Tattoos and Telehealth

Boundary Blueprint: Separating Work and Home to Protect Your Well-Being

17 min · 13. Mai 2026
Episode Boundary Blueprint: Separating Work and Home to Protect Your Well-Being Cover

Beschreibung

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2462819/fan_mail/new] Telehealth flexibility can hide a different kind of burnout, where the work never stops and the human connection feels harder to reach through screens. We talk through what drains us most in virtual care and the boundaries that help us stay present for patients without living at work.  • provider burnout showing up differently in telehealth workflows  • feeling pressure to move faster without room-to-room transitions  • protecting the patient-provider connection when care feels transactional  • setting a physical boundary between home life and work time  • invisible work from inboxes, portals, labs, pharmacies, and staff messages  • switching between platforms and EHRs raising cognitive load and error risk  • unrealistic response expectations from patients across nights and weekends  • tech failures, poor signal, and patients not prepared for virtual visits  • refusing visits while patients are driving for safety and focus  • normalizing stress and building a team to share coverage  you can find us at hamiltontelehealth.com or you can email us at contact at myhamiltonhealth.com Endorsement Thanks for tuning in to today’s episode! Ready to take the next step in your health journey? Visit HamiltonTelehealth.com [http://hamiltontelehealth.com/] — your healthcare oasis. Get care when you need it, where you need it. Don't forget to subscribe!

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52 Folgen

Episode Peptide Chit Chat Cover

Peptide Chit Chat

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2462819/fan_mail/new] Peptides are everywhere right now, and the hype can make it feel like everyone should be on something. We slow it down and talk like clinicians and like real people: what peptides can help with, what they can’t replace, and why “safe for your friend” might be unsafe for you. We start with the non-negotiable topic: safety. Some peptides touch growth hormone pathways, so we explain why cancer history and suspicious lesions matter when you’re considering peptide therapy. That nuance gets lost online, and it’s exactly why we want listeners to think in terms of screening, risk factors, and provider oversight instead of trend-based shopping. Then we get practical. We share our experience with NAD troches and why NAD stays popular for cellular energy and metabolic health when used consistently. From there we unpack newer conversations around body recomposition and metabolic optimization, including Adonyx and the ingredients people talk about for targeting visceral fat. We spend time on MOTS C, a mitochondrial peptide often described as an exercise mimic, and we connect the science idea to real life: menopause fatigue, getting back into running, protecting joints, and not letting a “second wind” push you into an injury spiral. We also touch peptide stacking, including questions people ask about pairing peptides with GLP-1 weight loss medications, and why sourcing matters as much as the compound itself. If you take one takeaway, make it this: vet your pharmacy, work with trained providers, and treat peptides like healthcare, not a shortcut. If this helped you think more clearly about peptide therapy, subscribe, share with a friend who’s curious, and leave a review so more people can find the safety-first side of the conversation. Endorsement Thanks for tuning in to today’s episode! Ready to take the next step in your health journey? Visit HamiltonTelehealth.com [http://hamiltontelehealth.com/] — your healthcare oasis. Get care when you need it, where you need it. Don't forget to subscribe!

8. Juli 202618 min
Episode How The Microbiome Talks To The Mind Cover

How The Microbiome Talks To The Mind

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2462819/fan_mail/new] We go deep on the gut brain axis and how gut bacteria can influence inflammation, stress response, energy, and even brain signaling. We follow a real clinical rabbit hole from unexpected C. diff and severe fatigue to emerging autism microbiome research, plus what’s promising and what’s not proven.  • gut brain axis basics and why it is bi-directional  • the four major signaling routes: neurologic, endocrine, immune, metabolic  • what a GI map stool test looks for and how it guides next steps  • why C. diff is usually linked to antibiotics or exposure and why “no risk factors” stands out  • what studies suggest about microbiome patterns in autism spectrum disorder  • short chain fatty acids like butyrate and why they matter for gut and brain health  • inflammation markers, cytokines, blood brain barrier effects, microglia, neuroinflammation  • probiotic strain focus: Bifidobacterium longum and the “psychobiotic” idea  • why we stress this is not just about autism and can apply to chronic fatigue and chronic inflammation  • fecal microbiota transplantation basics, evolving options, Rebyota, and real-world cost talk  • using credible journals, vetting sources, and translating dense studies into plain English  stay tuned, hamiltontelehealth.com, let us know. Send us a message. You can go to hamiltontelehealth.com. You can email us at contact at myhamiltonhealth.com if you have any questions about it. Endorsement Thanks for tuning in to today’s episode! Ready to take the next step in your health journey? Visit HamiltonTelehealth.com [http://hamiltontelehealth.com/] — your healthcare oasis. Get care when you need it, where you need it. Don't forget to subscribe!

24. Juni 202623 min
Episode No Longer PCOS Cover

No Longer PCOS

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2462819/fan_mail/new] PCOS has never been just “cysts,” and that misunderstanding has cost women years of clarity and real care. We’re Nicole Baldwin and Kelly White, board-certified nurse practitioners, and we’re unpacking the news that finally matches what women’s health providers have known for a long time: PCOS is being renamed PMOS, polyendocrine metabolic ovarian syndrome. That shift matters because it centers the full-body reality of hormone imbalance, insulin resistance, and metabolic risk instead of shrinking the problem down to ovaries alone. We walk through the biggest signs that should put PMOS on your radar, especially irregular periods that come too often, too far apart, or disappear. We also talk through androgen-related symptoms like chin hair, acne, and thinning scalp hair, plus what an ultrasound may show with multiple small follicles. If you have two of these three patterns, you deserve a thorough evaluation. We also connect the dots on insulin resistance, including stubborn belly fat, sugar cravings, and even dark velvety skin changes that can be a clue something deeper is going on. From there, we get practical about treatment. The goal is health first, then your priorities: cycle support, fertility planning, and reducing androgen symptoms, all while addressing glucose, insulin, cholesterol, and long-term cardiovascular health. We also share why modern tools like GLP-1 medications can be part of the conversation for the right patient, and how telehealth can help you get labs ordered and a plan started without another demoralizing visit. If you’ve ever been brushed off, we want you to hear this clearly: don’t tolerate dismissal. Listen now, share this with a friend who needs it, and subscribe and leave a review so more women can find evidence-based PMOS and PCOS support. Endorsement Thanks for tuning in to today’s episode! Ready to take the next step in your health journey? Visit HamiltonTelehealth.com [http://hamiltontelehealth.com/] — your healthcare oasis. Get care when you need it, where you need it. Don't forget to subscribe!

10. Juni 202612 min
Episode Widow Maker Cover

Widow Maker

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2462819/fan_mail/new] A heart attack at 52 should not be a “surprise,” and yet high cholesterol makes that kind of shock far too common. We are two family nurse practitioners, and we are getting very real about why cholesterol is both necessary and dangerous, especially when you have no symptoms to warn you that plaque is building in your arteries. Nicole shares a personal story about a deputy sheriff who died from a sudden massive heart attack and never knew his cholesterol was high. From there, we break down what cholesterol does in the body, how excess LDL cholesterol can narrow coronary arteries, and why the heart starts to die when oxygen-rich blood cannot get through. We also talk through the “garden hose” way to picture plaque and why “feeling fine” is not the same thing as being low risk. We go deeper into the widowmaker concept and collateral circulation, and why younger adults may actually be more likely to have a fatal event when a vessel suddenly closes. We also cover genetic hyperlipidemia, including the reality that you can be fit, active, and still have a lipid panel that puts you at serious cardiovascular disease risk. We keep it practical with what to ask your provider, why LDL targets have tightened over time, and how getting a simple cholesterol test can save your life. If you have not checked your cholesterol lately, make this the nudge to do it now. Subscribe, share this with someone you love, and leave a review so more people hear the message before a silent risk becomes a tragedy. Endorsement Thanks for tuning in to today’s episode! Ready to take the next step in your health journey? Visit HamiltonTelehealth.com [http://hamiltontelehealth.com/] — your healthcare oasis. Get care when you need it, where you need it. Don't forget to subscribe!

27. Mai 202612 min
Episode Boundary Blueprint: Separating Work and Home to Protect Your Well-Being Cover

Boundary Blueprint: Separating Work and Home to Protect Your Well-Being

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2462819/fan_mail/new] Telehealth flexibility can hide a different kind of burnout, where the work never stops and the human connection feels harder to reach through screens. We talk through what drains us most in virtual care and the boundaries that help us stay present for patients without living at work.  • provider burnout showing up differently in telehealth workflows  • feeling pressure to move faster without room-to-room transitions  • protecting the patient-provider connection when care feels transactional  • setting a physical boundary between home life and work time  • invisible work from inboxes, portals, labs, pharmacies, and staff messages  • switching between platforms and EHRs raising cognitive load and error risk  • unrealistic response expectations from patients across nights and weekends  • tech failures, poor signal, and patients not prepared for virtual visits  • refusing visits while patients are driving for safety and focus  • normalizing stress and building a team to share coverage  you can find us at hamiltontelehealth.com or you can email us at contact at myhamiltonhealth.com Endorsement Thanks for tuning in to today’s episode! Ready to take the next step in your health journey? Visit HamiltonTelehealth.com [http://hamiltontelehealth.com/] — your healthcare oasis. Get care when you need it, where you need it. Don't forget to subscribe!

13. Mai 202617 min