A practising GP who builds digital health, and thinks hard about the biology underneath it.
A practising GP and digital health leader working globally. I build online services that deliver safe, personalised medicine at scale, and write about the science of weight and how good remote medicine works.
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Verify →Ilustre Colegio Oficial de Médicos de MadridICOMEM · 282889105
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Verify →General Medical Council, United KingdomGMC · 7078829
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Verify →Medical Council of IrelandIMC · 429282
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Verify →College of Family Physicians of CanadaCFPC · 720470
SCOPE Certified, World Obesity Federation
Family medicine, digital infrastructure, and the biology of weight.
My main role is Medical Director (International) at HeliosX, a digital health group providing GLP-1 weight management and other medical services to patients worldwide. I also work regular shifts in urgent care with the NHS in Greater Manchester, keeping clinical practice and registration active alongside my international work.
My career in digital health began in 2019. As Clinical Director at Medicspot I built and led a team of twenty clinicians. Before that I spent three years at North Manchester General Hospital, leading the development of a Same Day Care Centre that was held nationally as a model for reducing A&E pressures. I qualified from Hull York Medical School and completed GP training in Greater Manchester.
I write about the evidence base for GLP-1 medicine and the clinical management of obesity. I am currently preparing a series of analysis papers for the BMJ on the science of obesity: the case for a clinical diagnosis beyond BMI, the argument for a new category of medically modifiable risk factor, and the evidence for long-term treatment as the clinical default.
I also serve as a medical advisor to OpenAI, reviewing the safety and usability of outputs from medical algorithms. I hold a PGCCE from Newcastle University, an MRCGP, and the SCOPE certification from the World Obesity Federation. I am an NHS-qualified Clinical Safety Officer and a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy.
Three pillars
How I think about treating obesity well: aim at the cause, work with the body's biology, and treat it as the long-term condition it is.

Treat the cause, not the effort
The scale is the end of a biological chain, not the start. Care should aim upstream, at the biology driving the defended weight.
Read the analysis →
Work with the body's biology
Behaviour moves you within a defended range. Medicine lowers the range itself, so the body stops fighting to return to its old weight.
Read the analysis →
Long-term condition, long-term care
The biology that defends weight does not vanish when weight comes down. Treatment is planned for the long term, not the quick result.
Read the analysis →Writing
The BMJ analysis series on obesity, the Remote Consultations Handbook, and essays on how digital medicine works.
See writingMy approach to weight management
Why the way we think about weight has had to change, and what it means now that medicine can act on the biology underneath it.
Read the approachLily
Golden retriever. Chief of operations, morale, and unreasonably long walks. Takes her responsibilities very seriously, except when she does not.
Meet Lily