Care Coordination
Care coordination for chronic and complex conditions
Navigating the healthcare system gets much harder when you are managing multiple conditions, conflicting diagnoses, medications, referrals, or symptoms that do not fit neatly into one specialty.

What makes this different
Traditional care coordination inside the conventional medical system is often focused on logistics: appointments, follow-through, medication compliance, and referral routing.
This program is broader. We help people think clearly about the whole landscape: where care is getting stuck, what questions matter most, and what integrative or conservative options may deserve attention alongside conventional care.
Who this is for
- people seeing multiple specialists without a coherent plan
- patients with confusing or conflicting recommendations
- people with chronic pain or complex illness that does not fit one silo
- families trying to prepare for better provider conversations
- patients looking for integrative options that complement medical care
How we help
Care mapping
We help organize your current landscape so it is easier to see who is doing what, where gaps exist, and what may need follow-up.
Decision support
When treatment choices or referrals are not obvious, we help clarify tradeoffs and prepare better questions for your providers.
Integrative navigation
We help identify evidence-aware local options that may fit alongside conventional care.

What this feels like
When the system feels fragmented, people need a calmer way to think.
This work is designed to reduce confusion, not add more of it. The goal is a clearer next step, a better mental map, and more confidence going into important decisions.
Care Coordination FAQ
Is this medical care or medical advice?
No. This is decision support and care navigation. We help people organize information, prepare better questions, and think through options, but we do not diagnose, prescribe, or replace physicians.
Do I need a referral?
No referral is required to start a conversation.
Can this work alongside my existing doctors?
Yes. The point is to make existing care easier to understand and coordinate, not to disrupt helpful care.
Want to learn more?
Download our Free Guide on Care Coordination here.
