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Men's Health

The stuff most clinics
rush or skip.

Testosterone, hair, weight, sexual health, all of it connected and treated that way, by somebody who'll actually talk about it with you like a normal adult.

Men's health

The stuff that goes sideways for guys between thirty and fifty.

Energy slides, libido slides, the gut shows up uninvited, the hair starts retreating, and the standard primary-care visit has no room for any of it, so most guys just learn to live with it.

It's all connected

Low T, lousy sleep, extra weight and a libido that's checked out usually show up together, so we work the whole picture instead of one piece at a time.

Testosterone & HRT

Getting back to feeling like yourself.

Hair loss

Finasteride, minoxidil, the stack that works.

Weight

GLP-1s, and the honest story on them.

Sexual health

ED, libido, and the hormonal stuff.

IV wellness

Some drips help, most are fancy Gatorade.

With a real prescriber on premises

Not a med-spa upsell, an actual visit that runs long enough to get it right.

In person and telehealth, Washington and Oregon

Ready to actually talk to someone?

Talk to a prescriber

A real person replies

Our care team gets back to you within a business day and gets you started.

What this is like

What working with us looks like

Telehealth or in person

Across Washington and Oregon, whichever actually fits the week you're having.

Treated as one system

Testosterone, weight, sleep, and libido get looked at together, because pulling one lever usually moves the others.

A real person, not a bot

Our care team reaches out within a business day, sorts the logistics, and matches you with the right clinician.

No five-minute quiz mills

A real panel, real follow-up, and the option that fits the situation, not a script in the mail nobody watches.

The stuff the average office ignores

There's a list of things that go sideways for guys somewhere between thirty and fifty that the average doctor's office is built to mostly ignore. Energy slides, libido slides, the gym work that used to add muscle now just maintains it, the gut shows up uninvited, the hair starts retreating, sleep gets weirder, and the mood gets shorter. Most of it is treatable. None of it gets the airtime it should, because the standard fifteen-minute primary-care visit doesn't have room for it and the standard answer is some version of "well, you're getting older."

The stuff on this page is what we actually treat on the men's-health side. Testosterone and HRT, hair loss, weight, sexual health. They're separate cards because they're separate conversations, but the truth is they're one system, and if you only pull on one lever you usually leave value on the table. Low T, poor sleep, extra weight, and a flagging libido frequently all sit at the same dinner table. We treat them that way.

Pick whichever card is the closest match to what you're dealing with. Each page goes through what the actual condition is, what the labs and the workup look like, what the treatment options are, and what the realistic outcomes are. No mystery, no sales voice, no overpromising.

What we actually treat

Why this is different

  • A real panel, drawn rightTotal and free testosterone at the right time of day, plus the safety markers that actually matter.
  • Numbers in contextWe read the labs against what you're reporting in your life, because the value and the symptom picture don't always agree.
  • Somebody keeps watchingWe follow up, keep checking the numbers, and change course if the data says to, instead of mailing a script and forgetting the file.

Why this isn't the same as the online clinic with the cool box

There's a whole category of online men's-health outfits that have figured out the marketing side and not the medicine side. You fill out a five-minute quiz, you get a prescription in the mail, and unless something goes obviously wrong nobody touches the file again. For some products that's basically fine. For testosterone, it's not, because testosterone is a hormonal intervention with real downstream effects on the rest of your physiology, and if nobody's actually watching the labs you can end up worse off than you started.

What we do is the boring, careful version. We run a real panel, total and free testosterone drawn at the right time of day, plus the things that actually matter for safety, hematocrit, PSA where relevant, lipids, estradiol, thyroid. We look at the numbers in the context of what you're actually reporting in your life, because the lab value and the symptom picture don't always agree. Then we choose the option that fits the situation, and we follow up to make sure it's doing what we wanted it to.

The same logic applies to weight and to hair loss and to sexual health. GLP-1s are wildly effective for a lot of people, and they're also a real intervention with side effects worth tracking and a strategy worth thinking about for how you eventually come off them, if you do. Finasteride works, and there are real conversations to be had about side-effect profiles and whether topical is a better fit for you than oral. ED has half a dozen workable answers and a couple of them get missed because the conversation never quite gets there.

The throughline is the same as the rest of the practice. We'll explain what we're doing and why, we'll keep watching the numbers, we'll change course if the data tells us to, and we'll talk about it the way two adults talk about a real thing, not a transaction.

What the first appointment actually looks like

Testosterone, weight, sleep, and libido all sit at the same dinner table. Pull one lever, the others usually follow.

The first visit on the men's-health side runs about an hour, because we go through your actual story instead of running you through a checklist that the back end of a software product wrote. Energy through the day, sleep, libido, mood, training, recovery, alcohol, body composition, what's changed in the last couple of years and when you noticed it. Family history. Whatever you're already taking, prescription or otherwise. The fuller the picture, the better the plan.

If labs make sense, we'll order them before or after the visit depending on what's most efficient. For testosterone work that usually means a morning draw, and for weight or general workup the panel includes the things that should have been checked a while ago and probably weren't. We'll go over the results together when they're back, and we'll explain what they mean in plain language, not the printout language.

From there we lay out the options. Sometimes the answer is to start a treatment. Sometimes the answer is to fix sleep and alcohol first because the labs are borderline and you'd be putting a band-aid on a fixable problem. Sometimes the answer is "yes, this is a real thing, and here's the conservative way to handle it and the more aggressive way, and here's what each one costs you in tradeoffs." You get to pick the path. We'll tell you what we'd do, and we'll tell you why.

Follow-ups for hormone work and weight work are scheduled close together at the beginning so we can actually catch what's happening, then they spread out once the picture is stable. We see patients in person and via telehealth across Washington and Oregon, so the in-person versus video question is mostly about what's convenient for you.

What the first hour covers

  • The whole pictureEnergy, sleep, libido, mood, training, recovery, alcohol, body composition, and what's changed in the last couple of years.
  • Labs if they make senseA morning draw for testosterone work, plus the panel that should have been checked a while ago and probably wasn't.
  • Options, then your callThe conservative way and the aggressive way, what each one costs you in tradeoffs, and you pick the path.

How it goes

How you actually get from a message to a plan

01
Reach out

You send a note about what's actually going on, and a real clinician reads it, not a bot and not a front desk screening you out.

02
A real evaluation

An hour going through the whole picture, labs drawn at the right time, and the results explained in plain language when they're back.

03
Dial in the plan

Treat it, or fix sleep and alcohol first, or lay out the tradeoffs and let you pick. We follow up and adjust as we go.

Cards on the table

Men's-health questions we get a lot

Is this just the online clinic with the cool box?

No. That model is a five-minute quiz, a script in the mail, and nobody watching the file. We run a real panel, read the numbers against what you're actually reporting, and follow up to make sure it's doing what we wanted. For something like testosterone, the monitoring isn't optional.

Do I have to pick just one thing to come in for?

No, and you probably shouldn't. Low T, poor sleep, extra weight and a flagging libido frequently sit at the same dinner table, so we treat them as one system. Pick whichever card is the loudest, and we'll sort out where the others fit from there.

Am I just going to get handed a prescription?

Not automatically. Sometimes the answer is to start a treatment, sometimes it's to fix sleep and alcohol first because the labs are borderline, and sometimes it's a real choice between the conservative path and the aggressive one. We'll tell you what we'd do and why, and you pick.

Can you do all of this over telehealth?

Some of it, not all. The mental-health side and a lot of the medication management work fine over video across Washington and Oregon. But a chunk of the men's-health side genuinely can't happen remotely, the physical and function exams, shockwave therapy, injections like Trimix, red light, those all need you in the clinic. We'll tell you up front which parts mean a visit.

Ready to actually talk to someone?

Drop a line. Our care team gets back to you within a business day and gets you set up with the right clinician.

From people who actually came in

What patients are saying.

  • Did the whole thing on telehealth from Vancouver because driving over the bridge for a 30-minute appointment is a non-starter. Worked totally fine, labs done locally, follow-ups on the portal, didn't feel any worse than going in person honestly.
    Drew, 39
  • Came in for one thing, ended up addressing about three things over the next six months because once you actually start talking to someone who's listening, more stuff comes out. Wasn't planning on that but it's been a net good.
    Matt, 41
  • Honestly the thing that got me to book was the form. It wasn't 90 questions about my grandmother's medical history, it was just the basics. Lowered the bar enough that I actually finished it instead of bailing halfway like I usually do.
    Kyle, 36
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