take insurance.

Dr. Jordan Shlain jokes he is not just a physician — but also a rabbi, hairdresser and friend when needed.Courtesy of Dr. Jordan Shlain
Though data on the industry is limited, concierge medicine has grown into a $7.47 billion market this year and projected to nearly double to $13.5 billion by 2030, according to a report from Research and Markets.

Shlain’s company is perhaps the most high-profile of a growing world of elite providers, along with Atria and Sollis, that are so hot they don’t even advertise — relying instead on word-of-mouth to attract new clients willing to shell out, on average, around $30,000 for the privilege of having a doctor on call (Price varies depending on factors like age, location and the number of patients in a practice).

Concierge doctors can get you impossible-to-nab appointments with sought-after surgeons and specialists and meet you at a hospital in the event of an emergency. Traveling and fall ill? Private, for one, can arrange for worldwide medical evacuation jet services.

Dr. Shlain discovered that one NAD+ supplement his patient wanted to take contained MDMA and herbicide.Mehmet Doruk Tasci – stock.adobe.com

You’ll still need to pay for all those services out of pocket or with traditional insurance, though.

Concierge docs can also vet the latest wellness trends. Shlain recalls testing the contents of NAD+ — a supplement popularized by celebrities like the Kardashians and Hailey Bieber that claims to slow aging by revitalizing cells — for a patient, and discovering it contained MDMA and herbicide. 

And Private is hardly the most expensive option. Atria Health and Research Institute — which has locations in NYC and Palm Beach and is planning seasonal pop-ups in Aspen and the Hamptons — charges a onetime $100,000 initiation fee plus $60,000 for annual membership, though younger members receive a reduced rate.

The cost of concierge medical service doesn’t cover extra expenses for things like an ambulance.jordi2r – stock.adobe.com

There are now an estimated 5,000 to 7,000 concierge doctors across the US, and smaller providers, including Elitra, MD² Park Avenue and Health Center Hudson Yards, have also entered the New York market in the hopes of getting a toehold in the space. 

Even major hospital networks, like Mount Sinai and Weill Cornell Medicine are launching subscription services that offer personalized amenities like at-home visits and on-demand appointments.

Longevity investor Alan Patricof believes the concept will become even more ubiquitous in future.

Asked if concierge medicine could become mainstream, he predicted: “Five years? No. Ten years? Maybe. Fifteen years? Yes.”

The market for concierge medical services like Sollis Health (pictured here) is expected to hit $13.5 billion by 2030.

Critics argue the high cost creates a divide between the wealthy and everyone else, but Dr. Shlain believes the model has a twofold benefit: creating a premium service now that could be made more affordable in the future and attract more doctors to general practice — a field often overshadowed by specialization.

He told NYNext he has already helped doctors launch lower-cost concierge services across the country that charge much smaller fees like $2,500 per year.

“You can’t build a model out of thin air,” Shlain explains. “First, we create the ideal healthcare experience—then, we figure out how to make it accessible at a lower cost.

“Great health is always a luxury.”

https://nypost.com/2025/02/14/business/concierge-medicine-is-booming-in-nyc-as-market-grows-by-billions/

Thursday, February 13, 2025

TikTok returns on Apple, Google app stores as Trump delays ban

 TikTok returned on the U.S. app stores of Apple and Google on Thursday, as President Donald Trump delayed its ban until April 5 and assured the companies they would not be fined for distributing or maintaining the Chinese app.

The popular short video app, used by 170 million American users, started restoring its services, weeks after the app went dark, as Trump assured to revive its access prior to his inauguration.

Trump's executive order last month delayed the ban of TikTok for 75 days, allowing China's ByteDance-owned company to continue its operations in the U.S. temporarily.
Trump’s executive order last month delayed the ban of TikTok for 75 days, allowing China’s ByteDance-owned company to continue its operations in the U.S. temporarily.Francis Chung/CNP / SplashNews.com

Tiktok did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

Trump’s executive order last month delayed the ban of TikTok for 75 days, allowing China’s ByteDance-owned company to continue its operations in the U.S. temporarily.

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The companies, which run mobile application stores or digital marketplaces where users can browse, download and update apps, would not face penalties for keeping the TikTok app up and running, the directive said.

TikTok was the second most downloaded app in the U.S., with more than 52 million downloads in 2024, according to market intelligence firm Sensor Tower.

About 52% of TikTok’s total downloads were from Apple App Store, while 48% were from Google Play in the U.S. last year, Sensor Tower said.

https://nypost.com/2025/02/13/business/tiktok-returns-on-apple-google-app-stores-as-trump-delays-ban/

US Transportation Sec'y Duffy requests meeting with Boeing CEO on safety

 U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said on Thursday he had asked Boeing's CEO to come to Washington, D.C., "as soon as possible" to discuss quality and safety issues at the company.

The U.S. planemaker has been under scrutiny after a series of crises involving safety, including when a door panel flew off a new Alaska Airlines 737 MAX 9 in mid-air last year.

Duffy added he would "visit Boeing myself to evaluate firsthand the measures being implemented to ensure its planes meet the highest safety standards," in a post on X.Boeing did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The door panel incident resulted in the Federal Aviation Administration maintaining tougher oversight of the company.

During his confirmation hearing, Duffy said the federal government needed to make sure the company was implementing its safety plan.

He also said at the time that he would maintain a cap on production of Boeing's 737 MAX planes put in place after the mid-air panel blowout last year, until he is satisfied it can be safely raised.

In January 2024, then FAA chief Mike Whitaker imposed the 38 planes per month production cap after the Alaska Airlines incident.

While Boeing has yet to reach production of 38 MAX jets a month, limiting production of its dominant cash cow delays its financial recovery and prevents it from narrowing a gap in the global jet market against archrival Airbus.

https://money.usnews.com/investing/news/articles/2025-02-13/us-transportation-secy-duffy-requests-meeting-with-boeing-ceo-on-safety

Taiwan president to meet senior officials on US tariffs, sources say

 Taiwan President Lai Ching-te pledged on Friday to talk with the United States about President Donald Trump's concerns over the chip industry and to invest more in and buy more from the country, while ramping up defence spending.

Trump spoke critically about Taiwan on Thursday, saying he aimed to restore U.S. manufacturing of semiconductor chips and repeating claims about Taiwan having taken away the industry he wanted back in the United States.

Speaking to reporters after holding a meeting of the National Security Council at the presidential office, Lai said that the global semiconductor supply chain is an "ecosystem" in which the division of work among various countries is important.

"We of course are aware of President Trump's concerns," Lai said.

"Taiwan's government will communicate and discuss with the semiconductor industry and come up with good strategies. Then we will come up with good proposals and engage in further discussions with the United States," he added.

Taiwan is home to the world's largest contract chipmaker, TSMC, a major supplier to companies including Apple and Nvidia, and a crucial part of the developing AI industry.

Taiwan also runs a large trade surplus with the United States, which surged 83% last year, with the island's exports to the U.S. hitting a record $111.4 billion, driven by demand for high-tech products such as semiconductors.

Lai said that the United States is Taiwan's largest foreign investment destination and that Taiwan is the United States' most reliable trade partner.

Trump has also previously criticised Taiwan, which faces a growing military threat from China whose government claims the island as its own territory, for not spending enough on defence, a criticism he has made of many U.S. allies.

"Taiwan must demonstrate our determination to defend ourselves," Lai said, adding his government is working to propose a special budget this year to boost defence spending from 2.5% of its GDP to 3%.

https://www.usnews.com/news/world/articles/2025-02-13/taiwan-president-to-meet-senior-officials-on-us-tariffs-sources-say

How To Forge The Spectator Class

 by Josh Stylman via The Brownstone Institute,

My father could disassemble and rebuild a car engine in our garage. I, like many of my generation, was steered toward the ‘civilized’ path – white collar work, climate-controlled offices, and an increasing detachment from the physical world. While I grew up loving sports, memorizing baseball stats with religious devotion, and finding genuine joy in the games, something fundamental has shifted in how men engage with athletics today.

In dimly lit rooms across the nation, millions of men gather every weekend, adorned in jerseys bearing other men’s names – not as a complement to their own achievements, but as a substitute for them. We’ve transformed from a nation of players to a nation of watchers.

Like Rome’s bread and circuses, this passive consumption serves to pacify rather than inspire. 

The games themselves aren’t the problem – they can build character, teach discipline, and provide genuine entertainment. I still love sports, finding genuine joy in the games just as I did memorizing those baseball stats as a kid. But somewhere along the way, I grew up and realized they should complement life’s achievements, not substitute for them. The danger lies in what happens when grown men never make this transition.

A growing segment of young men face an even more insidious form of spectator culture. While their fathers at least watched real athletes achieve real things, many young people now idolize social media personalities and content creators – becoming passive observers of manufactured personas who achieved fame primarily by being watched. They can recite influencer dramas and gaming achievements but don’t know the stories of Solzhenitsyn or have ever built something with their own hands. The virtual has replaced the visceral; the parasocial has replaced the personal.

History shows us a recurring cycle: hard times create strong men, strong men create good times, good times create weak men, and weak men create hard times. We find ourselves now in the latter stages of this cycle, where comfort and convenience have bred a generation of observers rather than builders. Our sophisticated entertainment serves as a digital opiate, keeping the masses content while their capacity for meaningful action atrophies.

This transformation isn’t accidental. As I explored in my ‘Engineering Reality‘ series, the systematic reframing of physical fitness as problematic represents a calculated effort to weaken societal resilience. Major media outlets like the Atlantic and MSNBC have published pieces linking physical fitness to right-wing extremism, while academic institutions increasingly frame workout culture as problematic. Even gym ownership has been characterized as a potential indicator of radicalization. The message couldn’t be clearer: individual strength – both literal and metaphorical – threatens the prescribed order.

This erosion of self-reliance extends far beyond fitness. A friend who’s spent decades as an auto mechanic recently confided that he’s grateful to be nearing retirement. “These Teslas,” he told me, “they’re not even cars anymore – they’re computers on wheels. When something goes wrong, you don’t fix it; you just replace entire modules.” What was once a craft that any dedicated person could learn has become an exercise in supervised dependency. Even Klaus Schwab openly predicts that by 2030, Los Angeles will be “private car driven free” – just a fleet of self-driving Ubers. With this week’s devastating tunnel fire in LA leaving thousands stranded, one wonders if such ‘Build Back Better’ moments are exactly the opportunities needed to accelerate these transformations. The message becomes clearer: you won’t fix things anymore because you won’t own them.

The Covid response revealed this agenda with striking clarity. While liquor stores remained ‘essential businesses,’ authorities closed beaches, parks, and gyms – the very places where people might maintain their physical and mental health. They promoted isolation over community, compliance over resilience, and pharmaceutical dependency over natural immunity. This wasn’t just public health policy; it was a dress rehearsal for state dependency. The same institutions that discouraged basic health practices now champion policies that replace family authority with bureaucratic oversight. From school boards usurping parental rights to social services intervening in family decisions, we’re witnessing the systematic replacement of the capable father figure with an ever-expanding nanny state.

But true masculinity has never been solely about physical strength. History’s greatest exemplars of masculine virtue weren’t just men of action – they were men of principle, wisdom, and moral courage. From Marcus Aurelius to Omar Little, as I explored in my earlier writing, the common thread was having an unwavering code – the willingness to stand firm on conviction even when it carries personal cost.

Consider how many men today silently acquiesce to policies they know are wrong, embrace narratives they privately doubt, or submit to institutional pressures that violate their conscience. During Covid, we watched as men who understood the importance of natural immunity, outdoor exercise, and community bonds nevertheless enforced policies that harmed their neighborhoods and families. They chose institutional compliance over moral courage, career safety over civic duty, majority approval over personal conviction.

Real strength isn’t found in anonymous aggression or digital posturing. I learned this firsthand during Covid when I spoke out against vaccine mandates and became a pariah for defending personal choice and bodily autonomy. While numerous ‘brave’ keyboard warriors attacked me online, one incident stands out. A friend forwarded me a Reddit thread where someone had posted personal information about my family and me, hoping to incite harassment against me – all because I stood up for bodily autonomy and opposed arbitrary biomedical segregation. The initials gave it away – it was my own neighbor, someone I’d known for years.

When I confronted him in person, this digital lion transformed instantly into a cowering mouse. The same man who had boldly called for my destruction from behind his screen, believing he was anonymous, now stood physically trembling before me, his hands shaking, voice quivering, unable to even meet my gaze.

This spiritual and intellectual weakness poses a far greater threat than any decline in physical capability. A society of physically strong but morally compliant men is just as vulnerable as one of physically weak ones. True masculine strength requires the courage to think independently, to question authority when necessary, and to protect those who depend on you even when it carries risk. It demands the wisdom to distinguish between legitimate authority and manufactured consensus, between genuine expertise and institutional capture.

History offers a stark lesson: civilizations thrive when diverse virtues work in concert – builders and nurturers, protectors and healers, strength balanced with empathy. Today’s systematic erosion of both isn’t random but calculated. As men are steered toward passive consumption and women away from their intuitive wisdom, both are replaced by institutional authority – a nanny state that attempts to fill both roles while achieving neither.

Consider the machinery at work: government programs increasingly separate children from family influence at younger ages, while school curricula promote ideologies that deliberately blur biological realities. From preschool to college, institutions systematically distance children from their parents’ values. Like the fiat currency that replaced real money, we now have fiat relationships through social media, fiat achievements through gaming, and fiat experiences through the metaverse. Each substitution moves us further from authentic human experience toward engineered dependency. When children no longer understand what it means to be male or female, when they’re taught to look to institutions rather than parents for guidance, the state’s victory is nearly complete.

The result is a society of spectators rather than builders, of consumers rather than creators, of followers rather than leaders. A society where men trade real achievement for virtual entertainment and keyboard courage, while genuine feminine wisdom is replaced by corporate-approved stereotypes.

The state can only expand into the vacuum left by weakened men and disconnected women. It feeds on our engineered helplessness, growing stronger as we grow more dependent. Those who recognize this pattern face a simple choice: remain comfortable spectators in our own decline, or reclaim the authentic virtues that make us human.

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/how-forge-spectator-class

Stifel Raises GE Healthcare Technologies Price Target

 to $104 From $102

https://www.marketscreener.com/quote/stock/GE-HEALTHCARE-TECHNOLOGIE-148175835/news/Stifel-Raises-GE-Healthcare-Technologies-Price-Target-to-104-From-102-49054299/