NASHVILLE, Tenn.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Nov 20, 2025--
Joi + Blokes, a leading national telehealth platform for men’s and women’s health, announced the launch of its Beyond the Labs program, a first-of-its-kind service that gives patients access to holistically-trained licensed clinicians for personalized 30- to 60-minute consultations based on their existing lab results, no matter where those labs were completed.
This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20251120568616/en/
In a healthcare landscape racing toward automation, AI-driven lab platforms, and transactional care, Joi + Blokes is taking a different approach centered on real human connection. The company believes that while biomarker data is essential, the true key to better health outcomes lies in the clinical conversation that follows.
“There’s an arms race in diagnostics right now; everyone’s focused on testing, tracking, and technology,” said Josh Whalen, CEO and Co-Founder of Joi + Blokes. “But what’s missing is the most crucial part: the human connection with a clinician. Data alone doesn’t heal anyone. Listening, empathy, and expert clinician guidance do.”
Through the Beyond the Labs program, patients can upload existing lab results from any provider and connect directly with a Joi + Blokes licensed clinician in all 50 states. Each consultation is built around the patient’s unique biomarkers, symptoms, and goals, bridging the gap between data and meaningful, personalized care.
“Most primary care visits are rushed, lasting under 15 minutes. Ours are 30–60 minutes long, and unlike the exploding number of ‘lab-only’ services, you’ll actually see a clinician who listens and builds you a real plan,” says Dr. Melissa Loseke, DO, Medical Director at Joi + Blokes. “We specialize in integrative health, functional medicine, and menopause care, translating complex data into actionable, personalized treatments that help women feel like themselves again.”
“We see it every day,” said Katy Whalen, Co-founder & COO of Joi + Blokes. “Women going through perimenopause or menopause are exhausted from being dismissed or told their symptoms are ‘normal.’ They don’t want another report or generic plan; they want to be heard. They want real solutions. Beyond the Labs gives them that, with holistically-trained clinicians who truly listen and care.”
Patients can choose from two levels of care:
All new patients receive 25% off their first visit. For those who simply want to talk things through, Joi + Blokes has made that even easier by offering free visits with our health coaches who help patients navigate their options and feel supported from the start. “We live in a world of call centers and automations,” added Whalen. “Sometimes just talking to someone, even for a few minutes, can make all the difference.”
Patients can learn more or schedule a visit at joiandblokes.com/beyondthelabs
About Joi + Blokes
Founded by Josh and Katy Whalen, Joi + Blokes is a national virtual clinic redefining how men and women approach hormone optimization, weight loss, diagnostics, and longevity. To learn more or explore B2B collaboration opportunities, visit www.joiandblokes.com, and follow @joiwomenswellness and @getblokes on Instagram to explore personalized care, diagnostic testing, and advanced hormone therapies for men and women nationwide.
Joi + Blokes Challenges the AI Diagnostic Arms Race with a First-of-Its-Kind 1:1 Clinician Consultation Program for Patients with Existing Labs
SEATTLE (AP) — Max Fried bemoaned his first start of the season, one in which he struggled to throw strikes at times.
The New York Yankees left-hander loaded the zone on Tuesday night, too, but the end results of each outing were the same: no runs on the scoreboard, and a win, the latest one 5-0 against the Seattle Mariners.
"There weren't times where I was just fighting to throw strikes,” Fried said. “I felt like I was actually able to locate today, which made things a lot easier.”
Fried breezed through seven shutout innings en route to winning his career-high eighth straight regular-season start dating to Aug. 27. He has not given up a run in 13 1/3 innings this season. He tossed 6 1/3 innings of two-hit ball in a win at San Francisco on opening night last Wednesday.
Manager Aaron Boone has been more than pleased with Fried, who is in his second season of an eight-year, $218 million contract.
“He was terrific tonight,” Boone said. “He was on point from the start. Just in total control of the game and had everything going for him, different ways to get you out. I thought he changed speeds really well, like had good life to his fastball, just back and forth.”
Fried did an exemplary job of keeping hitters off balance in 2025, too. In his first season in the Big Apple, Fried went 19-5 with a 2.86 ERA, made his fourth All-Star team and finished fourth in Cy Young award voting.
“He’s dominant,” said designated hitter Giancarlo Stanton, who went 2 for 4 with two RBIs in the win. “Continuing from last year, making it tough on the guys. Making them off balance, working in and out.”
While Fried’s contributions were greatly appreciated in New York last season, they are perhaps even more so in 2026. The Yankees rotation is down a couple of top arms.
Left-hander Carlos Rodón experienced right hamstring tightness on Tuesday while going through his throwing program, which could delay his return from elbow surgery. Former Cy Young award winner Gerrit Cole, who missed all of the 2025 season after undergoing Tommy John surgery, remains sidelined.
Even without Rodón and Cole, New York’s rotation has been arguably its greatest strength amid its 4-1 start. The Yankees have only given up three runs in five games and recorded three shutouts as a team, two of which have been started by Fried.
“Everyone’s contributed,” Boone said. “Obviously Max now, going into the seventh or completed the seventh in back-to-back ones. And everyone else from the starting rotation has gone out and held them down.”
Nobody has been more dominant than Fried, though, who has been sublime in pinstripes. He is setting the example for the rest of the staff, a group that has more than held its own during New York’s hot start to the year.
“We’re throwing the ball well right now,” Fried said, “so, we’re just trying to keep it rolling.”
AP MLB: https://apnews.com/mlb
New York Yankees starting pitcher Max Fried greets teammates in the dugout after the seventh inning of a baseball game against the Seattle Mariners, Tuesday, March 31, 2026, in Seattle. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
New York Yankees starting pitcher Max Fried throws against the Seattle Mariners during the fourth inning of a baseball game, Tuesday, March 31, 2026, in Seattle. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
New York Yankees starting pitcher Max Fried walks to the dugout after retiring the side against the Seattle Mariners during the seventh inning of a baseball game, Tuesday, March 31, 2026, in Seattle. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)
New York Yankees starting pitcher Max Fried throws against the Seattle Mariners during the first inning of a baseball game, Tuesday, March 31, 2026, in Seattle. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)