Episodi

  • No Longer PCOS
    Jun 10 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    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 — your healthcare oasis.
    Get care when you need it, where you need it. Don't forget to subscribe!

    Mostra di più Mostra meno
    12 min
  • Widow Maker
    May 27 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    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 — your healthcare oasis.
    Get care when you need it, where you need it. Don't forget to subscribe!

    Mostra di più Mostra meno
    12 min
  • Boundary Blueprint: Separating Work and Home to Protect Your Well-Being
    May 13 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    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 — your healthcare oasis.
    Get care when you need it, where you need it. Don't forget to subscribe!

    Mostra di più Mostra meno
    18 min
  • New Cholesterol Targets
    Apr 29 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    We break down the new AHA cholesterol guidelines and why LDL goals are getting lower based on your personal risk. We explain the tests that change the whole picture, including lipoprotein(a), ApoB, and coronary artery calcium scoring, and why women’s reproductive history now counts toward cardiovascular risk.
    • why LDL cholesterol drives plaque buildup and heart attack risk
    • how the 2025 AHA updates replace older LDL targets with risk-based goals
    • using coronary artery calcium scoring to clarify borderline or intermediate risk
    • what lipoprotein(a) is, why it is genetic, and why you must ask for it
    • why pediatric cholesterol testing may start earlier than many expect
    • what ApoB measures and why particle count matters
    • more flexibility beyond statins based on tolerance and preferences
    • pregnancy complications and early menopause as formal cardiovascular risk factors
    Make sure you take this back to your provider and just ask. You can you can just ask.


    Endorsement

    Thanks for tuning in to today’s episode!

    Ready to take the next step in your health journey? Visit HamiltonTelehealth.com — your healthcare oasis.
    Get care when you need it, where you need it. Don't forget to subscribe!

    Mostra di più Mostra meno
    20 min
  • A Compounding Pharmacist Explains Third-Party Testing And Why It Matters
    Apr 15 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    A package shows up cold-packed at your door, your telehealth clinician says it’s from a compounding pharmacy, and suddenly you’re staring at a label thinking: how do I know what’s actually in here? That question gets even louder when the topic turns to peptides, “gray market” suppliers, and headlines that make it sound like anything goes. We wanted a real, practical breakdown from someone who lives inside the process every day, so we brought on Tom from Pharmacy Solutions to explain what quality looks like when medications are made to order.

    We talk through the standards that separate a professional compounding pharmacy from risky shortcuts, including PCAB accreditation, NABP expectations, and multi-state licensing. Tom explains why pharmacies require certificates of analysis (COAs) for incoming pharmaceutical ingredients, what “pharmaceutical grade” sourcing is meant to accomplish, and why paperwork alone isn’t enough if a supplier can’t back up their claims. We also unpack what third-party testing really means, using plain language: an independent lab checks potency, and for sterile injectables it can also test sterility and endotoxins before a product is released.

    Peptides add another layer because many don’t have USP monographs, so consumers don’t always have clear, standard definitions of purity or acceptable contaminants. We dig into what that gap means for safety, why reputable pharmacies quarantine sterile batches while test results are pending, and how beyond-use dating and stability studies help ensure the product remains effective for the time it’s dispensed. Then we zoom out to a simple, useful comparison: retail pharmacies dispense mass-manufactured drugs, while compounding pharmacies customise strengths and formulas, including hypoallergenic options for patients who react to dyes and fillers.

    If you care about telehealth safety, compounded medications, peptide quality, or how to evaluate a pharmacy beyond the marketing, this conversation gives you a grounded checklist. Subscribe, share this with someone considering peptides, and leave a review if it helps, then tell us what questions you want us to ask Tom next.

    Endorsement

    Thanks for tuning in to today’s episode!

    Ready to take the next step in your health journey? Visit HamiltonTelehealth.com — your healthcare oasis.
    Get care when you need it, where you need it. Don't forget to subscribe!

    Mostra di più Mostra meno
    21 min
  • You Can Still Choose Gratitude On The Worst Days
    Apr 1 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    Some weeks don’t just feel busy, they feel heavy. When you’re caring for patients all day while juggling your own stress, family health scares, and the nonstop noise of modern life, it’s easy to slip into emotional exhaustion and call it normal. We hit pause and talk about gratitude as a practical reset, not a fluffy idea, especially for people working in healthcare, telehealth, and other high-stress roles.

    We share what gratitude looks like in the real world: the tiny moments that bring you back to center, the patient messages that remind you why the work matters, and the mindset shift that can change the whole tone of a hard day. Nicole opens up about being diagnosed with AFib and the fear that comes with “knowing too much,” plus how she’s navigating cardiology visits, testing, and next steps without spiraling. We also talk about how gratitude can coexist with anxiety, grief, and overwhelm, and why naming what you’re thankful for can help you move from panic to action.

    We go deeper into the daily habits that shape your mental health, including the idea that “you are what you consume” on social media, and why swapping “I have to” for “I get to” can rebuild perspective fast. We close with one of the most important burnout buffers we know: having a sounding board, someone who understands the trenches when your spouse or friends can’t fully relate. If you’ve been feeling stretched thin, this one is a breath of fresh air.

    Subscribe for more honest conversations from two board-certified nurse practitioners, share this with a friend who needs the reminder, and leave a review with one thing you’re grateful for today.

    Endorsement

    Thanks for tuning in to today’s episode!

    Ready to take the next step in your health journey? Visit HamiltonTelehealth.com — your healthcare oasis.
    Get care when you need it, where you need it. Don't forget to subscribe!

    Mostra di più Mostra meno
    12 min
  • Meeting Patients Where They Are
    Mar 18 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    The best care plans are the ones people can actually follow, and that starts with meeting patients where they are. We talk candidly about why telehealth and virtual care can feel radically different from traditional office visits, not just because you can join from home, but because you get room to breathe, explain, and be heard. From the jump, we lay out the basics and the boundaries, then dig into the real value: time, comfort, and a more patient-centered approach to healthcare.

    Kelli breaks down two sides of “meeting you where you are,” physically and emotionally. We share what it looks like when appointments run back-to-back, how telemedicine can protect your day from the waiting room spiral, and why patients often open up more when they are in a familiar environment. We also talk about the truth every provider learns fast: a plan only works if it fits your life. Sometimes that means adjusting the approach while keeping the diagnosis and standards of care steady.

    We get practical with healthcare technology too, including patient autonomy, remote monitoring, and home blood pressure tracking. If you deal with white coat syndrome, we explain why a well-done blood pressure log at home can be more accurate than a single high reading in a stressful clinic setting, and how to think about timing and cuff sizing. If you are curious about telehealth, urgent care alternatives, or how to build a safer, more honest patient-provider conversation, this one is for you.

    Subscribe, share the show with a friend who needs easier access to care, and leave a review so more people can find Tattoos and Telehealth.

    Endorsement

    Thanks for tuning in to today’s episode!

    Ready to take the next step in your health journey? Visit HamiltonTelehealth.com — your healthcare oasis.
    Get care when you need it, where you need it. Don't forget to subscribe!

    Mostra di più Mostra meno
    12 min
  • Hot Flashes, Cold Cream & Bringing Bounce Back to Midlife Skin
    Mar 4 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    Menopause doesn’t just announce itself with hot flashes; it sneaks into your mirror with paper-thin skin, a tighter, drier face, and that telltale “gobbler” neck. We got curious about why midlife skin changes so fast and built a gentle alternative to harsh actives: a custom-compounded cream with estriol, DHEA, collagen, and hyaluronic acid designed for sensitive, perimenopausal skin. The goal wasn’t hype—it was comfort, bounce, and a barrier that actually behaves.

    We walk through what estrogen does for skin health, from collagen support to moisture retention, and explain why loss of estrogen in perimenopause and menopause accelerates thinning and dryness. Then we connect the dots between low-dose topical estriol—long used safely for local genitourinary symptoms—and facial application with minimal systemic absorption. You’ll hear real results: calmer rosacea-prone areas after one night, smoother texture within days, and a perceptible return of cheek “spring” and a softer neck by week six. We also share why we skipped tretinoin in favor of a kinder, nightly routine that people with eczema or psoriasis can actually stick to.

    Along the way, we tackle updated FDA perspectives on estrogen safety, separate myths from evidence about HRT and cancer risk, and make a case for night routines that work with your body’s repair window. Expect practical how-tos: where to apply (face, neck, chest, hands), how much to use, how long a tube lasts, and what it costs. If you’ve felt written off by one-size-fits-all skincare or told to “just deal” with menopause, this conversation offers a clear, science-aware path back to hydrated, resilient skin.

    Ready to rethink menopause skincare with a routine you’ll love at night? Listen now, subscribe for more midlife health strategies, and share this episode with a friend who’s navigating the same changes. Your review helps more women find real answers.

    Endorsement

    Thanks for tuning in to today’s episode!

    Ready to take the next step in your health journey? Visit HamiltonTelehealth.com — your healthcare oasis.
    Get care when you need it, where you need it. Don't forget to subscribe!

    Mostra di più Mostra meno
    17 min