Made for Health | Medical Gaslighting | Lyme | Chronic Infections | Metabolic Syndrome | Insulin Resistance | Mystery Illness

Aaron Hartman, MD

You were made for health—vibrant, thriving, and full of possibility. But navigating today’s broken healthcare system, endless misinformation, and confusion can feel overwhelming. On Made for Health, Dr. Aaron Hartman cuts through the noise to deliver science-backed solutions that restore your health and reignite your hope. Join us each week for expert insights, practical tips, and inspiring conversations that empower you to harness your body’s incredible power to heal. Whether you're seeking clarity, direction, or just a trusted voice, this podcast is your roadmap to the vibrant life you were made for.

  1. Some of Medicine’s Most Trusted Beliefs Were Wrong – The Hidden Blind Spots That Changed Healthcare with Dr. Christian Jenski | Medical Blind Spots | #E155

    2d ago

    Some of Medicine’s Most Trusted Beliefs Were Wrong – The Hidden Blind Spots That Changed Healthcare with Dr. Christian Jenski | Medical Blind Spots | #E155

    🔥 What if some of the biggest health challenges people face today are not caused by bad medicine... but by blind spots in the system itself? Read UnCurable to explore a deeper perspective on overlooked diagnoses, chronic symptoms, and the importance of asking better questions when answers are hard to find. What if some of medicine’s most trusted beliefs have unintentionally harmed the very people they were meant to help? In this episode of Made for Health, Dr. Aaron Hartman and Dr. Christian Jenski begin a new series exploring medical blind spots, outdated assumptions, and the unintended consequences that can occur when healthcare systems become overly attached to prevailing beliefs. Using historical examples and modern patient experiences, they discuss how medicine has repeatedly evolved by challenging accepted ideas. From handwashing and infection control to hormone replacement therapy and chronic illness, they examine how some widely accepted medical assumptions have later been proven incomplete or incorrect. The conversation also highlights how women have often been disproportionately affected by these blind spots, particularly in areas such as autoimmune disease, chronic fatigue, fibromyalgia, hormonal health, fertility, and complex chronic illnesses. Throughout the episode, Dr. Hartman and Dr. Jenski emphasize the importance of curiosity, humility, patient advocacy, and continuously questioning assumptions in the pursuit of better healthcare. About the Guest Dr. Christian Jenski is a triple board-certified physician with expertise in emergency medicine, obesity medicine, and functional medicine. He works alongside Dr. Aaron Hartman to help patients uncover root causes of chronic illness through a systems-based and personalized approach to healthcare. Key Topics Covered What medical blind spots are and how they developWhy science evolves and accepted medical beliefs sometimes changeThe difference between scientific discovery and medical dogmaHistorical examples of medical blind spots and unintended harmThe story of handwashing and infection prevention in medicineHow healthcare systems can unintentionally overlook important patient experiencesWhy women are disproportionately affected by medical gaslightingThe relationship between chronic illness and missed diagnosesThe history and controversy surrounding hormone replacement therapyHow delayed acceptance of new evidence can affect patient careThe importance of intellectual curiosity in medicineWhy listening to patients remains one of the most important clinical skillsThe role of functional medicine in addressing complex chronic illnessesHow chronic fatigue, fibromyalgia, autoimmune disease, and hormone disorders are often misunderstoodWhy advocacy and self-education can help patients navigate healthcare challenges Follow Dr. Aaron Hartman and Richmond Integrative & Functional Medicine 🌐 Website: https://richmondfunctionalmedicine.com/ 📺 YouTube: @AaronHartmanMD

    29 min
  2. Hypermobility Changes More Than Your Joints – The Hidden Link Between Chronic Illness, POTS, and Neurodivergence with Dr. Aaron Hartman | Hypermobility | E154

    5d ago

    Hypermobility Changes More Than Your Joints – The Hidden Link Between Chronic Illness, POTS, and Neurodivergence with Dr. Aaron Hartman | Hypermobility | E154

    🔥 What if one of the most overlooked factors in chronic illness isn't an infection, hormone imbalance, or autoimmune condition... but the connective tissue you're born with? Read UnCurable to explore a deeper perspective on why seemingly unrelated symptoms may share common root causes. What if hypermobility is the hidden link connecting many of today's most complex health conditions? In this minisode of Made for Health, Dr. Aaron Hartman introduces hypermobility, a surprisingly common but frequently overlooked trait that may influence everything from chronic pain and fatigue to POTS, mast cell activation, neurodivergence, autoimmune conditions, and digestive health. He explains that hypermobility exists on a spectrum. For some people, it may contribute to athletic performance, flexibility, and enhanced physical abilities. For others, it can create vulnerabilities that affect connective tissue, nervous system regulation, healing, immune function, and overall resilience. The episode explores why connective tissue plays a much larger role in health than most people realize and how hypermobility may help explain why certain individuals are more susceptible to chronic symptoms, environmental triggers, infections, and inflammatory conditions. Key Topics Covered What hypermobility is and why it affects far more than just the jointsThe difference between hypermobility and Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome (EDS)Why hypermobility exists on a spectrumHow connective tissue influences the nervous system, healing, and inflammationThe relationship between hypermobility and neurodivergenceWhy hypermobility may be associated with ADHD, autism, and other neurological differencesThe connection between hypermobility and POTSHow mast cell activation and hypermobility frequently overlapWhy hypermobility may contribute to digestive symptoms and gut dysfunctionThe relationship between connective tissue health and chronic painHow hypermobility may influence recovery from infections and environmental exposuresThe connection between hypermobility, fatigue, and chronic illnessWhy nutrient deficiencies are common in hypermobile individualsThe importance of protein, minerals, vitamin C, vitamin D, and connective tissue supportWhy identifying hypermobility early may help support long-term health outcomes Follow Dr. Aaron Hartman and Richmond Integrative & Functional Medicine 🌐 Website: https://richmondfunctionalmedicine.com/ 📺 YouTube: @AaronHartmanMD

    13 min
  3. Lyme Testing Misses More Than Most People Realize – Why Diagnosis Remains One of the Biggest Challenges in Lyme Disease with Veronica Porterfield | Lyme Disease | E153

    Jun 15

    Lyme Testing Misses More Than Most People Realize – Why Diagnosis Remains One of the Biggest Challenges in Lyme Disease with Veronica Porterfield | Lyme Disease | E153

    🔥 What if one of the biggest challenges with Lyme disease isn’t treatment… but getting the diagnosis in the first place? Read UnCurable to explore a deeper perspective on chronic illness, missed diagnoses, and the root causes that often go overlooked. What if Lyme disease is often missed because the testing was never designed to catch every case? In this episode of Made for Health, Dr. Aaron Hartman and Veronica Porterfield conclude their Lyme disease series by exploring one of the most controversial and misunderstood aspects of Lyme disease: diagnosis and testing. They explain why Lyme disease can be difficult to identify, why negative test results do not always rule out infection, and how the bacteria’s unique ability to evade the immune system creates significant challenges for conventional testing. The conversation also explores the differences between antibody testing, Western Blot testing, specialty laboratory testing, and emerging diagnostic technologies. Throughout the discussion, Dr. Hartman and Veronica emphasize the importance of treating the patient rather than relying solely on laboratory results. They also explain how co-infections, chronic immune dysfunction, environmental factors, and gaps in clinician training can contribute to delayed diagnoses and prolonged suffering for many patients. About the Guest Veronica Porterfield, PA-C, IFMCP, MS, LN, MPAS is a functional medicine practitioner specializing in Lyme disease, chronic infections, mold-related illness, autoimmune conditions, and complex chronic health challenges. She is known for her root-cause approach to patient care and her expertise in helping patients navigate difficult-to-diagnose chronic illnesses. Key Topics Covered Why Lyme disease can be difficult to diagnose accuratelyThe limitations of standard Lyme antibody testingWhy a negative Lyme test does not always rule out infectionThe differences between screening tests, Western Blot testing, and specialty testingHow Lyme disease can interfere with normal immune responsesWhy antibody production does not always follow expected patternsUnderstanding Lyme-specific antibody bands and Western Blot interpretationThe differences between sensitivity and specificity in diagnostic testingHow specialty Lyme laboratories differ from conventional testingEmerging technologies used in Lyme disease detectionWhy co-infections can complicate both diagnosis and treatmentThe role of Bartonella, Babesia, and other tick-borne infectionsWhy clinician training and experience matter in complex chronic illnessThe impact of environmental toxins and immune dysfunction on chronic symptomsWhy patient symptoms remain a critical part of the diagnostic processHow advocacy and education can help patients navigate complex diagnoses Follow Dr. Aaron Hartman and Richmond Integrative & Functional Medicine 🌐 Website: https://richmondfunctionalmedicine.com/ 📺 YouTube: @AaronHartmanMD

    41 min
  4. Peptides Work Best When the Foundation Is Strong – How They Support the Body’s Natural Healing Process with Dr. Aaron Hartman | Peptides | E152

    Jun 12

    Peptides Work Best When the Foundation Is Strong – How They Support the Body’s Natural Healing Process with Dr. Aaron Hartman | Peptides | E152

    🔥 What if peptides work best not as a shortcut… but as a way to support the healing systems your body already has? Read UnCurable to explore a deeper perspective on restoring health by removing obstacles and supporting the body's natural ability to heal. What if peptides are most effective when they support the body's natural healing process? In this minisode of Made for Health, Dr. Aaron Hartman concludes his peptide series by sharing how he actually uses peptides in clinical practice and where they fit within a functional medicine approach to healing. Rather than viewing peptides as standalone solutions, Dr. Hartman explains why they work best when combined with strong foundations such as nutrition, sleep, movement, stress management, and correcting nutrient deficiencies. He discusses how peptides can serve as targeted tools that help support healing, tissue repair, immune function, gut recovery, metabolic health, and healthy aging when used appropriately. The episode also explores who may benefit from peptide therapy, who should avoid it, how practitioners evaluate risk, and why personalized treatment plans remain essential. Throughout the conversation, Dr. Hartman emphasizes a core principle of functional medicine: identify what is preventing the body from healing, remove the obstacles, and provide the support needed for recovery. Key Topics Covered How peptides fit into a functional medicine approach to health and healingWhy peptides work best when foundational health habits are already in placeThe relationship between peptides, nutrition, and adequate protein intakeHow peptides may support gut healing and tissue repairThe role of peptides in immune regulation and chronic inflammationWhy growth hormone naturally declines with ageHow peptides may support recovery, resilience, and healthy agingThe connection between peptides and metabolic healthWhy practitioners should identify root causes before adding advanced therapiesHow functional medicine focuses on removing obstacles to healingWho may be a good candidate for peptide therapyWhy active cancer and certain cancer histories require additional cautionThe importance of individualized treatment plans and monitoringHow regulatory changes continue to affect peptide availabilityWhy peptides should complement, not replace, foundational lifestyle interventions Follow Dr. Aaron Hartman and Richmond Integrative & Functional Medicine 🌐 Website: https://richmondfunctionalmedicine.com/ 📺 YouTube: @AaronHartmanMD

    12 min
  5. Treating Lyme Disease Takes More Than Antibiotics – The Hidden Factors That Determine Recovery with Veronica Porterfield | Lyme Disease | E151

    Jun 8

    Treating Lyme Disease Takes More Than Antibiotics – The Hidden Factors That Determine Recovery with Veronica Porterfield | Lyme Disease | E151

    🔥 What if some people continue struggling with Lyme disease not because treatment failed… but because the infection is far more complex than many realize? Read UnCurable to explore a deeper perspective on chronic illness, overlooked root causes, and personalized healing. What if treating Lyme disease requires much more than antibiotics alone? In this episode of Made for Health, Dr. Aaron Hartman and Veronica Porterfield continue their Lyme disease series by exploring why treating chronic Lyme disease can be far more complicated than simply prescribing antibiotics. They discuss how Lyme bacteria can change forms, evade treatment, hide within biofilms, and interact with the immune system in ways that make recovery highly individualized. The conversation explores why some patients improve quickly while others require a broader approach that includes immune support, detoxification, biofilm disruption, herbal therapies, inflammation management, and addressing environmental factors such as mold exposure and toxin burden. Dr. Hartman and Veronica also explain why personalized treatment plans matter, how Herxheimer reactions can complicate recovery, and why factors such as mast cell activation, chronic inflammation, gut health, and environmental toxins often influence treatment outcomes. About the Guest Veronica Porterfield, PA-C, IFMCP, MS, LN, MPAS is a functional medicine practitioner specializing in Lyme disease, chronic infections, mold-related illness, autoimmune conditions, and complex chronic health challenges. She is known for her root-cause approach to patient care and her expertise in helping patients navigate difficult-to-diagnose chronic illnesses. Key Topics Covered Why Lyme disease can become difficult to treat in chronic casesThe difference between acute Lyme disease and chronic Lyme diseaseWhy standard Lyme treatment may not work for every patientHow Lyme bacteria change forms to evade treatmentThe role of bacterial biofilms in chronic infectionWhy biofilm disruption is often an important part of treatmentThe differences between bactericidal and bacteriostatic antibioticsWhy some practitioners use herbal therapies alongside conventional treatmentThe role of immune regulation in Lyme recoveryUnderstanding Herxheimer reactions and symptom flares during treatmentHow environmental toxins and mold exposure may complicate recoveryThe relationship between mast cell activation and chronic Lyme symptomsWhy inflammation and cytokine responses influence treatment outcomesHow detoxification pathways impact symptom managementWhy treatment plans must be individualized for each patientThe importance of diet, gut health, and lifestyle factors during recovery Follow Dr. Aaron Hartman and Richmond Integrative & Functional Medicine 🌐 Website: https://richmondfunctionalmedicine.com/ 📺 YouTube: @AaronHartmanMD

    41 min
  6. Peptides May Be More Powerful Than Most People Realize – How They Support Healing, Recovery, and Regeneration with Dr. Aaron Hartman | Peptides | E150

    Jun 5

    Peptides May Be More Powerful Than Most People Realize – How They Support Healing, Recovery, and Regeneration with Dr. Aaron Hartman | Peptides | E150

    🔥 Ever wonder why some peptide therapies have generated so much excitement among functional medicine practitioners around the world? Read UnCurable to explore a deeper perspective on healing, chronic illness, and the future of personalized medicine. What if peptides are helping the body heal in ways that many people have never heard about? In this solo episode of Made for Health, Dr. Aaron Hartman continues his peptide series by exploring several of the most discussed peptides in functional and regenerative medicine, including Thymosin Alpha-1, Thymosin Beta-4, BPC-157, CJC-1295, Ipamorelin, and GHK-Cu. He explains the science behind how these compounds interact with the immune system, tissue repair pathways, growth hormone signaling, and cellular healing processes. Drawing from decades of research and clinical experience, Dr. Hartman discusses how these peptides are being used around the world for immune support, recovery, tissue repair, wound healing, healthy aging, and optimizing the body’s natural regenerative capabilities. The episode also explores the regulatory challenges surrounding peptide therapies, why sourcing and quality matter, and the importance of building a strong foundation through nutrition, sleep, exercise, and lifestyle before considering advanced therapies. Key Topics Covered What peptides are and how they support healing and recoveryThe history and research behind Thymosin Alpha-1How Thymosin Alpha-1 supports immune system regulation and T-cell functionWhy Thymosin Alpha-1 has been used internationally for viral infections and immune supportThe role of Thymosin Beta-4 in tissue repair and wound healingHow peptides influence inflammation, regeneration, and recoveryThe science behind BPC-157 and gastrointestinal healingWhy BPC-157 is commonly discussed for tendon, ligament, and tissue repairThe relationship between peptides and growth hormone signalingHow CJC-1295 and Ipamorelin support recovery and healthy agingThe role of GHK-Cu in skin health, collagen production, and regenerationWhy peptide sourcing, quality control, and regulation matterThe differences between pharmaceutical-grade and research-grade peptidesHow lifestyle factors remain the foundation of long-term healthWhy peptides should complement, not replace, foundational health habits Follow Dr. Aaron Hartman and Richmond Integrative & Functional Medicine 🌐 Website: https://richmondfunctionalmedicine.com/ 📺 YouTube: @AaronHartmanMD

    21 min
  7. Lyme Disease May Be the Diagnosis Everyone Misses – Why It Mimics So Many Chronic Illnesses with Veronica Porterfield | Lyme Disease | E149

    Jun 1

    Lyme Disease May Be the Diagnosis Everyone Misses – Why It Mimics So Many Chronic Illnesses with Veronica Porterfield | Lyme Disease | E149

    🔥 Ever wonder if a chronic illness you've been chasing for years could actually be something entirely different? Read UnCurable to explore a deeper perspective on overlooked diagnoses, chronic symptoms, and the root causes that modern medicine sometimes misses. What if Lyme disease is one of the most overlooked diagnoses in modern medicine? In this episode of Made for Health, Dr. Aaron Hartman is joined by Veronica Porterfield, PA-C, IFMCP, MS, LN, MPAS, to begin a deep dive into Lyme disease and why it continues to be one of the most misunderstood and frequently missed conditions in healthcare today. They explore why Lyme disease is often called a "great imitator," capable of presenting as chronic fatigue, fibromyalgia, autoimmune disease, neurological disorders, joint pain, cognitive dysfunction, and a wide range of seemingly unrelated symptoms. Through real patient stories, they demonstrate how individuals diagnosed with conditions such as multiple sclerosis, fibromyalgia, Bell’s palsy, and chronic fatigue were ultimately found to have underlying Lyme disease. The conversation also highlights the limitations of symptom-based specialty care, the challenges of Lyme testing, and why many patients continue searching for answers for years before receiving an accurate diagnosis. This episode serves as the foundation for a broader Lyme disease series that explores diagnosis, testing, treatment, and recovery. About the Guest Veronica Porterfield, PA-C, IFMCP, MS, LN, MPAS is a functional medicine practitioner with extensive experience in chronic illness, Lyme disease, complex infections, autoimmune conditions, and root-cause medicine. She previously trained and worked alongside leading Lyme disease specialists and brings a systems-based approach to identifying and treating chronic health conditions. Key Topics Covered Why Lyme disease is often called the "great imitator"How Lyme disease can mimic fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue syndrome, multiple sclerosis, and autoimmune conditionsWhy many patients never recall a tick bite or develop a classic bull's-eye rashThe connection between Lyme disease and neurological symptomsHow Lyme disease can contribute to joint pain, fatigue, cognitive issues, and chronic inflammationWhy some autoimmune diagnoses may have underlying infectious triggersThe role of mold exposure, Epstein-Barr virus, and other coexisting factors in chronic illnessWhy specialty-based medicine can sometimes miss systemic conditionsReal patient stories involving Bell's palsy, fibromyalgia, multiple sclerosis, and chronic fatigueWhy summer flu-like symptoms may warrant consideration of tick-borne illnessHow stress, infections, and immune dysfunction may reactivate dormant symptomsThe limitations of conventional Lyme testingWhy early diagnosis and treatment can dramatically improve outcomesWhat patients should know about advocating for themselves when symptoms remain unexplained Follow Dr. Aaron Hartman and Richmond Integrative & Functional Medicine 🌐 Website: https://richmondfunctionalmedicine.com/ 📺 YouTube: @AaronHartmanMD

    28 min
  8. GLP-1s Are About More Than Weight Loss – The Expanding Science Behind Inflammation, Longevity, and Chronic Disease with Dr. Aaron Hartman | GLP-1 | E148

    May 29

    GLP-1s Are About More Than Weight Loss – The Expanding Science Behind Inflammation, Longevity, and Chronic Disease with Dr. Aaron Hartman | GLP-1 | E148

    🔥 Curious why GLP-1 medications are making headlines far beyond weight loss? Read UnCurable to explore a deeper perspective on inflammation, chronic illness, and the future of personalized medicine. What if GLP-1 medications are doing far more than helping people lose weight? In this solo episode of Made for Health, Dr. Aaron Hartman takes a deep dive into the science, history, and evolving role of GLP-1 medications, one of the most widely discussed classes of therapies in modern medicine. Drawing from nearly two decades of clinical experience, he explains how GLP-1 medications have progressed from diabetes treatments to therapies being explored for obesity, cardiovascular disease, kidney health, sleep apnea, inflammation, and neurological conditions. He also addresses common misconceptions about safety, side effects, and why proper dosing plays a critical role in treatment success. The conversation highlights emerging applications of GLP-1 therapies within functional medicine, including their potential impact on chronic inflammation, mast cell activation, POTS, dysautonomia, and other complex chronic health conditions. Dr. Hartman also emphasizes that no medication replaces the importance of foundational lifestyle habits such as nutrition, sleep, exercise, and environmental health. Key Topics Covered The history and evolution of GLP-1 medications from diabetes treatment to modern therapeuticsWhy GLP-1 therapies are not as new as many people believeThe differences between semaglutide, tirzepatide, and emerging therapies like retatrutideHow GLP-1 medications support blood sugar regulation and weight managementThe cardiovascular and kidney-protective benefits of GLP-1 therapiesWhy proper dosing is critical for minimizing side effects and improving outcomesCommon misconceptions about GLP-1 safety and long-term useThe emerging role of GLP-1s in sleep apnea treatmentHow GLP-1 medications may influence inflammation and immune regulationThe connection between GLP-1s, mast cell activation, POTS, and dysautonomiaPotential applications for neurological and neuroinflammatory conditionsWhy obesity is more complex than calories aloneThe different drivers of obesity, including metabolic, inflammatory, toxic, and trauma-related factorsWhy lifestyle foundations remain essential even when using advanced therapies Follow Dr. Aaron Hartman and Richmond Integrative & Functional Medicine 🌐 Website: https://richmondfunctionalmedicine.com/ 📺 YouTube: @AaronHartmanMD

    12 min

About

You were made for health—vibrant, thriving, and full of possibility. But navigating today’s broken healthcare system, endless misinformation, and confusion can feel overwhelming. On Made for Health, Dr. Aaron Hartman cuts through the noise to deliver science-backed solutions that restore your health and reignite your hope. Join us each week for expert insights, practical tips, and inspiring conversations that empower you to harness your body’s incredible power to heal. Whether you're seeking clarity, direction, or just a trusted voice, this podcast is your roadmap to the vibrant life you were made for.

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