White Coat Black Sheep

Dr. Valerie Civelli

Hosted by Dr. Val Civelli, White Coat Black Sheep explores physiology, functional medicine, and the medical questions most people are told not to ask. This is where evidence meets curiosity, where dogma gets uncomfortable, and where real world medicine takes priority over headlines. From understanding your lab work to debunking hormone myths, medication misconceptions, and optimization strategies, this podcast helps you understand what is actually happening inside your body. If you care about health and think there might be a better way to practice medicine, you’re in the right place.

  1. 3D AGO

    A PI, a New Dad, and a Doctor Walk Into a Podcast | Ep. 14

    Intro Miguel Morales is a California-licensed private investigator, content creator, new father, and self-proclaimed aspiring Norteño accordion performer. He was born in Florida, found love in Bakersfield on St. Patrick's Day at McGarry's, became a father at 27 to a son named Makai who was almost running as of the recording date, and bought a $1,200 accordion as a birthday present to himself before he knew how to play it. He is currently episode 13 of White Coat Black Sheep, which he would like noted for the record. Topics Covered Fatherhood at 27 — what changes the moment you realize there is a literal half-you in the world, and how every week brings a new chapter. Medicine and performance — why getting the degree does not mean you stop answering to someone, and why the bosses just multiply. Private investigation work — what Miguel actually does day to day, why infidelity is the most common individual case, and why the hardcore criminal work is a building phase. The marriage scale — why six to ten is a green light, five is a dead zone, and the Malta family tree moment that reframed everything. Accordion at a quinceañera — buying a $1,200 instrument before you can play it, performing before you are ready, and why that is the right move every time. Sunday as a non-negotiable — how faith, family, and zero work became the structure that grounds the rest of the week. Fitness with real life — why 20 minutes of air squats in the living room after a 12-hour shift counts, and why consistency beats intensity every time. Legacy over logistics — why keeping the bigger mission in mind is the only way to survive both parenting and partnership. The hormonal cycle explained — Dr. Civelli's rapid-fire relationship advice to close out the episode. Mentioned in This Episode McGarry's Irish Pub — Bakersfield, CA Fitology Wellness Center — Florida Bakersfield College, CSUB, University of West Florida, Adventist University of Health Sciences The Epstein files and child safety conversation Follicular, LH, and luteal phases of the female hormonal cycle Connect Miguel Morales https://www.instagram.com/miguelangelmoraleshttps://www.tiktok.com/@miguelangelmoraleshttps://www.facebook.com/miguel.morales.363540 Dr. Valerie Civelli — trifectamedical.org Trifecta Medical — 7702 Meany Ave #101, Bakersfield CA 93308 | (661) 677-2623 | info@trifectamedical.org Services: HRT, Peptides, Health Optimization, Botox, IV Hydration, Functional Medicine, Dermatology, Aesthetics, Regenerative Medicine, Hair Loss Treatments, Psychiatry, Clinical Trials Guest intake: justin@thebeaconstudios.com

    1h 2m
  2. MAY 13

    Your Vibe IS Your Brand | Ep. 13

    Intro Terri Agcaoili is a healthcare marketing strategist born and raised in Kern County, working across cardiology, neurology, and OBGYN to build the practices and brands of some of the valley's most mission-driven physicians. She also just launched Fitology, a full-service wellness center in Pensacola, Florida, got engaged on a beach at sunset with a funky band playing, and somehow still had time to show up early with a sandwich in her purse. She's exactly the kind of energy this show was built for. Topics Covered Personal branding in a community where your name IS your reputationHealthcare marketing: what it means to build someone else's vision when you're aligned with itCollagen types 1 through 5, why chicken beats beef for type 2, and what chicken sternum, crest, and feet actually doGLP-1 medications: Tirzepatide vs. Retatrutide, accessibility, micro-dosing, and the inflammation angleChicory root in your coffee — it might not be for everyoneHiring with intention: building a team of hand-selected people, not people with a pulseFaith, alignment, and turning down money when your values aren't in lineThe "coming in hot" text and why respecting time is a form of loveSocial media and the danger of getting health information from influencersPeople and Things Mentioned Terri Agcaoili — @agcaoili on InstagramFitology Wellness Center, Pensacola FL — fitologylife.comDr. Sandhu, California Cardiovascular InstituteTirzepatide (GLP-1 / GIP receptor agonist, brand name Mounjaro / Zepbound)Retatrutide (GLP-1 / GIP / glucagon triple receptor agonist, in development)Collagen types 1 through 5Chicory root — common coffee alternative, in many products, not tolerated by everyoneConnect Terri Agcaoili — @terriagcaoili | terriagcaoili@gmail.com | (661) 205-4079Dr. Valerie Civelli — trifectamedical.org Trifecta Medical — 7702 Meany Ave #101, Bakersfield CA 93308 | (661) 677-2623 | info@trifectamedical.org Services: HRT, Peptides, Health Optimization, Botox, IV Hydration, Functional Medicine, Dermatology, Aesthetics, Regenerative Medicine, Hair Loss Treatments, Psychiatry, Clinical Trials Guest intake: https://forms.clickup.com/9017720434/f/8cqyzkj-7997/PAKUAT3ISINQJZFNDQ

    52 min
  3. MAY 6

    Your Labs Are Normal. So Why Do You Feel Like Trash? | Ep. 12

    Intro Ten weeks into the podcast, Dr. Civelli and Justin take stock — what the show is doing, why it matters, and where it's headed. Then they get into it: a full listener mailbag with no softballs. Topics Covered Snoring and sleep as the foundation of every health problemTestosterone: why total T vs. free T matters, and what 310 actually meansGLP-1s and Ozempic: the real concern isn't addiction — it's what happens when skinny becomes the goal at any costAntidepressants: how to taper off safely, and why methylene blue is worth looking atRecognizing depression in men who don't think they're depressedInflammation markers: what "eat better" actually means and what doctors missFunctional medicine explained: root cause vs. Band-Aid, and the chess game of complex healthStress and the mom who does everything right but still feels offSleep tracking tools: wearables, rings, bedside apps, and vagal nerve stimulatorsFitology Medical in Pensacola — how a Facebook poke accidentally started a wellness centerMentioned Viome (customized toothpaste + microbiome supplements)BioCell collagenLion's mane, ashwagandha, chaga, L-theanine, BCAAsVivix antioxidantNMN (NAD precursor)Methylene blue / BPC-157Creatine (10mg/day split)Oura Ring / WhoopCPAP, mouth tape, jaw repositioning devicesVagal nerve stimulator (Q Collar adjacent)Retatrutide / Tirzepatide (GLP-1s)Quest Diagnostics (cash-based lab orders via Dr. Civelli's Instagram)Connect Instagram: @drcivelliTrifecta Medical: trifectamedical.org | (661) 677-2623New patients: info@trifectamedical.orgGuest inquiries / questions: justin@thebeaconstudios.com

    58 min
  4. APR 29

    When Your DNA Knows Better Than Your Doctor | Ep. 11

    About the Guest Jinal Patel is a board-certified Family Nurse Practitioner at Adventist Health's Chester location, where she practices in an internal medicine clinic with a growing focus on functional and integrative medicine. Originally from India and raised in Canada, Jinal earned her Bachelor of Science in Health Studies before relocating to Florida, where she completed her BSN and Master of Science as a Family Nurse Practitioner while working as an ICU nurse in Orlando. Now based in Bakersfield, she provides holistic, longevity-focused care emphasizing nutrition, lifestyle, and mental wellness — treating everything from diabetes and hypertension to women's health and thyroid disorders. She is fluent in English, Gujarati, and Hindi, and is currently accepting new patients. Intro Dr. Civelli sits down with Jinal for a conversation that goes exactly where you'd hope two clinicians obsessed with functional medicine would take it — deep into the gut, the genome, and the gap between what conventional medicine offers and what patients actually need. Topics Covered Functional medicine and how the field has evolved over the past 20 years. Cycle syncing and how menstrual phases should inform workout intensity, intermittent fasting, and nutrition. The Oura Ring and heart rate variability as stress indicators. The beta-glucuronidase gene, estrogen dominance, and implications for hormone replacement therapy. Gut microbiome testing and DNA sequencing as tools for personalized treatment. Glucose monitoring and how eating order at meals affects A1C. The connection between work culture, community, and long-term health. Why the basics — sleep, diet, movement, social connection — have to come before supplements or peptides can make a meaningful difference. Mentioned Oura Ring, Glucose Goddess, Viome gut microbiome test, DNA Collect, CGM (continuous glucose monitor), functional medicine conference in Las Vegas, MTHFR gene, beta-glucuronidase enzyme, GLP-1s, NAC, glutathione, blue zones Connect Trifecta Medical — trifectamedical.org | (661) 677-2623Jinal Patel — Adventist Health Chester | https://doctors.adventisthealth.org/provider/jinal-patel/3095648IG @np.jinal Want to be a guest on White Coat Black Sheep? We're always looking for clinicians, researchers, and health professionals who are ready to challenge the status quo. Email justin@thebeaconstudios.com to start the conversation.

    48 min
  5. APR 22

    Why Functional Medicine Changes Everything | Ep. 10

    About This Episode Dr. Hugh Beatty has spent over four decades in medicine, including 25 years in anesthesiology and pain management before pivoting to functional medicine in 2013. Today he runs a thriving private practice in Bakersfield, CA, treating complex chronic conditions that traditional medicine often can't solve. In this conversation, Dr. Beatty and Dr. Civelli explore the philosophy, science, and patient stories behind functional medicine's growing impact. Topics Covered Physician burnout: Dr. Beatty's decision to step away from anesthesiology and the two years that reset his career Functional vs. traditional medicine: the diagnostic mindset shift from "what" to "why" Collaborative care: why functional medicine works best alongside specialists, not against them Ozone therapy (MAH IV): mechanism, safety, and case studies including prostate cancer radiation damage The Otto Warburg hypothesis: oxygen deprivation, inflammation, and disease Neuropathy, Bell's palsy, and chronic pain resolved with ozone injections Mitochondrial health and NAD as the "money of the cell" Residency culture: 36-hour shifts, hazing, and what hasn't changed The med school application grind: 2.6% acceptance rate and the $30K residency match process Cold plunge, red light therapy, and blood flow as the foundation of healing Why functional medicine patients and doctors tend to look healthier Mentioned in This Episode Otto Warburg and the Nobel Prize theory on oxygen and cancer Amen Clinic (brain health and Alzheimer's support) GainsWave / shockwave therapy MAH IV ozone (major autohemotherapy) "Don't Let Your Doctor Kill You" (book referenced by Dr. Beatty) Jules Stein Eye Institute, Harbor-UCLA, Howard University Connect Dr. Hugh Beatty: https://www.hughbeatty.com/ Dr. Valerie Civelli | Trifecta Medical: trifectamedical.org | 7702 Meany Ave #101, Bakersfield CA | (661) 677-2623 White Coat Black Sheep: listen on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and YouTube

    1 hr
  6. APR 15

    The Pace of Life | Ep. 9

    In This Episode Dr. Civelli sits down with Tim Pace — physician assistant, 20-plus year clinical veteran in orthopedic surgery, and doctoral candidate in lifestyle medicine graduating in 2027. What starts as a catch-up between colleagues turns into a deep, honest conversation about stress, burnout, the six pillars of lifestyle medicine, and why the people most qualified to give health advice are often the last ones following it. Topics Covered What Is Lifestyle Medicine? Lifestyle medicine is built on six pillars: adequate nutrition, avoiding risky substances, restorative sleep, physical activity, stress management, and social connectedness. Tim's two favorites — stress management and social connection — are also the two most overlooked. The field goes far deeper than it sounds, because the problem isn't that people don't know what to do. It's that they don't do it. The Lifestyle Medicine Assessment When Tim completed the long-form intake questionnaire for his own program, he discovered he scored off the charts on anxiety — something he'd never considered a diagnosis. That moment of stopping, reading, and looking inward changed how he thinks about both himself and his patients. The American College of Lifestyle Medicine holds providers to living the lifestyle themselves, which Tim calls one of the most therapeutic parts of his doctorate. Box Breathing — The One-Minute Reset Box breathing is simple: inhale for four seconds, hold for four, exhale for four, hold for four — and repeat while visualizing a box in your mind. The benefits are measurable: increased oxygen, decreased blood pressure, reduced cortisol and adrenaline, activated prefrontal cortex for clearer decision-making, and a calmed amygdala — your brain's fear center. You can do it at a red light, between patients, or the moment you feel yourself flooding with stress. Your Brain Can't Tell Real From Imagined When you run a stressful scenario in your head — even one that never happens — your body responds with the same chemical cascade as if it were real. Cortisol spikes, adrenaline surges, oxidative stress builds. The amygdala fires whether the threat is real or imagined. The good news is the reverse is also true: calm the thought, calm the chemistry. Medical Provider Burnout Tim and Dr. Civelli get candid about the reality of provider burnout — chugging Mountain Dews, smashing Red Bulls, eating Snicker bars at 3am between surgeries, going home with amniotic fluid on your neck. Medical training is entirely patient-focused, and providers are expected to just be okay. Burnout rates are skyrocketing alongside documentation demands, EMR systems, social media, and post-COVID anxiety. You cannot pour from an empty cup. Nutrition — Whole Food Plant-Based The evidence overwhelmingly points toward whole food plant-based eating. Not vegetarian, not giving up meat entirely — just making plants the foundation. Tim reversed his chronically elevated triglycerides and cholesterol by shifting away from meat at every meal. His weekly routine is simple: random vegetables from Trader Joe's, protein beef broth, bullet it, done. Lentils, soy, beans — protein is not a problem. Sleep, Distraction, and the Art of Recentering Both Tim and Dr. Civelli admit to the middle-of-the-night spiral — waking up, brain firing, anxiety about not sleeping compounding into anger. Tim's trick is listening to something without a storyline, like David Attenborough narrating animal facts. The key is redirecting focus away from the stressor before the amygdala takes over. Meditation is the cleanest solution, but it takes practice — real, ongoing practice, like any skill. Social Connection as Medicine Isolation is one of the most underestimated health threats. When people are stressed, they isolate. But social connection drives oxytocin, reduces cortisol, and is a documented protective factor against chronic disease. It doesn't require a big social life — wave at your neighbor, find a community around something you love, try Meetup or Bumble BFF. Small moves count. Reading Research Without Bias Tim and Dr. Civelli discuss the responsibility that comes with a platform — how easy it is to take a study, spin a narrative, and present it as truth. The goal for this show is always to create conversation, not confirm bias. Look it up yourself. If they're wrong, they want to know. Mentioned in This Episode The six pillars of lifestyle medicineAmerican College of Lifestyle MedicineFITT prescriptions (frequency, intensity, time, type)Stages of change / pre-contemplation modelBox breathing techniqueAmygdala and prefrontal cortexCortisol, GABA, adrenaline, noradrenalineOxytocin and pet bonding researchCalm app / bedtime storiesDavid Attenborough sleep listeningGame Changers documentaryWhole food plant-based nutritionBumble BFF / Meetup for social connectionMedical provider burnout statisticsResearch bias and media spinConnect with Tim Pace t.paceoflife Connect with Dr. Civelli 🌐 trifectamedical.org 📍 7702 Meany Ave #101, Bakersfield, CA 93308 📞 (661) 677-2623 📧 info@trifectamedical.org White Coat Black Sheep — where science gets curious and dogma gets uncomfortable.

    49 min
  7. APR 8

    The 30-Minute Body | Ep. 8

    In This Episode Dr. Civelli sits down with Jerry Teixeira — founder of Bodyweight Strength, Marine Corps veteran, competitive jiu-jitsu athlete, and coach helping busy professionals over 40 build real strength at home with no gym required. What starts as a conversation about fitness habits turns into a masterclass on training efficiency, aging, and why most people are doing far more work than they need to. Topics CoveredFrom the Marine Corps to Bodyweight Strength Jerry never considered himself an athlete growing up on his grandparents' dairy in McFarland. He left for the Marines at 18, and the daily morning PT habit just stuck. Years later, inspired by watching gymnasts train his daughter at practice, he realized bodyweight training could deliver the same results as the gym — and built his entire business around that insight. The 80% Rule Your first set delivers about 55% of your possible gains. Sets two and three get you to roughly 80% of the total. Every set after that is chasing the last 20% at the cost of doubling your time. For most people, two to three hard sets per exercise is all they need. The Velocity Method — How to Know You're Actually Building Muscle Instead of counting arbitrary reps, Jerry teaches clients to track movement velocity. When you have to push harder to maintain the same pace, that's when muscle building begins. Push a few more reps from there — not to complete failure, but close. Reps, Ranges, and Bone Density High reps and low reps both build muscle as long as you get close to failure. But lower rep ranges of five to eight are better for strength and bone density. One heavy set per exercise is enough to stimulate bone, with the rest of your sets at higher reps if you prefer. Aging Is the Loss of Fitness Muscle loss begins in your 30s at around 5% per decade, accelerating through your 50s and 60s. Strength and power go first — even NFL players lose explosive capacity before they lose muscle size. But the research is clear: you can reverse it at any age. A 70-year-old client of Jerry's was curling 30-pound dumbbells within weeks and had visible muscle definition that made him question whether her numbers were even real. The Metabolism Myth Your metabolism doesn't slow down in your 30s and 40s. Research shows it stays stable from your early 20s all the way to your 60s. The decline after 60 may actually be driven by muscle loss — which means building muscle is one of the most powerful things you can do to protect your metabolic rate long-term. Non-Linear Aging — The Mid-40s Acceleration A recent study found that aging doesn't happen in a straight line. There are two windows where certain organ systems accelerate: the mid-40s and the mid-60s. People who get proactive before those windows hit build a biological reserve that slows the process down. Exercise Snacks and Micro Workouts The total weekly volume of work is what your body responds to — not how it's spread across time. A 45-minute dedicated workout and the same exercises broken into micro sessions throughout the day produce the same results. Jerry literally works out between cooking dinner, stepping into his garage gym between stirs. The Mindset of an Outlier Jerry started jiu-jitsu at 44 and competed at 45 against guys 20 years younger. He talks about why he eventually decided to share his story publicly — not to show off, but because someone in his demographic needed to see that it was still possible. Mentioned in This Episode Arnold Schwarzenegger's Guide to Modern BodybuildingBodyweight Strength methodMaximum recoverable volumeReps in reserve conceptVelocity-based trainingFast-twitch vs. slow-twitch muscle fibersSarcopenia and muscle loss with agingNon-linear aging study (mid-40s and mid-60s acceleration)Metabolism stability researchOura Ring and sleep trackingDeep sleep and light disciplinePlacebo effect and mindset researchGymnastics as a bodyweight strength modelExercise snacks and micro workoutsConnect with Jerry Teixeira Website: bodyweightstrength.fit YouTube: Jerry Teixeira Connect with Dr. Civelli https://trifectamedical.org/ White Coat Black Sheep — where science gets curious and dogma gets uncomfortable.

    1h 1m
  8. APR 1

    You Can’t Do Everything At Once | Ep.7

    Dr. Civelli sits down with Kristin Saban — real estate agent, insurance specialist, mom of two, and peptide enthusiast — for a candid conversation about managing health, hormones, and hustle in the middle of real life. From morning routines and the four burner method to retatrutide, cold plunging, and life insurance that pays out while you're still alive, this episode is equal parts practical and personal. The Four Burner Method Kristin shares a framework she discovered that changed how she thinks about balance — health, wealth, family, and friends. The idea is simple: not all four can run at full capacity at the same time. Something has to turn down so nothing burns out. Morning Routines & Real Consistency Kristin breaks down her 5:30am routine — Bible study, 20-30 minute workouts, Peloton, running, sauna, and cold plunging in the pool. The conversation gets honest about internal resistance, sleep quality, and what actually makes showing up easier. Peptides & Retatrutide Dr. Civelli and Kristin dig into retatrutide — what makes it different from semaglutide and tirzepatide, why it's more activating than depleting, and how it helped Kristin lose 90 pounds post-pregnancy and clear inflammation tied to Hashimoto's. Cold Plunge & Mitochondrial Health Kristin cold plunged throughout her second pregnancy. Dr. Civelli explains why the ability to tolerate extreme cold is actually a marker of mitochondrial health — and what overdoing it can do to your adrenal system. NAD, NMN & Supplements Dr. Civelli breaks down the difference between NAD and its precursor NMN, why NAD dose matters more than people realize, and how she tracks mitochondrial health through labs every three months. Also covered: Vitamin D3 paired with K2 and why that combination matters for calcium and bone health. Selank & Semax Nasal Sprays Kristin shares her experience with cognitive-enhancing nasal sprays for winding down at night — and yes, the taste is rough, but the calm is worth it. Microbiome Testing & Food Sensitivities Kristin reflects on her microbiome test results and how discovering that bell peppers were triggering inflammation changed her meal prep entirely. Alcohol & Inflammation An honest conversation about what alcohol actually does to the body, the liver's bandwidth during illness, and how quality of life factors into every medical decision — including whether to take brownies away from a grandma with dementia. Life Insurance with Living Benefits Kristin introduces the concept of living benefit riders — life insurance policies you can cash in on before death if diagnosed with a critical, chronic, or fatal illness. She shares a real story of a couple who used their policy to access $900,000 for specialty cancer treatment outside their network. He's alive today.

    54 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
2 Ratings

About

Hosted by Dr. Val Civelli, White Coat Black Sheep explores physiology, functional medicine, and the medical questions most people are told not to ask. This is where evidence meets curiosity, where dogma gets uncomfortable, and where real world medicine takes priority over headlines. From understanding your lab work to debunking hormone myths, medication misconceptions, and optimization strategies, this podcast helps you understand what is actually happening inside your body. If you care about health and think there might be a better way to practice medicine, you’re in the right place.

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