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الرئيسيةEnglishThe Real Male Longevity Conversation
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The Real Male Longevity Conversation

Three of the region’s leading brands in male health, longevity and wellness living talk on what is being sold and what actually works

Dubai, United Arab Emirates, 20 May 2026 – In the United Arab Emirates, men develop premature coronary heart disease between ten and fifteen years earlier than men in Western nations, according to peer-reviewed research published in Frontiers in Public Health in 2023. Cardiovascular disease accounts for around forty per cent of all deaths in the country, according to the UAE Healthy Future Study published in BMC Cardiovascular Disorders the same year, and the same body of research notes that CVD-related mortality in the UAE sits above the global average. The men this happens to are often the same men with every resource to do something about it long before it happens. Most of them do not. The reason sits at the intersection of biology, behaviour, and a wellness industry that has sold men a thinner conversation than the one women receive.

To map a more serious version of that conversation, we sat down with three of the sharpest brands in Dubai.

“Most men in this city have never had a real health check.”

Ahmed Elbarkouki, CEO of Echelon Health, “Most men over forty have had a body composition scan, a skin analysis, a smartwatch stress score and a hair check,” he says. “What almost none of them have had is a proper medical assessment. That is the conversation that decides whether you reach seventy in good shape, or in a cardiology ward.”

Most of what is sold as a regional health screen, he argues, is a reassurance product. Echelon Health’s flagship Platinum Plus Assessment is built on a different premise: the biggest killers of men, coronary heart disease, the cancers, and the diseases of the circulatory, respiratory and digestive systems, very often exist in the body long before they declare themselves. Not a twenty-minute blood test, in other words, but a complete and dedicated clinical programme of around five hours of carefully tailored tests, combining advanced imaging across the body with a comprehensive blood panel of more than forty parameters, including tumour markers, HbA1c, PSA, vitamin D, kidney, liver and thyroid function, and the full cholesterol profile.

“In the UK, we have reassured healthy living for many of our members, and detected disease in others who walked in feeling completely well. Stage-one cancers. Heart disease in marathon runners. Aneurysms nobody knew were there,” he says. “Without a rigorous assessment of your health, every conversation about longevity is just cosmetics.”

“Prevention is not a wellness trend. It is the imperative action that tells you what is already happening inside you.”

“Peptides are not the protocol. The data is the protocol.”

Mark Boyes is the Founder and CEO of Sigma Clinic, the first clinic in the region built exclusively for men: a Jumeirah villa where diagnostics, hormones, peptides, regenerative aesthetics and recovery sit under one roof, on one chart, with one clinical lead. If Ahmed’s job is to find what is wrong, Mark’s begins when a man has the data and wants to act on it.

“Peptides are the trend of the moment. Men walk in asking for BPC-157, for growth hormone secretagogues, for combinations they heard on a podcast,” he says. “Some of these are genuinely useful when used properly. Others are not appropriate for the patient in front of you. A clinician’s job is to know the difference, and to decide based on bloods, not on what is fashionable.”

He is equally direct on testosterone. A meaningful proportion of men have suboptimal levels by midlife, he says, but suboptimal does not always mean clinically deficient, and lifestyle, sleep, strength training, weight, alcohol, will move the needle further than most expect before a prescription is written. “When replacement is appropriate, it should be conservative, monitored, and read alongside everything else on the chart. The goal is not a number on a lab report. Every intervention has to earn its place against the diagnostics. If you cannot tell me what marker you are moving, you should not be prescribing it.”

“Every intervention has to earn its place against the diagnostics.”

“The most expensive longevity plan in the world fails at the last mile.”

Mike Lee, Managing Director and co-founder of LIFTD Design, explains an overlooked space of longevity impact. That real life vitality happens in the spaces a man lives in. The room he wakes up in. The space he trains in. The room he recovers and sleeps in. These are the places where, hour by hour, a programme either turns into a life, or quietly does not.

“You can have the best health assesments in the city and the best peptide protocol in the region,” he says. “But health does not live in a clinic. If the bedroom is wired for stimulation rather than for sleep, his recovery will be poor. If the only place he can train is a treadmill in a converted bedroom under a strip light, he will not train. It lives at home. If the kitchen does not support how a man should be eating, he will not eat that way. The man does not fail the programme. The home fails him. And then, quietly, the programme fails too.”

What he designs for, he says, is not aesthetic. It is behavioural. The home is a series of zones, each of which is either making the work of health easier or quietly making it harder. The training space, sized and lit so that he uses it without negotiating with himself. The recovery zone, separated from where he pushed himself, so the nervous system can down-regulate. The bedroom, treated with the same seriousness as the gym, because sleep is the largest single input into how he ages. “Health is the most valuable wealth a man has, and almost no one designs their home around it. They design around how it looks, how it photographs, who they expect to entertain. The goal is a man who doesn’t strive simply for wellbeing, but for optimisation, to function at the peak his body will allow him to. The environment around him is either helping him get there, or quietly stopping him. A neutral home does not exist.”

Health is the most valuable wealth a man has, and almost no “one designs their home around it.”

A different conversation, finally

Three men, three disciplines, one argument: find what is already there, treat what the data tells you, and build the environment in which the work can happen. None of it is glamorous. All of it is more rigorous, and more effective, than the version of male health that has been on sale for the last twenty years. The conversation is starting. The men who notice early will get the benefit. The rest, as one of the three put it after the recorder was off, will be next year’s patients.