Industry Leader's Vision for Holistic Healthcare Inspires Global Change

Industry Leader's Vision for Holistic Healthcare Inspires Global Change

Photo Courtesy of Priyanka Chaturvedi

While much of the healthcare world clung to outdated systems and impersonal processes, something new began to take shape in a quiet corner of London in 2015. Priyanka Chaturvedi launched HealthClic, the UK’s first concierge medicine practice, a bold defiance of traditional norms in a space known for its inertia.

Chaturvedi saw what others ignored. Medical care had become reactive, faceless, and mechanical – even in the private sector. Doctors rushed, patients waited, and deeper connections were often lost. With HealthClic, she set out to build something personal, human, intimate—a place where medicine returned to its roots, knowing the patient, not just their symptoms.

“We do not want ‘sick care’ anymore. We want healthcare that serves to preserve and protect health,” she says. That line, simple and urgent, is the heartbeat of the company’s model. Initially, her practice operated on a simple but powerful idea: people do not just need doctors’ health advice when ill, they need them when they are well, too.

From Early Action to Industry Blueprint

As the rest of the world caught up, HealthClic was already moving ahead. During the chaos of the COVID-19 pandemic, when government systems buckled under pressure, the company moved fast, becoming one of the first in the UK to offer private COVID testing in March 2020. This kind of nimble action was possible only when bureaucracy was not in the way and the patient was front and center. That decisiveness cemented their place as not just early adopters but standard setters.

The global concierge medicine market, expected to hit nearly $23 billion by 2030, is riding the wave Chaturvedi helped create. While others race to catch up, she and her team continue refining and expanding the model.

Earning Trust Where It’s Most Guarded

Chaturvedi introduced a term that has since entered the healthcare lexicon: the “Trust Barrier,” which refers to the invisible wall that exists between high-profile individuals and the healthcare professionals meant to serve them. Celebrities, business moguls, royals are people who live with a deep fear that their health details, more specifically their personal worries, will be leaked, misused, or misinterpreted. They have a very justified fear of being taken advantage of. That fear leads to silence. Silence becomes avoidance. And soon, health is sacrificed for privacy.

Breaking through that wall was not easy, but HealthClic did it. They trained their team in personalised medicine, discretion, emotional intelligence, and advocacy. Their doctors accompany patients to specialist visits, surgeries, and even international procedures – they’re trained to become unbiased health advocates for HealthClic member patients.

Predicting the Unseen, Preventing the Unthinkable

One story still echoes in the halls of their practice: a young child in the UK with a severe spinal condition, with limited expectancy, was given a second chance at life when the company arranged her surgery in the United States. These are not services you find in mainstream clinics. With a 98 percent membership renewal rate, HealthClic is earning loyalty from the most discerning patients.

While much of the healthcare system waits for illness to appear before acting, the company was among the first in the UK to weave whole genome sequencing into its patient assessments. Long before it became trendy, Chaturvedi understood that the key to long-term health lies in knowing what’s coming, and stopping it before it strikes.

Built for the Future, Grounded in Trust

While global disease prevention scores remain embarrassingly low even in wealthy countries, HealthClic is rewriting the rules. Their doctors dig into genetics, inflammation, early markers, and lifestyle data to craft health strategies that fit the individual like a tailored suit. It is medicine with foresight, not hindsight.

Chaturvedi, whose academic roots lie in economics and entrepreneurship from Cambridge Judge Business School, brings a rare clarity to the business side of medicine. She understands what motivates physicians and patients and has built a system that honors both – ensuring that incentives lie in long term preventative care; rather than “reactive care” where you make money when patients are sick. Her connections to family office communities globally have deepened HealthClic’s reach, and her regular contributions to respected journals and events have made her a thought leader without needing to shout for attention – maintaining the hallmark of discretion which their clients desire.

What began as a niche service in London now ripples across borders. Chaturvedi’s story is not one of overnight success, but of discipline, vision, and an unwillingness to settle. As medicine races toward algorithms and automation, they have doubled down on the human element, reminding the world what healthcare can look like when the patient comes first.