We surveyed 1,003 American men aged 40–65 about their health.
65% have never had their testosterone tested. Not once.
Meanwhile 75% reported a symptom of low T in the past year.
That gap is the whole problem. 🧵
A real milestone — great to see the label catching up to the evidence. But this is the start, not the finish. Testosterone deficiency is a widespread, undertreated condition, and outdated guidance has kept too many men from evidence-based care. That’s the change worth leading. https://t.co/RW3ij6Qgoc
Last week the FDA requested updates to testosterone therapy labeling — a turning point for evidence-based men’s health, and the second major labeling action in 16 months.
⭐️ Important label changes for testosterone 💊- no major cardio AEs, approved for age-related decline, only restricted to metastatic prostate cancer, no concerns for BPH.
✅ We previously showed safety in men on Active Surveillance receiving TTh.
https://t.co/ATIgFNEODh
This is the recognition gap in one post. In our survey of 1,000+ men 40–65, 22% had already noticed reduced muscle — yet 65% had never had their testosterone tested. The body-composition shift and the hormonal one are part of the same metabolic picture; most men only track the part they can see in the mirror. Train, yes — and know your numbers.
This works in reverse too — kids need dads well enough to be present. In our national survey of 1,000+ men 40–65, 45% said health concerns were already affecting their work, relationships, and daily life — yet 65% had never had their testosterone tested. The message this Men’s Health Month: know your numbers.
@PeterDiamandis The irony is the first step costs nothing and most men still skip it. We surveyed 1,000+ men 40–65 — 65% had never had their testosterone tested. Billionaires would trade a fortune for healthy years. The average man won’t trade 20 minutes for the test that helps protect them.
This pairs directly with a gap we just measured. While two-thirds of men carry excess weight, our national survey found 65% have never had their testosterone tested — even though low T and metabolic dysfunction are clinically linked and tend to reinforce each other. We screen the waistline and miss the hormone. Both deserve a number. Good to see this getting attention this week.
Full survey + methodology: https://t.co/wsfsTmvMw8
1,003 U.S. men, 40–65, fielded by YouGov June 5–8. If this resonated, a repost gets it in front of a man who needs the reminder. 🔁
We surveyed 1,003 American men aged 40–65 about their health.
65% have never had their testosterone tested. Not once.
Meanwhile 75% reported a symptom of low T in the past year.
That gap is the whole problem. 🧵