The Dr. Hyman Show - Office Hours: Practical Advice on How to Heal from An Injury
Episode Date: February 16, 2026Injury has a way of humbling you. One minute you’re strong and capable, and the next you’re struggling to do the simplest things—walking, sleeping, even brushing your teeth. I know this firsth...and. After six back surgeries and more than a few serious setbacks, I’ve learned that healing isn’t something you wait for—it’s something you actively create. In today’s Office Hours, I share what I’ve learned not just as a doctor, but as a patient who worked his way back to strength offering a practical roadmap for putting your body into healing mode after an accident, injury, or surgery. In today’s conversation, I cover: • The 3 phases of healing—and what slows them down • The essential recovery nutrition strategy (more protein, key micronutrients, anti-inflammatory fats) • How to reduce excess inflammation while supporting repair • Why sleep, stress regulation, and mitochondrial health are critical for recovery • The mindset shift that can dramatically improve pain, resilience, and healing outcomes Healing isn’t luck—it’s biology. When you create the right conditions, your body knows exactly what to do. With the right inputs, you can reduce pain, shorten recovery time, and come back stronger than before. Visit functionhealth.com for 160+ lab tests at just $365 a year. Grab your copy of Food Fix Uncensored: https://foodfixuncensored.com/ Join the 10-Day Detox to Reset Your Brain and Metabolic Health https://drhyman.com/pages/10-day-detox Have a question you’d love answered on Office Hours? Submit it here 👉https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSdNF2y4lFWEOMLlzVNlFDpJ4xl7oOpH9NlImMoHr5mHggL_Ww/viewform?usp=header (0:00) Introduction to office hours and personal health journey (6:12) Nutrition's role in healing and recovery (11:00) The biological mechanisms of healing (14:29) The role of sleep, stress management, and mindset in recovery (21:20) Monitoring recovery with heart rate variability (22:32) Supplements and professional support for optimal healing (25:22) Conclusion, sharing, and subscribing information
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Welcome to office hours.
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Today on our episode, I'm going to talk about some personal stuff.
Unfortunately, I'm not just an expert as a doctor in this topic.
I'm an expert as a patient.
And today we're going to talk about how do we put your body into a healing mode after
injury or an accident. And unfortunately, I live pretty fast and hard and have had my fair share
of bumps and bruises and have had, count them, six back surgeries. And I've had to come back from
all of them. And the last one has been quite challenging. I'm going to get into it. But that was
probably the most intense recovery of anything I've ever done in my whole life. Now, I've done
lots of stuff. I've flown over the handlebars on my bike. I've had a broken arm. I've sprained
this. I've broken that. I recently had a bike accident. The truck pulled in front of me. I'm not
going to ride on the road anymore. I was used to riding in the country in the Berkshires where I lived
for 30 years and I live in Austin now and there's cars everywhere and people are just not paying
attention. And I just let a car pull in front of me and I bounced up the car and got some
pretty smashed up things in my body. So I've healed pretty quick because I know what to do.
And I know how to recover and I'm going to teach you what that is.
So when I get injured, I'm just amazed at how the body has its own powerful healing system.
That's better than any doctor, any medication or anything you could possibly imagine.
And it's so resilient.
I mean, I lost 25 pounds of muscle after my back surgery.
I couldn't walk.
I was in a walker.
I was in a wheelchair.
I couldn't get up down the stairs.
I couldn't get the bathroom on myself.
I couldn't brush my teeth by myself.
I was down and out.
And I've come back.
And, you know, I was in the gym this morning.
My trainer did 15 pull-ups.
I'm lifting heavy weights.
I'm fit.
And I was in Aspen.
This summer, I rode my bike 11 miles, straight uphill, 9,600 feet of elevation.
The body can do it.
And I'm an old dude.
I'm like 66 now.
So it's amazing at any age, how the body can recover.
Second, it's important to know that you have to have the right conditions.
Because if you don't do the right stuff, your body can't heal.
So I've really struggled to recover, and I've really learned a lot about what it takes
from the point of view of food, of rehab, exercise, the right supplements, additional
things that are available out there that, not available to everybody, but that are in the marketplace,
things like peptides, laser therapy, red light, hyperbaric oxygen.
and there's a lot of ways to recover.
A lot of elite athletes use these technologies,
but not everybody has access to them.
But healing doesn't just happen.
Like, yeah, if you cut your skin,
you don't have to do anything,
but if you want to accelerate the healing that your body has,
if you want to activate your body's own
regenerative repair, renewal systems,
there's a lot you can do.
It's an active process,
and you need to learn what to do
to make your body heal and repair.
And it requires energy.
It requires activation of many people,
pathways in your body. You require increased nutrients and protein. If you do the right things,
you can dramatically shorten the recovery time. You can reduce pain and you can get back to
something like yourself very quickly. Two weeks ago, I had a bike accident and my face was a mess.
I had a giant fat lip. My face was swollen. I had blood everywhere. I had lacerations.
And now you can't really tell anything. And it's not because I have makeup on. It's because I use a lot
of technologies and tools to help my body heal fast.
I'm going to teach you what those are.
So we're going to walk through the science of healing.
We're going to walk through the simple steps you can take to repair your body,
whether you had surgery and you're recovering from that,
or you had a sprain or a pulled muscle,
or you just had an unfortunate bike accident like I did.
That wasn't my fault.
But let's talk about what healing mode actually means.
It's not passive.
It's an active process that your body does.
And it needs energy.
It needs increased energy reserves,
there's increased nutrients, increased blood flow.
It needs an inflammatory triggers that are removed
and basically a low inflammatory environment.
So there's a bunch of phases that happen with healing.
The first phase is inflammation.
That's normal.
Redness, swelling, pain, heat, common when you have an injury
like a sprain ankle.
And that brings all the cytokines, the stem cells,
the fiber blasts, the repair signals,
all that stuff, the white blood cells, clean up the mass.
It's a good thing in the,
the short term. But if it goes on too long, it's not good. And so what do you, what do you have to do?
Well, you have to do the next step, which is to bring in the tissue repair component. This is collagen,
fibroblasts. It helps rebuild tissue. The next step is remodeling where you increase strength and
flexibility. And when this process doesn't go well, it's usually because there's some increased level
of inflammation in the body, or you don't have enough of the right nutrients or enough protein, or you have
too much stress in your system or not getting of sleep or rest or you have too much metabolic
dysfunction because, you know, one of the things that people don't realize is that healing is impaired
if you have pre-diabetes or diabetes or insulin resistance to some degree. In fact, diabetic foot ulcers
are really common. Why? Because there's no circulation, because there's nerve damage. And so we use
techniques like hyperbaric oxygen therapy for wound healing in these patients to actually help bring
blood flow and healing. So, you know, healing is going to take time.
But there are ways to speed it up and there are ways to support it so you can actually heal better and end up stronger.
In fact, I am stronger now than I was before I had my back surgery, which is pretty amazing.
First thing is you've got to give your body the right raw materials.
And protein is what your muscles are made of.
Protein is what your tissues are made up.
Protein is what is the building blocks of your body.
And you're not made up of sugar.
You have some fat.
You're made up of all cell membranes and your brain is a lot of fat.
but your structural things, your things that matter, are mostly protein.
And people don't eat enough protein when they've had an injury.
So you need to up your protein.
For example, I had a protein shake this morning with 50 grams of goat weight.
And I put in creatine and I put in all these other anti-inflammatory compounds.
And so when you're injured, you need to increase your protein about 20 or 30 percent.
So you need to have good quality protein.
Chicken, fish, meat, beans, lentils, protein shakes, weight, weight, weight,
protein is probably the most bio available. You also want to include anti-inflammatory fats,
particularly omega-3 fats. These are very anti-inflammatory. They help repair tissues,
but your cells are made of this. You need things like wild salmon, sardines, mackerel herring.
Those are fish that people don't like, but I do. Antrobates, walnuts, chia seeds, all help reduce inflammation.
You also, you don't want a little inflammation, but you want to balance it, and this will help
that without shutting down the process of healing. You also want to improve the nutrient levels you have.
You need higher levels of nutrients. For example, collagen is really important, but it's dependent on
vitamin C. You also need zinc. Sink is an incredibly important compound for wound healing,
and a lot of people are deficient in zinc. You need magnesium, which is also for your muscles
and tissue repair, and we've got about 45% of the population deficient or insufficient in
magnesium. Vitamin D, really important for modulation of your immune system. And again,
80% are deficient or insufficient.
B vitamins help your cell regenerate.
So you need to eat all these nutrients
and a good multibitamin, fish oil, vitamin D will do the trick.
Also, you want to reduce the inflammatory foods
because the more inflammation in your body,
the heart of your body is going to struggle with healing.
So sugar, refined starches,
seed oils, or oxidized oils,
ultra-process foods just should not be a big part of your diet.
In fact, ultra-processed foods shouldn't be a part of your diet at all.
Food isn't just fuel.
It's basically information.
It's medicine.
It tells your body to how to repair.
or if you eat the wrong food, it's going to tell your body not to repair.
So really important to optimize your nutrient levels and your diet.
The next step is inflammation.
You want to reduce it, but you don't want to block it.
Early inflammation is key for bringing all the resources I said to the location of healing.
And you need to do that.
Now, if you have too much inflammation for too long, it can delay healing.
So, for example, I had this bike accident and I injured my ankle,
I have a lot of sprain and a little chip on my ankle bone,
and I entered the other foot.
I'm hobbling around and I have a broken toe
and a lot of inflammation and soft tissue damage.
And that's important initially to kind of start the healing process.
But if my feet stain swollen for too long,
it can't actually repair.
So I've been using these Norma Tech boots.
They're essentially lymphatic drainage boots
and I put them on for a half an hour a day
and it squeezes all the fluid out of my legs
and out of my feet and gets rid of it.
It's quite amazing.
And in the days I've been using it,
my feet have just dramatically reduced.
by probably 70, 80% in swelling.
So you want to keep the swelling down as the healing process goes on.
And if you have too much inflammation, it's just going to delay the healing.
So you can do heat and ice back and forth sometimes early on.
You want to do ice.
Later on, you can do heat.
Movement.
So exercise, pumping with muscles helps.
Omega-3 fats are great to help with lowering inflammation.
Tumoric, which is a powerful anti-inflammatory herb that you can use.
You can use in a spice or you can take curcumin as a supplement.
Ginger.
I use a lot of ginger in cooking.
Breath work also helps lower stress response.
Core dissolving your stress doesn't allow you to heal,
actually make sure tissues break down.
You don't want to use anti-inflammatory drugs too much
because they can slow some of the remodeling of the tissue.
So in acute pain, you can use them,
but I would not stay too much on things like Advil or Aleve or ibuprofen.
So we want to have a little information, but not too much.
It's kind of like Goldilocks.
The next is really key.
And by the way, for my healing,
And just kind of to keep you up today, I use a lot of things that reduce inflammation on the dietary stuff, the supplements, but also I use, for example, ice, ice, yeah, ice plunges, which are no fun.
They actually work.
And they learn inflammation I saw in a hot and cold.
And that really helped me a lot to recover.
Mitochondri is the next topic, because these little factories that make energy in your body, there's thousands of them in every cell, they're really key to repair.
because getting your body to repair from an injury is really energy intensive.
So you need to have good quality, high functioning mitochondria.
There's a lot of ways to improve mitochondrial health.
I'm going to tell you the basic foundational ones,
and I'm going to tell you some things that I've been using that have been remarkable.
And again, there are things you can get in different places.
The first is sleep.
So you need sleep to rebuild your energy source.
You need hydration.
You need minerals.
You need movement.
Exercise improves mitochondria.
Nutrient dense food also help obviously improve your,
your mitochondrial nutrient health.
Omega-3 fats are critical,
and good fats are really important.
Alcohol is not good,
actually, for your mitochondria,
so you don't want to drink.
And the things that I've been using
for my mitochondria are two things
that have been really helpful
and have healed my face
pretty dramatically, pretty quickly.
And I have one area in my body
that I've got to scrape,
that I've not been using it,
and it hasn't healed this fast.
And it's two things.
One is laser therapy and red light therapy.
And both those have different functions,
but they can be incredibly helpful
improving tissue repair and regeneration
because they activate your mitochondria.
The red light and laser will do many things,
but one of the key things they do
is to activate your mitochondria.
So I really encourage people if they can get those
that they have an acute injury to use those.
And this is a lot used again in athletes and sports.
When you take care of your mitochondria,
your body will repair.
They're your repair crew.
You want to feed them well,
you want to take care of them,
and they will help you rebuild and heal faster.
Now, what about movement?
How do you move without making it worse?
So if you don't move
and a lot of people when they're injured don't move.
It's a bad idea because you want to keep the blood moving
and the blood flowing and the lymph flowing and the lymph moving.
And literally, two days after my injury,
I got my trainer in the gym.
And I was pretty banged and bruised up,
but there were things that I could do and I did them.
And it just gets your body moving.
And now I'm back to almost a full routine.
I can't stay not that well on my feet yet,
but I'm doing a lot.
The goal isn't to avoid movement.
You want to use the right movement for your injury
and you can work around it.
So, for example, if you have an ankle injury,
you can do circles and gentle circles
with right the alphabet with your toe,
your back hurting, you can do walking,
you can do pelvic tilt,
you can do gentle stretching,
you can do glute work.
There's a lot of things you can do.
If your muscles are torn,
you can do range of motion work.
I actually have a device that I've used
as part of my recovery,
which is blood flow restriction.
They're little, like a blood pressure cup,
but you put them on your arms,
your legs, they pump up and they restrict the blood flow.
that really activates muscle building and repair and healing and increases the metabolic function
in the muscles, and that can really help healing. So I've been using that as an adjunct because I can't do
as much heavy stuff, so I'm doing lighter stuff with blood flow restrictions. So there's a lot of
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So movement is also medicine.
You just have to figure out what the right thing is to do to match your injury.
And again, when I had my back surgery and I couldn't even walk and I was on a walker,
I had the physical therapist come to my room and where I was staying in this hotel
and Sarah was just go ahead by surgery and had to rehab with me.
And rehab was just literally laying on the table on the physical therapy table and having a band
around my knees and just moving my knees apart.
slowly to start to build and activate my glutes and doing some simple squeezes between my knees
to activate my inner adductors and just simple things. I couldn't even do a pelvic tilt for
probably like six weeks. So I just did whatever I could and I kept moving. What about sleep, stress,
and your nervous system and why that's so important? Well, there are hormones and growth factors
that happen when you sleep. It's the repair time. When you sleep, you literally activate
the repair hormones.
Growth hormone is the repair hormone.
And when you have good deep sleep,
you increase growth hormone,
and you actually will start to repair your body.
And that's what happens at night.
Cortisol goes down and collagen formation can improve when you sleep.
So when your cortisol is high,
it's going to really impact your collagen formation.
And people often will see people with Cushing syndrome,
which is where you have a tumor that makes too much cortisol,
you'll get these stretch marks because your tissue start to get weak.
and your tissues suck to fall apart.
So stress will do that.
Also paradoxically can increase inflammation.
So simple things you can do, breath work, yoga nidra, non-sleep, deep rest.
Lots of tools out there on free.
They're free.
They're on Spotify or YouTube.
I encourage you to just do something to help every day.
And I do that every day.
Also sleep is important.
Prioritize that.
Get into an early nighttime routine.
Get yourself set up for sleeping.
Lower the stress levels.
get morning daylight exposure.
I get up every morning.
I go on the roof of my house.
It's like a little deck out there,
top floor, and I just sit there and I write a little bit in my journal,
and I let the sun come up and get a good 20 minutes of sunlight.
And I go to bed early and I take a hot bath.
I also, oh, by way, I'm using this cool bath thing.
It's a hydrogen bath.
I don't know.
The science is kind of interesting about it.
I don't think it's conclusive,
but again, is another tool I've been using to help reduce inflammation
after the entry.
So getting enough sleep,
going to bed early, prioritizing sleep hygiene, quiet room, cool room, dark room, all really matter.
Not being on the devices.
All that's really important.
So you can do everything right.
And you can eat right.
You can move.
We can do all these things.
Take the supplements.
But if you're not sleeping and you're too stressed, your healing is going to stop.
All right.
What about your mindset?
Now, this is really where the rubber meets the road.
And I'm kind of a weirdo.
Like, I'm the guy who's going to get the trainer after.
having a massive back surgery and losing 25 pounds of muscle and start in my hotel room when
I'm still on a walker, I'm that guy. Or I'm that guy who's going to, when I get in a bike accident,
not just going to sit on the couch and watch movies, I'm going to start working to get better.
And I think it's really important because if you don't have a good mindset, nothing matters.
If you don't believe you can heal and repair. And by the way, folks, when I had my back surgery
last year, I was in such bad shape. I didn't know if I was going to come back from it. I didn't
I didn't know if the pain was ever going to end.
It was six months before I could turn over in bed without being in a lot of pain.
I didn't know if I was going to recover, but I kept at it little by little, day by day, step by step.
Every bite of food I took was medicine.
Every time I got in the gym was medicine, my trainer was medicine.
I did all the things that I had to do to recover.
And now I feel better.
I'm stronger and healthier than I've ever been.
So it's incredible when you actually do the right things and you give
right inputs and you activate your body's own repair, regenerative and renewal system,
what can happen? So getting this in between your ears straight is the biggest thing you can
possibly do. Because I see so many people when they have an injury, they just stop. And if you stop
and don't continue to be active and don't continue to do the things that are going to make you
better, you're going to get in bad shape pretty quick. So this isn't really thinking about
being positive and getting better. It's like doing the things that actually helped you to
make those small steps every day,
they're going to get you better.
So your mental state,
your emotional state is really important.
And having the will and the determination
every day to get up and do the small little steps
of things that are going to make you better.
And I probably spent like, I don't know,
300 hours in the gym this year.
And I just was consistent with it.
And it was like building blocks.
First, I couldn't do a simple thing like, you know,
a pelvic tilt.
And now I can do a lot of stuff
that I could never even do before.
So when you're in a good mental state,
it affects your immune system, it affects your level of inflammation,
affects your perception of pain, it affects your hormones, wound healing,
all that is affected by what's going on between your ears.
When people actually understand the neurobiology of your mental state, of your mindset,
it can be profound.
The MRI shows, for example, when you look at MRI studies,
they show that if you have belief that you're going to heal,
it activates your body's own pain receptors.
So your opioid pathways, the narcotic pathways in your brain,
actually it activated by your body's own pharmacy,
which is between your ears,
and that lowers your perception of pain.
Another big study in The Lancet found that when patients expected
they were going to get better, their outcomes improved,
regardless of the treatment type.
So I talked to my surgeons at UCSF, and they were like,
I don't know what you're doing.
We have to learn from you because we've never seen people recover like you.
Most people with what you had are still on a walker.
And look at you.
You're like riding mics on mountains.
You're lifting weights.
You're back to normal life.
It's all about mindset.
If you have the expectation that you're going to get better,
you're going to set into play an enormous pharmaceutical treasure trove,
which is the pharmacy between your ears.
And it's real.
And it works.
So don't actually underestimate that.
For example, if you're an optimistic surgical patient,
they needed fewer pain meds and had fewer complications.
So your brain and its ability to think that you're going to get better
actually influences the biological pathways of healing.
Really important.
And regulating your nervous system is also really important.
When I was really struggling and sick, every day I would do a restorative meditation.
It was hard for me to sit up so I couldn't sit up.
And I would lay down, I would put headbows on,
and I would go through this 30-minute relaxation,
sequence like a yoga nidra, like a deep sleep,
what Andrew who've been called non-sleep deep rest.
It's been around for thousands of years.
It's just where you go through a body scan,
you just breathe and you kind of reset your nervous system.
And this activation of this parent's sympathetic nervous system,
this rest and repair system is activating all kinds of amazing things.
Because like when you think about it, when you're stressed,
your blood vessels are constricted, your blood sugar goes up,
all these things happen to deal with an acute response,
which you need to run from a tiger,
but it's not going to help your body heal.
So when you activate the parasympathetic system,
it makes your blood flow increase,
it gets your tissues more oxygen,
it helps your hormones,
all these things really help.
There's also something that you can measure,
and a lot of people have ORR ring or other devices.
You can increase your heart rate variability
by a number of practices,
but heart rate variability basically measures
the health of your nervous system.
And the higher the variability,
the healthier you are and better correlated it is with wound healing and surgical recovery.
So what this means is, you know, your heart rate, let's say, is 70, but it's not actually 70.
It's like 70 and a half. It's 69 and a quarter. It's 68 and two thirds. It's 72 and an 8, you know.
And the more variability there is between every beat, the healthier you are. The more complexity
to your heart rate, the healthier are. It's the most pernicious heart rate and very
is a flat line, like nothing, no variability.
And if you have low variability, it means your heart's not good,
your nervous system isn't good, and it's really bad.
So people with high heart rate variability actually recover faster,
they have pure complications, and there's ways to increase that by breathwork,
by meditation, by gratitude practices, by shifting your body into a healing physiology
through yoga and all these various practices that you can do to increase your parasympathetic
system.
And there's a lot of devices out there.
There's a lot of apps out there you can do, but we'll put those in the show notes,
but there's a lot of ways to do this that are really important.
And it takes an active process.
You have to deliberately relax.
Okay, what about supplements?
Yes, I use supplements.
They are needed and they're essential if you're recovering.
They're individualized, so you want to talk to your doctor.
But in functional medicine, we use supplements, not as replacements, but to help optimize
and encourage the body's own healing system.
For example, omega-3 is really important for inflammation and tissue repair.
collagen formation requires vitamin C, magnesium for muscle recovery, curcumin, which is an herb for inflammation.
Lots of good quality protein, like weight protein, can help repair our tissues.
Really important.
So I use proteolytic enzymes, for example.
I have, when you have a sprain, there's a lot of things that can be helpful.
But one of them is these enzymes that you can take that help break down some of the damaged tissues and clear the waste out of your system.
And I found those very helpful.
And there's a bunch of research on them too.
sometimes you need help, right?
So you need professional help.
So I got help from people.
I got help from the trainer and physical therapists.
I got help from acupuncturists.
I got help.
But you want to do things that are going to help your body heal.
So when you're healing from an injury like a fall or a sprain or you have a surgery,
you know, which is just a plant injury, the principles of healing are the same.
But the timelines and the warning signs are not.
So let's talk about when you should bring in extra support.
First, if you're not getting better, right?
if you have more swelling, more redness, more pain, that's not good.
Time to get seen and see what's going on.
If you're losing mobility and function, get seen.
If you have weird symptoms like numbness or tingling, not a good thing.
If you're not getting better over two or three weeks and you shouldn't be seeing improvement,
you want to go see somebody because maybe there's something else going on.
Maybe there's some other injury.
Functional medicine practitioners, physical therapists, body workers, all that can really help
your healing dramatically.
And what's really cool is that there's a lot of techniques.
I mentioned a few of them here.
Red light therapy, laser therapy,
PMF we didn't talk about,
but I'm using that as well.
Pulse electromagnetic frequency helps also repair inflammation,
healing and bone repair.
These lymphatic drainage boots that I was mentioning,
peptide, sometimes can be helpful.
I've used DPC 157 and others that help my healing and tissue repair.
Cotton cold therapy, all kinds of therapies are available.
Some are accessible, some are not,
so much for people, hyperbaric oxygen therapy.
There's a whole suite of tools that are available to use,
but the foundations that we talked about
will work for most people most of the time.
Now, if you're like me, you want to get on it,
I don't want to get better faster.
I'm going to use some of these things.
So dealing is not luck.
It's just biology.
And when you create the conditions your body needs,
it knows exactly how to repair it.
So whether you were coming from a sprain or a strain or a fall or overuse,
just remember, you have a lot of power here to make yourself better, faster,
and heal well.
Thanks for joining me for office hours.
I love diving into these topics with you.
Remember, you are the CEO of your own health.
And every choice you make can move you closer to healing and vitality.
I want to keep these episodes as relevant and useful as possible.
So tell me, what do you want to explore next?
What questions are you wrestling with?
What breakthroughs are you chasing?
Share your ideas in the comments on social media or through the link in the show notes.
I'm listening. Until next time, keep taking charge, keep asking questions, and keep showing up for your health.
If you love this podcast, please share it with someone else you think would also enjoy it.
You can find me on all social media channels at Dr. Mark Hyman. Please reach out. I'd love to hear your comments and questions.
Don't forget to rate, review, and subscribe to the Dr. Hyman show wherever you get your podcasts.
And don't forget to check out my YouTube channel at Dr. Mark Hyman for video versions of this podcast and more.
Thank you so much again for tuning in.
We'll see you next time on the Dr. Hyman Show.
This podcast is separate from my clinical practice at the Ultra Wellness Center,
my work at Cleveland Clinic, and Function Health, where I am chief medical officer.
This podcast represents my opinions and my guest's opinions.
Neither myself nor the podcast endorses the views or statements of my guests.
This podcast is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional
care by a doctor or other qualified medical professional.
This podcast is provided with the understanding that it does not constitute medical or other
professional advice or services. If you're looking for help in your journey, please seek out a
qualified medical practitioner. And if you're looking for a functional medicine practitioner,
visit my clinic, the ultra-wellness center at ultra-wellnesscenter.com, and request to become a
patient. It's important to have someone in your corner who is a trained, licensed healthcare
practitioner and can help you make changes, especially when it comes to your health. This podcast
is free as part of my mission to bring practical ways of improving health to the public. So I'd like
to express gratitude to sponsors that may to take to you.
today's podcast possible. Thanks so much again for listening.
