PODCAST · health
Functional Medicine for Real-World Impact: The School of Applied Functional Medicine (SAFM)
by Tracy Harrison
Functional Medicine for Real-World Impact offers practical insights to empower healthcare professionals in transforming patient care through applied functional medicine. Join Tracy Harrison as she dives deep into the interconnected nature of physiology, lifestyle, and innovative interventions—bringing clarity to the science behind complex, chronic conditions. Each episode is packed with case scenarios, clinical pearls, and actionable strategies that practitioners can immediately apply for greater patient outcomes. If you’re ready to do your best work and elevate your clinical confidence, this podcast is your guide to meaningful, impactful change in healthcare.
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An NP's Refreshing Insights on a FxMed Inspired Career | E39
Most practitioners assume the only honest path into functional medicine is to leave conventional medicine behind, and Katie Creedon has spent nearly two decades proving that assumption wrong. Katie is an adult nurse practitioner with deep roots in geriatric care, a program director for a VA nurse practitioner residency, and the founder of New England Functional Wellness. On this episode of Functional Medicine for Real World Impact, host Tracy Harrison sits down with Katie to talk about what functional medicine for nurse practitioners looks like when it is built gradually, intentionally, and without abandoning the clinical foundation that makes the work credible. Katie’s path has not been a straight line. She kept her footing in conventional medicine while building something new on the side, and that deliberate pace turned out to be exactly right for her life, her family, and her sense of professional credibility. She talks about what finally pushed her to act, why the mosaic career model works better for most practitioners than the all-or-nothing narrative suggests, and what she has learned about keeping care simple when the functional medicine toolbox makes complexity feel like progress. Brain health in midlife sits at the center of Katie’s clinical focus. After years of watching dementia affect patients and families in nursing home settings, she became convinced that dementia prevention deserved far more attention than conventional care was giving it. Her perspective on healthy aging functional medicine is grounded in real clinical experience, and she is candid about the challenges of bringing that message to patients who are not yet thinking about their brains and to colleagues who remain skeptical of the field. If you are navigating an integrative medicine career transition and wondering whether you have to choose between stability and alignment, Katie’s experience offers a more honest picture of what the path can look like. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Introduction to Functional Medicine for Nurse Practitioners 01:48 Katie Creedon's Background in Geriatric Care 05:53 How a Grandmother Shaped a Career in Aging 10:07 When Conventional Medicine Stops Being Enough 14:10 Finding Functional Medicine and Reigniting Clinical Purpose 18:16 Integrating Functional Medicine Into a Conventional Role 23:16 Building a Practice Gradually Without Burning It All Down 27:11 Why Both Conventional and Functional Medicine Matter 32:32 Mentoring New Nurse Practitioners With a Root Cause Lens 37:00 The Best and Worst of Functional Medicine in Practice 44:19 What Starting a Business Teaches You About Yourself 49:45 Dementia Prevention and Brain Health in Midlife 56:16 Letting Your Why Drive Your Courage 57:41 Advice for Practitioners Ready to Realign Their Careers Connect with Katie Creedon: Visit the New England Functional Wellness website Follow New England Functional Wellness on Instagram Connect with Katie on LinkedIn New England Functional Wellness Linktree Email Katie at [email protected] SAFM Links: Take SAFM’s 10 CME course - The Essential Gut Deep Dive Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox Learn more about SAFM’s practitioner training Subscribe to our YouTube channel Access quick clinical tips on Facebook Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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The Revolving Door of Dysbiosis: Advanced Gut Insights | E38
Recurring dysbiosis is a clinical clue that the body’s terrain still favors chaos over repair. On Functional Medicine for Real-World Impact, Tracy Harrison speaks directly to practitioners who keep seeing recurrent gut dysbiosis return after a short-lived win. Her point is direct. Recurrent gut dysbiosis is rarely a failure of testing or the wrong antimicrobial. More often, it reflects an internal environment that allows the imbalance to persist. This conversation is for practitioners who are tired of the revolving door. When a patient improves for a few weeks and then slides back into symptoms, Tracy urges you to look upstream. She walks through the clinical patterns that can keep dysbiosis in place even when interventions seem solid. That includes hypochlorhydria, pancreatic insufficiency, poor bile flow, impaired gut motility, and everyday habits that keep digestion from doing its job. She also explains that maldigested food is a common root cause of small intestinal bacterial overgrowth - but often left unexplored. One of the strongest parts of this discussion is the reminder that the mouth is part of the gut. Oral dysbiosis, poor chewing, dry mouth, and common mouthwash habits can influence what happens farther downstream. Tracy also brings attention to medication patterns that quietly keep patients stuck, from acid suppressing drugs to NSAIDs, antibiotics, steroids, and metformin. For busy providers, that makes this episode useful because it brings everyday case details back into focus. Gut healing is not only about what to remove. It is about what needs to work again. Diet quality matters. Bowel habits matter. The nervous system matters. Tracy makes a clear connection between stress and gut health, showing how chronic sympathetic activation can impair digestion, weaken immune resilience, and keep patients locked in recurrence. If you want better long-term outcomes, this episode will help you shift from chasing bugs to rebuilding terrain. That shift is what can break the cycle of recurrent dysbiosis and gives providers a more durable path forward. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Recurrent Gut Dysbiosis and the Revolving Door Problem 02:24 Why Gut Dysbiosis Keeps Coming Back in Clinical Practice 04:43 Maldigestion, Hypochlorhydria, and Small Intestinal Bacterial Overgrowth 11:46 Impaired Gut Motility, Thyroid Function, and Constipation Clues 16:17 Oral Dysbiosis, Chewing, and Why the Mouth Shapes Gut Health 23:19 Medications That Can Quietly Sustain Gut Dysbiosis 30:24 Diet, Fiber, and Feeding the Gut Microbiome the Right Way 32:43 Stress and Gut Health Through the Nervous System Connection 39:29 How to Stop Recurrent Gut Dysbiosis by Changing the Terrain SAFM Links: Take SAFM’s 10 CME course - The Essential Gut Deep Dive Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox Learn more about SAFM’s practitioner training Subscribe to our YouTube channel Access quick clinical tips on Facebook Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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Successful Health Coach Flips the Script on Menopause | E37
When symptom complaints keep getting brushed aside, a functional medicine health coach often sees the pattern a rushed visit misses. On Functional Medicine for Real-World Impact, host Tracy Harrison talks with Meredith Orlowski about what practitioners need to understand when women in perimenopause present with fatigue, weight change, skin issues, anxiety, and subclinical hypothyroidism. This episode shows how a functional medicine health coach brings context, pacing, and partnership to cases where education alone does not move care forward. For health workers, providers, and coaches, this conversation offers a practical lens on functional medicine for perimenopause and why symptoms deserve a systems view instead of a normal aging label. Meredith connects hormone shifts with gut health, stress load, and histamine patterns, including the role of gut health and histamine intolerance in skin flares, inflammation, and mood changes. She also explains why a perimenopause health coach helps patients follow through by building plans around readiness, feedback, and real life limits. The episode also makes a strong case for functional medicine training for health coaches by showing how deeper clinical thinking strengthens outcomes, referrals, and collaboration across care teams. If your work includes women who feel unheard or stuck, this conversation offers a grounded example of how a functional medicine health coach supports clearer thinking, better patient buy in, and more useful care. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Functional Medicine Health Coaching in Real Clinical Practice 01:48 Meredith Orlowski’s Journey From Thyroid Symptoms to Health Coaching 07:59 Why Women in Perimenopause Need Better Answers for Fatigue, Weight Gain, and Thyroid Issues 11:10 Perimenopause as a Wake-Up Call for Stress, Boundaries, and Self-Care 16:21 How to Build a Successful Health Coaching Practice Through Referrals and Testimonials 26:58 Effective Health Coaching Strategies That Improve Client Follow-Through 32:55 Hidden Perimenopause Symptoms Including Inflammation, Eczema, and Estrogen Dominance 36:26 Gut Health, Histamine Intolerance, and Skin Issues in Perimenopause 43:50 Endocrine Disruptors, Clean Products, and Hormone Balance in Midlife 46:30 Why Functional Medicine Training Helps Health Coaches Handle Complex Cases 52:40 Client Success Story With Weight Loss, Skin Relief, and Better Gut Health 57:34 Meredith’s Advice for Health Coaches Considering Functional Medicine Training Connect with Meredith Orlowski: Visit the Root to Leaf Wellness website Follow Root to Leaf Wellness on Instagram Follow Root to Leaf Wellness on Facebook Connect with Meredith on LinkedIn Email: [email protected] SAFM Links: Take SAFM’s 10 CME course - The Essential Gut Deep Dive Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox Learn more about SAFM’s practitioner training Subscribe to our YouTube channel Access daily quick tips on Facebook Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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Misspeaks and Misunderstanding: What Practitioners Need to Stop Saying - and Why | E36
Clear communication shapes how patients understand their health and how colleagues evaluate clinical thinking. In this episode of Functional Medicine for Real-World Impact, Tracy Harrison explores why functional medicine language matters more than many providers realize. The way we describe physiology, stress, and chronic disease influences patient understanding and professional collaboration. For medical practitioners who want stronger communication with patients and peers, this conversation highlights why precision in functional medicine supports clearer thinking, better care, and stronger professional trust. Tracy examines how commonly used phrases can unintentionally weaken functional medicine credibility. Terms such as adrenal fatigue, leaky gut, and bad cholesterol may sound familiar, but they often oversimplify complex biology. Instead, she explains how more accurate explanations can strengthen patient education in functional medicine. When providers understand the science behind concepts like HPA axis dysregulation and enhanced intestinal permeability, they can communicate in ways that are both accessible and medically sound. The episode also offers a practical reminder that functional medicine language reflects clinical reasoning. Clear communication helps patients understand the connection between lifestyle choices and physiological changes while allowing providers to collaborate more effectively across conventional and integrative settings. For practitioners focused on improving outcomes in chronic disease care, this episode offers a useful perspective on how functional medicine language shapes patient understanding and professional credibility. Maintaining precision in functional medicine strengthens patient education and supports more effective care. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Why Functional Medicine Language and Precision Matter 05:10 Why Providers Should Stop Saying Adrenal Fatigue 11:40 The Science Behind “Leaky Gut” and Enhanced Intestinal Permeability 16:30 The Cortisol Steal Myth and Hormone Balance 21:20 Why LDL Is Not “Bad Cholesterol” 31:30 Detox Myths and Why Detox Should Not Come First in Treatment 39:30 Step by Step Root Cause Care in Functional Medicine SAFM Links: Take SAFM’s 10 CME course - The Essential Gut Deep Dive Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox Learn more about SAFM’s practitioner training Subscribe to our YouTube channel Access daily quick tips on Facebook Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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How Practitioners Are Reinventing Healthcare by Letting Go of Outcomes and Embracing Uncertainty | E35
A functional medicine career transition can feel risky when your training rewards speed, compliance, and output over depth. If you are quietly questioning your current path, this conversation will meet you there. Tracy Harrison and Dr. Lara Salyer talk openly about what makes a functional medicine career transition succeed and why more credentials alone will not create change. They focus on practitioner activation, the shift from collecting knowledge to taking aligned action in your real clinical life. You will hear a discussion of physician burnout recovery and why burnout often reflects a loss of agency rather than a lack of skill. Dr. Lara Salyer explains why a new job or business model does not automatically solve the problem, and how a different lens on patient outcomes can protect your energy without lowering standards. This shift supports a true transformational care partnership where patients share responsibility instead of expecting to be rescued. If you are exploring a functional medicine career transition, this episode will help you evaluate what kind of functional medicine practice model fits your values, your market, and your long term capacity. You will gain clarity on what to build, what to release, and how to design a functional medicine career transition that feels sustainable and grounded in who you are as a provider. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Functional Medicine for Real World Impact With Tracy Harrison and Dr. Lara Salyer 01:51 Dr. Lara Salyer’s Functional Medicine Career Transition From Rural Family Medicine 08:00 Physician Burnout Recovery and Burnout as Grief in Modern Medicine 19:41 Transformational Care Partnership and Patient Shared Responsibility 21:41 Letting Go of Patient Outcomes to Protect Provider Energy 28:00 Why Plug and Play Templates Fail and How Community Drives Practice Growth 33:44 Practitioner Activation and Moving From Training to Implementation 41:56 The Provider Who Thrives Next and What Healthcare Needs Now Connect with Dr. Lara Salyer: Visit Dr. Lara’s website Follow Dr. Lara on Instagram Follow Dr. Lara on Facebook Connect with Dr. Lara on LinkedIn Subscribe to Dr. Lara’s YouTube channel Follow Creativity Doctor on TikTok SAFM Links: Take SAFM’s 10 CME course - The Essential Gut Deep Dive Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox Learn more about SAFM’s practitioner training Subscribe to our YouTube channel Access daily quick tips on Facebook Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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Vitamin D Myths and Misunderstanding | E34
Vitamin D myths continue to shape clinical decisions in ways that can cost practitioners clarity and better outcomes. If you have ever seen a low lab value and felt pressure to increase the dose quickly, this episode will help you pause and rethink your approach. In this episode of Functional Medicine for Real-World Impact, Tracy Harrison explains why vitamin D myths persist even among experienced clinicians and why correcting them requires a stronger understanding of physiology rather than simply more supplementation. You will hear a practical explanation of vitamin D as a hormone and how that shifts the way you interpret lab markers, symptoms, and dosing. Treating vitamin D as a simple nutrient misses its role in receptor activation and downstream signaling. Tracy outlines the real concerns around vitamin D supplementation risks, especially when higher doses are used in patients with inflammation or autoimmune patterns. The goal is not to avoid vitamin D, but to use it with precision and awareness. This episode walks through 25-hydroxy vs 1,25-dihydroxy vitamin D and why this distinction matters in practice. A low 25-hydroxy value does not always mean deficiency, and an elevated 1,25-dihydroxy level can reflect inflammation-driven conversion rather than optimal status. Tracy explains how vitamin D and parathyroid hormone PTH work together as a feedback system. Looking at these markers together provides clearer insight into whether vitamin D effects are truly sufficient at the tissue level. You will also learn why vitamin D cofactors magnesium, vitamin A, and vitamin K2 are essential for proper metabolism and receptor function. Without adequate magnesium for conversion, retinol for receptor activation, and vitamin K2 for calcium regulation, supplementation may stall or even create new issues. Understanding this synergy helps move beyond common vitamin D myths and toward a cleaner clinical framework you can apply with confidence. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Vitamin D Myths and Clinical Misunderstandings 02:20 Vitamin D as a Hormone and Receptor Activation 09:09 Sunlight vs Supplementation and Vitamin D2 Risks 13:32 25-Hydroxy vs 1,25-Dihydroxy Vitamin D Testing 18:24 Vitamin D and Parathyroid Hormone PTH Explained 27:50 High Dose Vitamin D and Autoimmune Disease Risks 40:55 Vitamin D Cofactors Magnesium Vitamin A and Vitamin K2 SAFM Links: Take SAFM’s 10 CME course - The Essential Gut Deep Dive Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox Learn more about SAFM’s practitioner training Subscribe to our YouTube channel Access daily quick tips on Facebook Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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Miraculous Melatonin: What if Sleep Support is its Least Important Benefit? | E33
Melatonin may be best known for sleep, yet its real power lies in protecting mitochondria, repairing the gut, and calming immune chaos across the entire body. This conversation challenges the narrow way melatonin is usually framed and invites a broader clinical lens. Tracy Harrison explains why much of melatonin’s most meaningful work happens inside cells rather than in the pineal gland, where it supports mitochondrial health and antioxidant balance. What happens when this system quietly weakens over time? How might that shift influence energy, cognition, cardiovascular health, or recovery from illness? The episode also explores melatonin’s central role in the gut, where it supports motility, barrier integrity, and microbial balance. Since so much immune activity begins there, melatonin emerges as a quiet regulator of immune tolerance and inflammatory tone. Could recurring infections, autoimmune patterns, or lingering post-viral symptoms point to a deeper melatonin story that has been overlooked? Tracy also offers practical ways to think about assessment and supplementation. Poor sleep onset, frequent illness, oxidative stress markers, and non-dipping nighttime blood pressure can all offer clues. She explains why dosing must be individualized and why more is not always better, especially when morning fatigue or blood sugar shifts appear. The takeaway is simple and challenging at the same time: melatonin deserves respect as a systemic signal of resilience, not a one-size-fits-all sleep aid. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Melatonin Beyond Sleep The Antioxidant Role Most People Miss 04:10 Mitochondrial Melatonin and Cellular Protection 10:30 Pineal Versus Mitochondrial Melatonin and Sleep Timing 17:45 Gut Derived Melatonin and Intestinal Barrier Health 26:10 Melatonin and Immune Regulation Through T Regulatory Cells 33:40 Rethinking Melatonin as a Core Tool for Resilient Healing SAFM Links: Take SAFM’s 10 CME course - The Essential Gut Deep Dive Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox Learn more about SAFM’s practitioner training Subscribe to our YouTube channel Access daily quick tips on Facebook Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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An NP Excelling in Functional Medicine Shares Her Wisdom | E32
Functional medicine becomes far more powerful when it slows down, listens closely, and focuses on simple changes that help patients reclaim trust in their own ability to heal. In this episode, Tracy Harrison speaks with nurse practitioner Lisa Vasile about what functional medicine looks like when it is practiced with restraint, clarity, and real-world perspective. Lisa reflects on her journey through conventional nursing, women’s health, education, and her own celiac diagnosis, and how those experiences exposed the limits of symptom-based care. Rather than chasing answers through endless testing, she explains why understanding the person, setting expectations, and addressing foundational habits often leads to the most meaningful change. The conversation challenges common assumptions in both conventional and functional medicine. Are patients truly unwilling to change, or have they simply never been given context and support? What happens when practitioners slow down and stop trying to fix everything at once? Through clinical stories and hard-earned insight, Lisa makes a case for simpler interventions, thoughtful timelines, and partnerships that help patients build confidence in their body’s ability to heal. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Introduction to Functional Medicine and Real-World Impact 01:31 Lisa Vasile’s Journey from Conventional Nursing to Functional Medicine 11:51 How Celiac Disease Changed Lisa’s Approach to Healing 16:11 Choosing and Building Sustainable Functional Medicine Practice Models 27:52 Patient-Centered Care and the Power of Listening 31:07 Common Pitfalls in Functional Medicine and When Less Is More 54:24 A Transformative Patient Story That Redefined Healing Connect with Lisa Vasile: Email: [email protected] Visit 4betterhealthmedicine.com Connect with Lisa on LinkedIn Follow 4 Better Health on Instagram 4 Better Health's Facebook Page SAFM Links: Take SAFM’s 10 CME course - The Essential Gut Deep Dive Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox Learn more about SAFM’s practitioner training Subscribe to our YouTube channel Access daily quick tips on Facebook Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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Dual-Edged Iron: Essential Mineral and Ultimate Heavy Metal Toxin | E31
Iron can be both life-saving and quietly destructive and understanding when it fuels healing versus when it drives inflammation is one of the most important clinical distinctions practitioners can make. This episode invites practitioners to rethink iron as more than a lab value to correct or a supplement to prescribe. Tracy Harrison reframes iron as a powerful regulator of energy, immunity, brain function, and inflammation, one that requires nuance and restraint rather than automatic intervention. The conversation challenges the assumption that low hemoglobin or fatigue always calls for more iron and asks a bigger question about when the body may be intentionally limiting iron as a form of protection. Rather than chasing numbers, Tracy emphasizes clinical context, regulatory intelligence, and root cause awareness. Iron can support vitality when handled with precision or quietly amplify oxidative stress and chronic disease when misunderstood. The takeaway is a shift in mindset: slower assessment, better questions, and treatment decisions that respect the system rather than override it. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 The Paradox of Iron in Functional Medicine 05:48 Why Ferritin and Full Iron Panels Matter 11:53 Inflammation, Hepcidin, and Iron Sequestration 15:12 Iron Balance Across Women’s Life Stages 17:55 Oxidative Stress, Chronic Disease, and Iron Overload 20:52 How to Supplement Iron Safely and Effectively SAFM Links: Take SAFM’s 10 CME course - The Essential Gut Deep Dive Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox Learn more about SAFM’s practitioner training Subscribe to our YouTube channel Access daily quick tips on Facebook Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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Beyond the Prescription Pad - An MD’s Journey to True Healing | E30
A German-trained physician shares how functional medicine helped her finally understand why lifelong eczema persisted and what changed when she stopped chasing symptoms and started addressing immune overload. In this episode, Tracy Harrison speaks with Julia Martin, MD, HC, about the gap between conventional medical training and real-world healing. Julia reflects on living with eczema since childhood, becoming a licensed physician, and realizing that much of what she learned focused on suppression rather than understanding why chronic conditions return. Discovering functional medicine shifted how she viewed immune activation, food sensitivities, and inflammation, leading to meaningful improvement in her own health. The conversation explores Julia’s “inflammation bucket” framework, which explains how genetics, gut health, toxins, hormones, stress, and environment collectively shape symptoms over time. Rather than searching for a single trigger or cure, Julia emphasizes reducing overall immune load and empowering patients to respond calmly and confidently when flares occur. This episode shows how asking better questions and connecting systems can transform both practitioner confidence and patient experience. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 From Conventional Medicine to Functional Medicine Impact 03:00 Living With Lifelong Eczema and the Limits of Symptom Suppression 07:22 The Functional Medicine Aha That Changed Everything 11:20 The Inflammation Bucket and Why Chronic Symptoms Persist 20:25 Root Causes of Eczema Including Gut Health Histamine and Immune Overload 39:59 Empowerment Over Panic A Real Eczema Breakthrough Story Connect with Julia Martin: Email: [email protected] The Ex-zema™ Root Cause Solution Facebook Group: Root Cause Solutions for Holistic Eczema Warriors 🌱 SAFM Links: Take SAFM’s 10 CME course - The Essential Gut Deep Dive Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox Learn more about SAFM’s practitioner training Subscribe to our YouTube channel Access daily quick tips on Facebook Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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Owning the Mission: A PA’s Leap into Functional Medicine | E29
What if your most powerful clinical tool is not another lab panel but the way you partner with patients around what their bodies already know? Functional medicine PA Zoie Phillips joins Tracy Harrison to share how choosing integrity over a conventional career path led her to a values-based, telemedicine practice where patients act as true partners rather than passive recipients. She walks through her decision to commit to functional medicine straight out of PA school, her rocky attempt at a conventional job, and the moment she trusted her calling enough to wait for a role that actually fit. Along the way, Zoie explains how SAFM training helped her turn complex biochemistry into plain language, why education sits at the center of every visit, and how inviting patient intuition into the room often reveals clues no test would catch. Zoie and Tracy also get honest about the slow, vulnerable early months of building a values-aligned practice, from financial reality checks and awkward networking attempts to the steady word of mouth that now fills Zoie’s schedule with patients who are ready to do the work. They talk about low stomach acid, trauma, and nervous system safety as hidden drivers of gut issues and explore why supplements alone never count as true root cause care. If you have ever wondered how to grow a functional medicine practice that honors your values, your bandwidth, and your patients’ autonomy at the same time, this conversation offers both caution signs and a hopeful, very human blueprint. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Functional Medicine for Real World Impact Introduction 01:38 Meet Functional Medicine PA Zoie Phillips and Upcurrent Functional Medicine 03:49 Choosing Functional Medicine Over a Conventional PA Career 11:21 Discovering a Calling and Vision for a Values-Based Practice 15:07 Turning Functional Medicine Science Into Clear Patient Education 20:43 From Paternalistic Care to True Functional Medicine Partnership 26:35 The Realities of Starting a Telemedicine Functional Medicine Practice 33:27 Money, Beliefs, and Building a Sustainable Functional Medicine Business 42:16 Building a Small but Mighty Functional Medicine Care Team 53:18 Low Stomach Acid, Trauma, and Root-Cause Gut Health 01:01:36 Letting Go of the “All-Knowing Expert” and Trusting Patient Intuition Links Zoie Phillips’ Functional Medicine Practice Take SAFM’s 10 CME course - The Essential Gut Deep Dive Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox Learn more about SAFM’s practitioner training Subscribe to our YouTube channel Access daily quick tips on Facebook Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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Hidden Toxicity That’s Promoting Your Patient’s Disease | E28
Hidden toxins in your air, products, technology and even inner dialogue may shape your patients’ physiology far more than their diet or exercise, and this conversation asks you to look at those influences through a sharper functional medicine lens. In this episode, Tracy Harrison breaks toxicity down into categories such as indoor air quality, fragrance and phthalates, plastics and microplastics, overlooked heavy metals and the constant load from screens and EMF, then connects each one to hormone balance, sleep, energy, mood and long term disease risk in ways you can act on in clinic. She also points out what might be the most powerful “toxin” of all, the critical voice in a patient’s head that keeps their nervous system locked in survival mode and quietly blocks detoxification and healing even when the clinical protocol looks solid on paper. Where could these hidden burdens be showing up in your patients’ homes, routines and thought patterns, and how might your plans change if you treated toxicity as a core clinical focus instead of a side note? Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Introduction to Hidden Toxicity 02:48 Understanding Toxicity and Its Impact 10:49 Sources of Hidden Toxicity 18:25 The Role of Heavy Metals and Plastics 27:42 The Psychological Aspect of Toxicity 33:51 Conclusion and Clinical Implications Links Take SAFM’s 10 CME course - The Essential Gut Deep Dive Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox Learn more about SAFM’s practitioner training Subscribe to our YouTube channel Access daily quick tips on Facebook Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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The Devil in the Dairy - and Downstream Disease | E27
Dairy’s trusted role in patient diets shifts as Tracy Harrison breaks down how it can drive inflammation, immune reactivity, and persistent symptoms that rarely get linked to food in clinical practice. She explains why lactose intolerance is far more common than most patients realize, how whey and casein can contribute to skin issues, congestion, joint pain, fatigue, and histamine overload, and why some patients tolerate goat or sheep dairy better than cow dairy. Tracy also highlights the problem of hidden dairy in packaged foods and how it can undermine a structured elimination. This episode gives practitioners a sharper lens for assessing symptoms that look unrelated at first glance and a clearer path for deciding when dairy deserves closer investigation in a patient’s case. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 The Devil in Dairy: An Introduction 02:58 Lactose Intolerance: A Common Misunderstanding 06:12 Immune Hypersensitivity to Dairy 09:00 Cow vs. Goat vs. Sheep Dairy: Understanding Differences 12:07 A1 vs. A2 Casein: The Protein Debate 14:53 Cross-Reactivity: Dairy and Gluten Connection 18:09 Symptoms of Dairy Sensitivity 20:57 The Myth of Dairy and Bone Health 24:11 Hidden Dairy: The Importance of Label Reading 26:59 Conclusion: Bio-Individuality in Dairy Consumption Links Take SAFM’s 10 CME course - The Essential Gut Deep Dive Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox Learn more about SAFM’s practitioner training Subscribe to our YouTube channel Access daily quick tips on Facebook Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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The Most Common Reason Patients Don’t Get Well | E26
Most chronic disease protocols fail because the body won’t heal until it feels safe - and that sense of safety starts with the vagus nerve. Tracy Harrison takes a closer look at what it really means for the body to be ready to heal. Why do some patients follow every recommendation yet still struggle to make lasting progress? What if the real barrier isn’t what they’re missing, but how their nervous system is responding to the world around them? In this episode, Tracy breaks down how the vagus nerve acts as the body’s communication bridge (regulating inflammation, digestion, fertility, mood, and more) and why chronic stress or unresolved emotions can quietly keep patients in survival mode. She also shares ways to restore vagal tone through simple, accessible habits like diaphragmatic breathing, gratitude, laughter, and restorative rest. These aren’t surface-level stress tips; they’re science-backed tools for helping the body feel safe enough to shift from defense to repair. For practitioners, it’s a call to move beyond managing symptoms and start cultivating an internal environment where healing can actually take root. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Why Chronic Disease Persists 01:26 Safety as the Foundation for Healing 05:47 The Vagus Nerve and Whole-Body Regulation 23:07 Breathing as a Pathway to Healing 28:04 Gut Health and the Parasympathetic Connection 34:03 Rest and Recovery as Medicine 46:03 Heart Rate Variability and Resilience 49:00 Healing Is State Dependent Links Take SAFM’s 10 CME course - The Essential Gut Deep Dive Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox Learn more about SAFM’s practitioner training Subscribe to our YouTube channel Access daily quick tips on Facebook Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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The Secret to Making Functional Medicine Sustainable? | E25
Functional medicine can only create real change when practitioners move beyond collecting information and start developing the confidence, efficiency, and teamwork that bring healing to life. Tracy Harrison invites practitioners to think honestly about what it means to do this work well. How do you turn deep scientific knowledge into practical, lasting results for real people? How do you keep your passion alive without running yourself into the ground? Tracy explores what it looks like to move functional medicine from a niche movement into a more accessible, sustainable model of care - one that supports both the patient and the practitioner. Tracy also takes an unfiltered look at the burnout so many practitioners face and why so many feel they have to do everything alone. She shares how collaboration, whether through hiring early, building a multimodality team, or integrating health coaches and pharmacists, can create more impact with less exhaustion. Along the way, she points out the power of group visits, shared education, and patient partnerships that make functional medicine more affordable and effective for everyone involved. This episode is an honest, encouraging look at how practitioners can move past self-doubt and build a practice rooted in confidence, clarity, and genuine connection. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Confidence, Capability, and Impact for Practitioners 02:15 Knowledge vs Capability and Imposter Syndrome 09:10 Integrating Functional Medicine Into Managed Care 13:55 Efficiency and New Reimbursement Paths for Sustainability 16:18 Stop Doing It Alone: Build Your Team Early 35:20 Patient-Centered Care with SMART Goals and Accountability 44:50 Shared Medical Visits and Group Programs That Scale Results 54:13 Sustain Your Impact and Protect Practitioner Well-Being Links Take SAFM’s 10 CME course - The Essential Gut Deep Dive Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox Learn more about SAFM’s practitioner training Subscribe to our YouTube channel Access daily quick tips on Facebook Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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What’s Really Holding You Back? Hidden Beliefs Sabotaging Your Clinical Impact | E24
Limiting beliefs have a way of sneaking into the work of functional medicine practitioners and Tracy Harrison is pulling them into the light. Have you ever felt like you had to do everything on your own to be credible, or that you should wait until you know absolutely everything before you start? Tracy makes the case for why those assumptions hold you back and how confidence is built through real practice, not endless preparation. Tracy also looks closely at the practitioner-patient relationship and asks a hard question: what happens when we carry the weight of “fixing” our patients instead of helping them take ownership of their own choices? From moving past overreliance on labs and supplements to creating a true partnership based on education, accountability, and community, she shares a more sustainable way forward. How much impact could you have if you let go of old assumptions and focused on wisdom, collaboration, and practical action? This episode is a reminder that the future of functional medicine depends on practitioners who are willing to rethink, adapt, and lead with both insight and courage. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Truth Telling on Limiting Beliefs in Functional Medicine 02:15 The Myth of Practicing Functional Medicine Alone 06:44 Stop Waiting Until You “Know It All” to Begin 13:50 Patient Responsibility and True Healing Partnerships 20:37 Rethinking Lab Work: Beyond “Within Normal Limits” 32:21 Medications, Myths, and Functional Wisdom 41:59 The Limitations of Stool Tests and Functional Gut Health 51:07 Parasympathetic Activation as the Foundation for Healing Links Take SAFM’s 10 CME course - The Essential Gut Deep Dive Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox Learn more about SAFM’s practitioner training Subscribe to our YouTube channel Access daily quick tips on Facebook Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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Food Sensitivities: Myths and Truths for Practitioners | E23
Food sensitivities often play a bigger role in chronic health problems than many practitioners realize. In this episode, Tracy Harrison unpacks how foods that look perfectly healthy on the surface can still trigger immune responses that drive inflammation and dysfunction. She explains the differences between IgG and IgA mediated reactions, explores why intestinal permeability matters, and points out the impact of common medications, toxins, and microbial imbalances on immune tolerance. How often do we assume patients without gut complaints can’t have food sensitivities? What if the clues show up instead as joint pain, skin issues, or fatigue? Tracy also talks through the limitations of food sensitivity testing and why context is everything when interpreting results. Practitioners will walk away with a clearer sense of why most food sensitivities are acquired, how they can be reversed by addressing upstream dysfunction, and what it looks like to guide patients through elimination, reintroduction, and restoration of tolerance in a way that sticks. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Introduction to Food Sensitivities in Functional Medicine 02:07 Myth: Food Sensitivities Don’t Exist 03:02 Food Sensitivities vs. Allergies Explained 07:00 Limitations of Food Sensitivity Testing 10:07 IgA Antibodies and Gut Health 15:11 Intestinal Permeability and Chronic Disease 17:05 How Food Sensitivities Manifest Beyond the Gut 20:29 Gluten, Zonulin, and Leaky Gut 26:11 Addressing Root Causes of Food Sensitivities Links Take SAFM’s 10 CME course - the Essential Gut Deep Dive Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox Learn more about SAFM’s practitioner training Subscribe to our YouTube channel Access daily quick tips on Facebook Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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23
Lackluster Case Results Even After You’ve Mastered FxMed Science? Here’s Why | E22
So much of functional medicine celebrates the latest science, but how often does that knowledge actually change a patient’s life? Tracy Harrison invites us to look closer at the gap between information and transformation. Why do so many people collect new diagnoses, run more tests, or add another supplement yet still feel stuck? What gets in the way of real change, and how can practitioners guide patients through it? In this episode, Tracy explores why lifestyle shifts are the real turning point in healing and how practitioners can become better partners in that process. She shares the simple power of telling a patient, “I believe you can get better,” the importance of setting clear and realistic expectations, and the hidden risks of overwhelming people with too many interventions at once. With stories and analogies, she points out how addressing root causes together, rather than chasing quick fixes, leads to lasting outcomes for both patient and practitioner. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 The Limits of Endless Labs and New Diagnoses 01:05 Optimizing Clinical Outcomes in Functional Medicine 05:15 Why Science Alone Cannot Heal Patients 07:34 From Knowledge to Action: Breaking the Cycle of Permanent Patients 09:49 Mastering the Art of Facilitating Lifestyle Change 16:56 Placebo, Nocebo, and the Biochemical Power of Practitioner Engagement 20:28 The Healing Impact of Saying “You Can Get Better” 23:59 Setting Realistic Expectations and Avoiding Quick Fixes 35:28 Rapid Relief: Building Patient Trust and Confidence 44:54 Defining the Emotional Why Behind Sustainable Change 49:38 The Three Thumbtacks Analogy for Root Cause Healing 52:10 Moving from the Drama Triangle to the Empowerment Triangle 59:18 Facilitating Change Without Burning Out Links Take SAFM’s 10 CME course - the Essential Gut Deep Dive Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox Learn more about SAFM’s practitioner training Subscribe to our YouTube channel Access daily quick tips on Facebook Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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22
The Antioxidant Trap: What We Often Get Wrong About Oxidative Stress | E21
The antioxidant trap challenges the assumption that more supplements always mean better health. Tracy Harrison explains how oxidative stress, often seen as harmful, is also essential for normal physiology and for activating the body’s innate antioxidant defenses. She shows why hormesis, the right amount of stress in the right context, builds resilience, while too much can tip the body into harm. Tracy challenges common myths, including the belief that compounds like curcumin or sulforaphane are antioxidants in themselves, when in fact they work as mild pro-oxidants that stimulate adaptive pathways. She also points to why whole foods, with their hundreds of synergistic phytonutrients, can never be fully replaced by capsules. Supplements have value in short-term, targeted use, but lasting health depends on diet diversity, lifestyle, and reducing hidden drivers of oxidative stress such as sleep apnea, food sensitivities, and blood sugar imbalance. For practitioners, the takeaway is a more nuanced framework for clinical care. Oxidative stress is not simply something to eliminate but something to understand and work with. The key lies in knowing when to protect the body, when to challenge it, and how to identify the hidden imbalances that push patients into overload. When clinicians learn to see stress as both a risk and a tool, they can guide patients toward true resilience that extends beyond symptom management and into long-term vitality. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Introduction to Oxidative Stress and Antioxidants 01:16 The Antioxidant Trap: Five Myths for Practitioners 05:06 Hormesis and the Body’s Antioxidant Pathways 06:45 Bioindividuality in Oxidative Stress and Health 10:18 Why Antioxidant Supplements Act as Pro-Oxidants 15:25 Why Supplements Can’t Replace a Poor Diet 20:22 Whole Foods vs Supplements in Clinical Practice 25:05 The Role of Minerals in Antioxidant Defense 29:19 Lifestyle and Hidden Drivers of Oxidative Stress 38:16 Blood Sugar and Redox Imbalance 43:06 Key Markers for Assessing Redox Balance Links Take SAFM’s 10 CME course - the Essential Gut Deep Dive Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox Learn more about SAFM’s practitioner training Subscribe to our YouTube channel Access daily quick tips on Facebook Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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21
Resolving the Functional Roots of Infertility | E20
Infertility can be one of the most painful challenges a person faces, yet it’s often the body’s way of signaling that something deeper is out of balance. Could the struggle to conceive be pointing to hidden metabolic issues, hormone imbalances, or stress patterns that have been building for years? Tracy Harrison looks at infertility through the lens of functional medicine and shares how five common but often overlooked imbalances can quietly undermine fertility. She talks about the early signs of insulin resistance that can interfere with ovulation, the impact of estrogen dominance driven by poor detoxification and everyday exposure to endocrine-disrupting chemicals, and the surprising ways gut health shapes reproductive outcomes. Tracy also examines how toxic load, oxidative stress, adrenal function, and subclinical thyroid issues can create an environment where conception and full-term pregnancy are harder to achieve. For practitioners, this episode is a reminder to step back and consider the whole picture. Are we catching the subtle signs before they become bigger problems? Are we helping patients address the underlying conditions that set the stage for lasting reproductive health? Tracy offers insight and direction for identifying the true root causes and guiding patients toward solutions that support both conception and long-term well-being. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Infertility as a Multisystem Dysfunction 01:16 Insulin Resistance and Blood Sugar Imbalance 07:05 Estrogen Dominance and Endocrine Disrupting Chemicals 13:12 Gut Health’s Role in Fertility 17:01 Toxicity and Miscarriage Risk 22:29 Adrenal Thyroid Imbalance and Chronic Stress Links Take SAFM’s 10 CME course - the Essential Gut Deep Dive Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox Learn more about SAFM’s practitioner training Subscribe to our YouTube channel Access daily quick tips on Facebook Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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20
Hidden Hormone Dynamics Sabotaging Your Patient Outcomes (It’s Not Always Hashimoto’s) | E19
Most thyroid labs look fine on paper, but your patient’s cells may be screaming for help you can’t see. Tracy Harrison offers a wake-up call for healthcare practitioners: long-term healing can’t happen without addressing the hidden hormone dynamics that standard labs often miss. In this episode, she explores why persistent symptoms in chronically ill patients, especially post-pandemic, may be tied to unrecognized dysfunction in the adrenal-thyroid axis. These are the patients doing “everything right” yet still cycling through flare-ups, fatigue, and stalled progress. Tracy names what many clinicians sense but can’t always explain: a revolving door of disease driven by intracellular hypothyroid function, subclinical adrenal imbalances, and unresolved stress physiology. At the core is one foundational principle – all healing is a parasympathetic activity. Tracy challenges practitioners to see beyond lab panels and protocols, reminding us that the nervous system listens to lived experience, not positive thinking. She connects the dots between sympathetic dominance, chronic inflammation, micronutrient deficiencies, estrogen excess, insulin resistance, and hormone conversion issues that derail recovery even when test results look perfect. Through clear clinical insight, examples, and research-backed nuance, Tracy reframes how we evaluate thyroid and adrenal patterns in practice. This episode is an invitation to slow down, listen more deeply, and upgrade your lens on what healing truly requires. If you’ve been trained to trust the labs first, this conversation will change how you see everything. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 The Revolving Door of Chronic Illness 03:45 Healing Requires Parasympathetic Dominance 07:15 Intracellular Hypothyroid Function Explained 14:10 Nutrient Deficiencies Driving Thyroid Dysfunction 21:05 How Chronic Stress Suppresses Thyroid Function 28:15 Inflammation, Reverse T3, and Long COVID 39:55 Insulin Resistance and Thyroid Hormone Resistance 47:05 Running a Complete Thyroid Panel 54:05 Rethinking Thyroid Hormone Replacement 1:00:55 Hidden Physiological Stressors That Disrupt Healing Links Take SAFM's 10 CME course - the Essential Gut Deep Dive: https://schoolafm.com/gut-course Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox: https://schoolafm.com/clinical-tips Learn more about SAFM's practitioner training: https://schoolafm.com/our-program Subscribe to our Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@safmchannel Access daily quick tips on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/AppliedFunctionalMedicine/ Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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19
Perimenopause Nuances that Women Need Us to Master | E18
Perimenopause isn’t a syndrome to treat. It’s a complex, shifting transition that most women in their 40s are already navigating, whether they realize it or not. For practitioners working in functional medicine, failing to recognize and address the nuances of this phase can mean missing the real root of your clients’ symptoms. In this episode, Tracy Harrison lays out five critical practitioner blind spots that lead to frustration and subpar outcomes. She challenges the idea that a fixed protocol can support women through perimenopause, reminding us that the only constant in this life stage is change. Hormones don’t decline in a straight line. Progesterone drops early and steadily, while estrogen tends to spike and swing before it ever goes down. This hormonal chaos can trigger anxiety, insomnia, mood swings, migraines, and even histamine-related issues that are too often misdiagnosed or ignored. Tracy explains how common symptoms such as poor sleep, bloating, mood instability, hot flashes are often driven by overlooked mechanisms like GABA depletion, serotonin fluctuations, or impaired histamine clearance. She breaks down why alcohol can sabotage sleep and worsen hot flashes, why estrogen dominance is more common than we think, and how mindset and chronic stress directly influence hormone symptoms through the nervous system. This episode is a call to meet women where they are, not with a standard protocol, but with a dynamic, personalized approach that accounts for the biochemical, emotional, and environmental complexity of perimenopause. If you want to truly support midlife women, you need more than hormone labs and supplements. You need to understand the full picture, and be prepared to shift with it. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Understanding Perimenopause: A Natural Transition 05:02 Why Protocols Fail in Perimenopause Care 08:06 How Progesterone Drop Triggers Mood and Sleep Issues 11:22 Alcohol’s Hidden Role in Anxiety, Insomnia, and Hormone Disruption 12:29 The Overlooked Link Between Histamine and Perimenopause Symptoms 16:21 Estrogen Dominance in Early Perimenopause: What Practitioners Miss 21:48 The Estrogen-Serotonin Connection and Its Impact on Mood 26:10 What Really Causes Hot Flashes and Night Sweats 30:00 How Stress Hormones Worsen Perimenopause Symptoms 32:09 Why Mindset and Thought Patterns Matter in Symptom Management 33:45 Partnering with Patients Through Perimenopause Links Take SAFM’s 10 CME course - the Essential Gut Deep Dive: https://schoolafm.com/gut-course Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox: https://schoolafm.com/clinical-tips Learn more about SAFM’s practitioner training: https://schoolafm.com/our-program Subscribe to our Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@safmchannel Access daily quick tips on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/AppliedFunctionalMedicine/ Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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18
Disease Begins in the Gut in Surprising Ways | E17
What happens in the gut doesn’t stay there. It can quietly ignite inflammation, disrupt immune balance, impair cognition, and set off chronic conditions that leave practitioners chasing symptoms instead of causes. In this episode, Tracy Harrison delivers a call to action for practitioners to look beyond surface-level symptoms and trace chronic dysfunction back to the digestive system. She breaks down the often-missed connections between low stomach acid, impaired enzyme activity, compromised bile flow, and damaged intestinal lining, and how each of these can block nutrient absorption, trigger systemic inflammation, and create a breeding ground for disease. From medication-induced gut damage to the misunderstood role of histamine overload, Tracy illustrates how even everyday interventions like NSAIDs and antibiotics can have far-reaching consequences for the brain, hormones, immune system, and more. Through vivid metaphors and practitioner-tested insights, Tracy exposes the pitfalls of removing “problem” body parts without resolving the upstream dysfunctions that caused them. She urges practitioners to shift from managing symptoms to restoring core physiological balance, using functional medicine to address root causes and rebuild long-term resilience. This episode challenges conventional thinking and invites a deeper, more strategic approach to healing, one that begins in the gut and ripples outward into every system of the body. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 The Gut as the Root of Systemic Disease 01:42 Why “You Are What You Eat” Is Misleading 04:46 How Low Stomach Acid and Enzyme Deficiency Fuel Disease 07:09 Bile Flow, Estrogen, and Gallbladder Dysfunction 11:48 NSAIDs, Ibuprofen, and the Hidden Cost to Gut Health 14:05 Histamine Overload and the Brush Border Breakdown 18:30 Leaky Gut and Immune System Overexposure 23:15 Lipopolysaccharides and the Gut-Brain Axis 28:03 How Medications Disrupt Gut Integrity 32:50 The Rise of Food Sensitivities and Systemic Inflammation 38:28 Oral Health as the Starting Point of Gut Dysfunction 43:08 The Critical Role of Bile in Digestion and Immune Defense 47:45 Don’t Treat the Victim, Address the Root Cause Links Take SAFM’s 10 CME course - the Essential Gut Deep Dive: https://schoolafm.com/gut-course Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox: https://schoolafm.com/clinical-tips Learn more about SAFM’s practitioner training: https://schoolafm.com/our-program Subscribe to our Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@safmchannel Access daily quick tips on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/AppliedFunctionalMedicine/ Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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17
Too Much of a Good Thing Promotes Disease? | E16
More exercise. Extra supplements. Cleaner eating. Sometimes the advice we rely on most can quietly work against the people we’re trying to help. In this episode, Tracy Harrison discusses why functional medicine demands more than just protocols and good intentions. She shares real clinical scenarios where common strategies like high-intensity workouts or high-dose vitamin D can actually worsen symptoms when underlying issues like adrenal fatigue or oxidative stress are at play. Tracy also challenges how we interpret lab markers. Is a high HDL level always a good sign? What do low liver enzymes really tell us? She connects the dots between nutrient status, metabolic patterns, and the subtle red flags that can get lost in standard lab reviews. This episode moves through supplements, lab work, diet trends, and minerals with one constant thread: context matters. This is a practical, case-based reminder to pause, ask better questions, and treat the person, not the lab result or the trend. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 When “Healthy” Advice Makes Patients Worse 01:04 The Hidden Risks of Over-Exercising 10:10 Vitamin D, Magnesium, and Supplement Missteps 14:08 How to Read Lab Markers with More Precision 24:00 Metabolic Dysfunction Beyond Blood Sugar 29:02 Green Smoothies, Oxalates, and Gut Health 36:26 Recognizing Histamine Intolerance in Your Patients 41:06 Why More Iron Isn’t Always the Answer 45:34 Understanding Magnesium Forms and Deficiency Links Take SAFM’s 10 CME course - the Essential Gut Deep Dive: https://schoolafm.com/gut-course Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox: https://schoolafm.com/clinical-tips Learn more about SAFM’s practitioner training: https://schoolafm.com/our-program Subscribe to our Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@safmchannel Access daily quick tips on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/AppliedFunctionalMedicine/ Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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16
#%$@ Promotes Health - and the Many Ways we Resist It | E15
Flow might not be something you measure on a lab panel, but when it’s blocked, your patients feel it. Tracy Harrison unpacks seven places where flow gets disrupted in the body, often in ways that go unnoticed in clinical care. What happens when oxygen doesn’t circulate well because of poor posture or undiagnosed sleep apnea? Could chronic symptoms trace back to something as basic as hydration, or a lymphatic system that isn’t moving waste effectively? Tracy walks through the quiet impact of circadian misalignment, synthetic hormone use, and even tight clothing that impairs detox and digestion. And she makes the case for taking joy seriously, not as a bonus, but as a core element of physiological health. Could mindset, laughter, and forgiveness be just as important as nutrition and supplements? This episode is a reminder to look beyond protocols and ask what might be getting in the way of the body’s natural flow and its capacity to heal. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Flow in Health 01:14 The Importance of Oxygenation 03:42 Subclinical Anemia and Oxygen Flow 04:47 Hydration: The Overlooked Blockage 06:46 The Role of Lymph in Circulation 08:55 Circadian Rhythms and Health 10:35 Hormonal Flow in Women’s Health 18:08 Physical Blockages and Detoxification 21:34 The Flow of Joy and Emotional Health 25:35 Embracing Flow for Vitality Links Take SAFM's 10 CME course - the Essential Gut Deep Dive: https://schoolafm.com/gut-course Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox: https://schoolafm.com/clinical-tips Learn more about SAFM’s practitioner training: https://schoolafm.com/our-program Subscribe to our Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@safmchannel Access daily quick tips on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/AppliedFunctionalMedicine/ Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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15
Toxicity and Biotransformation: Practical Clinical Pearls | E14
Most detox advice does more harm than good unless you understand how toxicity really works in the body. Tracy Harrison takes on one of the most misunderstood topics in functional medicine: why detox protocols often backfire, especially in patients with chronic illness. Should detox ever be the first step in care? What happens when you mobilize years of stored toxins without first making sure the body can handle it? This episode challenges the common urge to “cleanse” as a quick fix and instead offers a deeper look at how biotransformation actually works. Tracy walks through the difference between acute exposure and chronic overload, the risks of aggressive detox, and the science behind supporting phase two detox pathways from a place of strength. She also highlights the toxins hiding in plain sight, from dryer sheets to personal care products, and the role of nutrient depletion in keeping patients stuck. For practitioners who want to move past protocol-driven care and into true partnership with their patients, this episode is a reminder: real change happens when people understand what’s happening in their body and feel confident enough to do something about it. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Missteps in Detox Protocols 01:05 Chronic Toxic Overload vs. Acute Exposure 04:10 Safe and Targeted Detoxification 06:08 Why the Body Stores Toxins 09:02 Detoxing from a Place of Strength 12:04 Weight Loss and Mobilized Toxins 18:11 Dose-Response Myths and Toxic Synergy 21:05 Everyday Sources of Toxic Exposure 25:06 Transdermal Absorption and Beauty Products 30:06 Individual Toxin Overload and Nutrient Needs 34:08 Hormonal and Cellular Damage from Toxins 36:06 Helping Patients Understand and Commit 43:02 Glutathione, COVID, and Detox Capacity 46:04 Personalized Support for Long COVID 54:01 Early Life Exposure and Toxic Burden Links Take SAFM's 10 CME course - the Essential Gut Deep Dive: https://schoolafm.com/gut-course Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox: https://schoolafm.com/clinical-tips Learn more about SAFM's practitioner training: https://schoolafm.com/our-program Subscribe to our Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@safmchannel Access daily quick tips on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/AppliedFunctionalMedicine/ Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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14
Save the Gallbladders - Or at Least Apprehend the Criminals | E13
Most patients think losing their gallbladder solved the problem. Functional medicine practitioners know it was only the first clue. Tracy Harrison takes a closer look at what’s actually driving gallbladder dysfunction, and why removing the organ doesn’t remove the risk. Too often, upstream issues go unaddressed, allowing the same hidden dynamics to continue affecting the body. She walks through six of the most common contributors to hepatic biliary congestion: estrogenic overload, metabolic dysfunction, subclinical hypothyroidism, dehydration, toxic burden, and GLP-1 agonist medications. These factors can thicken bile, impair flow, and quietly disrupt other systems long after the gallbladder is gone. You’ll hear strategies for identifying these patterns early, plus a case study that shows how easy it is to miss them, especially when the patient doesn’t fit the usual mold. For clinicians, this episode is a reminder that gallbladder disease is rarely an isolated issue and that upstream thinking is what leads to real progress. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 The Gallbladder Crisis 01:18 What Causes Hepatic Biliary Congestion 03:04 Why the Gallbladder Isn’t Optional 03:46 Estrogenic Overload and Hormone Imbalance 08:36 Metabolic Dysfunction and Fatty Liver 12:34 Dehydration as an Overlooked Factor 14:42 Subclinical Hypothyroidism and Bile Flow 18:19 Toxic Burden and Everyday Chemical Exposure 20:32 GLP-1 Agonists and Gallbladder Risk 24:02 Case Study: Gallbladder Risk in a Young Male Patient 27:04 Why We Still Need Bile (and Gallbladders) Links Take SAFM's 10 CME course - the Essential Gut Deep Dive: https://schoolafm.com/gut-course Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox: https://schoolafm.com/clinical-tips Learn more about SAFM's practitioner training: https://schoolafm.com/our-program Subscribe to our Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@safmchannel Access daily quick tips on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/AppliedFunctionalMedicine/ Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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13
Autoimmune Disease Through The Functional Medicine Lens | E12
Most autoimmune protocols fail because they chase symptoms while the real problem simmers quietly underneath. Tracy Harrison offers an honest take on what’s often missing from autoimmune care. What if the immune system isn’t broken at all, but just responding exactly as it was designed to, in a world it no longer recognizes? This episode challenges the idea that symptom relief is the same as healing and urges practitioners to look further upstream. Tracy makes the case for mindset as a starting point. Before tossing out protocols or supplements, are we helping patients believe that change is possible? Are we preparing them for the discipline and patience required to truly shift their health trajectory? Using the thumbtack analogy, she illustrates why single interventions rarely work, and why lasting progress comes from building habits that stick. Tracy also unpacks the problem with focusing only on the tissue under attack. When autoimmune disease shows up in one place, how long before it shows up somewhere else? She explains why polyautoimmunity is common and why protocols must be tailored, not templated. This episode is a reminder for practitioners that clinical knowledge is only part of the equation. Sustainable results require education, empathy, and a clear-eyed view of what healing really takes. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Understanding Autoimmune Disease Through Functional Medicine 01:04 Challenging Myths About the Immune System 09:18 Why Protocols Fail Without Personalization 12:24 Patience, Discipline, and the Thumbtack Analogy 21:31 The Practitioner’s Role in Patient Belief and Behavior 29:30 Gluten, Molecular Mimicry, and Cross-Reactivity 35:00 NF-kappa B, Lifestyle Stressors, and Immune Priming 38:02 Preventing Flares Through Long-Term Support 44:05 The Four-Legged Stool of Autoimmunity 49:05 Gut Integrity, Gallbladder Function, and Clinical Precision Links Learn more about SAFM’s accredited practitioner training: https://schoolafm.com/our-program Take SAFM’s 10 CME course - the Essential Gut Deep Dive: https://schoolafm.com/gut-course Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox: https://schoolafm.com/clinical-tips Subscribe to our Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@safmchannel Access daily quick tips on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/AppliedFunctionalMedicine/ Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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12
Big Insights Many Practitioners Miss in Lab Data | E11
Most lab results lie, unless you know how to read between the lines, accounting for context, cofactors, and the body’s adaptive responses. In this episode, Tracy Harrison breaks down how even the most routine labs can mislead if practitioners don’t account for timing, stress, hydration, or recent supplement use. She introduces the concept of “lab-draw hygiene” and explains why educating patients on when and how to get tested is just as important as the tests themselves. From biotin skewing thyroid panels to iron panels that contradict hemoglobin levels, Tracy offers strategies to avoid common clinical missteps. She warns against defaulting to medications like statins or iron supplements without fully understanding what the data reveals or conceals, and calls for routine use of expanded thyroid panels and insulin markers to catch hidden dysfunction early. This episode is a reminder that lab values don’t exist in a vacuum, and truly impactful care requires asking the right questions before interpreting the numbers. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Introduction 00:33 What Is Lab-Draw Hygiene? 03:26 How Stress and Fasting Habits Skew Results 07:12 Supplements That Interfere with Labs 08:06 Biotin and Thyroid Panel Accuracy 13:08 When Iron Supplementation Backfires 17:05 LDL, Statins, and Missed Thyroid Clues 23:24 The Link Between Vitamin D and Magnesium 28:22 Medications That Disrupt Nutrient Absorption 32:39 Why “Low” Lab Values Aren’t Always Good 41:00 Insulin Resistance Hidden in “Normal” Glucose 54:04 What to Include in an Annual Lab Panel Links Take SAFM’s 10 CME course - the Essential Gut Deep Dive: https://schoolafm.com/gut-course Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox: https://schoolafm.com/clinical-tips Learn more about SAFM’s practitioner training: https://schoolafm.com/our-program Subscribe to our Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@safmchannel Access daily quick tips on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/AppliedFunctionalMedicine/ Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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11
Chronic Disease Dynamics We Often Miss | E10
Most chronic conditions linger or return because no one’s asking the right questions or looking in the right places. In this episode, Tracy Harrison gets specific about why so many patients with autoimmune issues or recurrent health problems struggle to truly get better. She walks through four critical areas that are often missed in clinical practice and explains how each one can quietly block progress toward meaningful disease regression. Is gut health playing a bigger role than you think? Tracy breaks down how digestion, microbiome diversity, and gut barrier function influence everything from mood and energy to inflammation and autoimmunity. Even patients with no digestive complaints may be stuck because of what’s happening in their gut. From there, the focus shifts to nervous system balance. Why are so many people stuck in a state of sympathetic overdrive? And what are the ripple effects of that stress on healing, immune regulation, and long-term outcomes? Tracy shares specific ways to help patients return to a parasympathetic state, one where the body feels safe enough to recover. Tracy also challenges the way most clinicians interpret lab data. Just because a number falls within the reference range doesn’t mean it’s serving the patient. What if a “normal” value is actually masking nutrient depletion, inflammation, or liver dysfunction? Tracy also makes a case for asking better questions during intake. So many patients are holding clues they don’t even know matter. Whether you’re supporting someone with autoimmune disease, chronic fatigue, or any pattern of recurrent illness, this episode offers a sharper lens and a better path forward. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Functional Medicine Overview 01:15 The Gut’s Role in Chronic Disease 03:03 Digestion and Nutrient Absorption 06:06 Microbiome Disruption and Antibiotics 09:00 Gut Barrier Function and Inflammation 17:00 Nervous System Imbalance and Stress 23:28 Vagus Nerve and Parasympathetic Healing 28:10 Long COVID and Immune Dysregulation 34:08 Rethinking Lab Data Interpretation 39:02 Nutrient Deficiencies Behind Lab Results 44:03 Ferritin, Iron, and Inflammation 48:00 Why Better Questions Change Outcomes 50:00 The Power of a Thorough Intake Links Take SAFM's 10 CME course - the Essential Gut Deep Dive: https://schoolafm.com/gut-course Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox: https://schoolafm.com/clinical-tips Learn more about SAFM's practitioner training: https://schoolafm.com/our-program Subscribe to our Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@safmchannel Access daily quick tips on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/AppliedFunctionalMedicine/ Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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10
Supplements: Missteps and Best Practices | E9
Most supplement mistakes happen when we forget to ask the simplest questions: Why this? Why now? And for how long? In this episode, Tracy Harrison breaks down why even the most well-intentioned supplement plans can miss the mark. She explains the three core reasons to use supplements (relief, reversal, and maintenance), and how overlooking these distinctions can lead patients to stay on products long after they’ve served their purpose. Tracy also unpacks the hidden consequences of common medications, like how statins and beta blockers drain CoQ10 or how birth control pills deplete vitamin B6, creating new issues that are often misunderstood or missed entirely. Are your patients feeling better because of what you recommended or despite it? This episode is a call to slow down, think critically, and move beyond protocol checklists. Tracy shares practical ways to educate patients so they feel like partners, not bystanders, in their own care. If you’ve ever wondered how to improve outcomes without overcomplicating your practice, Tracy offers a smart, grounded place to start. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Introduction to Supplement Use 01:16 Three Reasons to Use Supplements 02:11 The Power of Rapid Relief 05:24 Interventions to Reverse Disease 07:00 Educating Patients for Long-Term Success 09:06 Nutrient Depletions from Medications 12:09 Rethinking Maintenance Supplements 25:25 Beyond Protocols: The Devil in the Detail 27:01 Nutrient Interactions and Overlooked Risks 34:04 Post-COVID Supplement Challenges 42:09 Quercetin, Stress, and Individualized Care 47:02 5-HTP and SSRI Contraindications 50:47 Methylation and Common Misconceptions Links Take SAFM's 10 CME course - the Essential Gut Deep Dive: https://schoolafm.com/gut-course Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox: https://schoolafm.com/clinical-tips Learn more about SAFM's practitioner training: https://schoolafm.com/our-program Subscribe to our Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@safmchannel Access daily quick tips on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/AppliedFunctionalMedicine/ Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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“You Are What You Eat”? Think Again! | E8
Most people assume that eating healthy food is enough. But the real issue is often not what’s on the plate. It’s whether the body can actually use it. In this episode, Tracy Harrison questions the idea that nutrition starts and ends with food choices. She breaks down why so many patients fail to thrive despite eating well and how digestion quietly plays a much bigger role than we give it credit for. Tracy walks through four patient groups that often struggle with maldigestion: those with acid reflux, diabetes, hypothyroidism, and chronic aches and pains. Could common medications like PPIs or NSAIDs be interfering with nutrient absorption? Could sluggish bile flow or low enzyme output be blocking access to critical micronutrients? These are the kinds of questions she urges practitioners to ask more often. Along the way, she explains why foundational functions—stomach acid, bile, enzyme activity, brush border integrity—deserve just as much attention as the more complex topics in functional medicine. Because when those basics are overlooked, even the best nutrition plans can fall flat. This is a call to shift your focus back to the basics and to recognize that restoring digestive function may be the most powerful clinical move you can make. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Introduction 01:03 The Importance of Micronutrition 02:18 The Role of Digestion in Nutrient Absorption 03:46 Focus on Digestion: Acid Reflux and GERD 07:01 Hypochlorhydria and Its Impact 10:02 Eating Hygiene and Its Importance 13:24 Diabetes and Digestive Enzyme Insufficiency 18:07 Hypothyroidism and Bile Function 22:22 Chronic Aches, Pains, and NSAIDs 26:07 The Interconnectedness of Health Issues Links Take SAFM's 10 CME course - the Essential Gut Deep Dive: https://schoolafm.com/gut-course Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox: https://schoolafm.com/clinical-tips Learn more about SAFM's practitioner training: https://schoolafm.com/our-program Subscribe to our YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@safmchannel Access daily quick tips on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/AppliedFunctionalMedicine/ Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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Root Causes of Disease in the Rx | E7
Medications your patients trust most may be the very ones quietly driving their disease. How often do we stop to question the long-term impact of the most common prescriptions? Tracy Harrison takes a close look at the unintended consequences of medications like beta blockers, diuretics, antibiotics, and high-dose vitamin D. These are drugs patients often take for years, sometimes decades, without realizing they could be fueling nutrient depletion, sleep disruption, gut dysfunction, or immune imbalance. What happens when a beta blocker meant to lower blood pressure also suppresses melatonin and CoQ10? Or when a prescribed vitamin D dose leaves someone more magnesium-deficient than before? Tracy connects the clinical dots and urges practitioners to think beyond the prescription pad. She makes the case for a more nuanced approach, one that questions assumptions, looks for root causes, and sees medications as tools, not permanent solutions. If you’ve ever wondered why a patient plateaus despite doing “everything right,” this episode offers perspective that could shift your clinical lens. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 How Common Medications Can Drive Disease 02:17 Hypertension Drugs and Nutrient Depletion 05:08 The Hidden Cost of Beta Blockers 08:02 Diuretics, Electrolytes, and Blood Pressure 10:10 Vitamin D Dosing Mistakes and Magnesium Loss 13:03 Interactions Between Vitamins D, A, and K 16:08 Immunosuppressants and Autoimmune Progression 25:10 Antibiotics, Gut Health, and Immune Dysregulation 30:13 NSAIDs and Pain Relief at a Cost 34:45 Metformin and Silent B12 Deficiency Links Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox: https://schoolafm.com/clinical-tips Learn more about SAFM's practitioner training: https://schoolafm.com/our-program Subscribe to our Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@safmchannel Access daily quick tips on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/AppliedFunctionalMedicine/ Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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Weight Loss through the Functional Medicine Lens | E6
Weight gain isn’t always a result of overconsumption; it’s often the body’s natural response to imbalances that go undetected for years. In this episode, Tracy Harrison breaks down four functional imbalances commonly at the root of overweight and obesity, starting with insulin resistance that often hides behind “normal” labs. How many patients are told they’re fine when their metabolism is anything but? Tracy explains how stress, subclinical hypothyroidism, hormone disruption, and environmental toxins can all push the body to hold onto weight, even when someone is doing everything “right.” Could that daily fatigue or bloating be tied to something deeper? This episode leaves practitioners with a challenge: stop chasing symptoms and start identifying the early signs of imbalance. Because when we address the real root causes, weight loss becomes a natural outcome, and patients finally feel seen, supported, and in control. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Four Functional Imbalances Behind Weight Gain 03:27 Hidden Early Stages of Insulin Resistance 12:06 Why Standard Labs Miss Metabolic Dysfunction 15:10 Gut Health and Its Role in Metabolism 18:12 The Clinical Cost of Over-Relying on GLP-1 Medications 26:06 Subclinical Hypothyroidism and Overlooked Thyroid Markers 38:06 Estrogen Dominance and Endocrine Disrupting Chemicals 43:06 Adiposity, Hormone Synthesis, and Toxin Storage 48:00 Constipation, Retoxification, and Hormone Clearance 54:03 Sympathetic Dominance and Chronic Stress 52:00 Building Sustainable Weight Loss Through Root-Cause Care Links Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox: https://schoolafm.com/clinical-tips Learn more about SAFM's practitioner training: https://schoolafm.com/our-program Subscribe to our Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@safmchannel Access daily quick tips on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/AppliedFunctionalMedicine/ Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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Gut-Brain-Chronic Pain Connections | E5
Chronic pain isn’t just a nuisance. It’s often a gut-driven signal that something deeper is out of balance. In this episode, Tracy Harrison takes a practical look at how gut health shapes our experience of pain. She questions the default approach of reaching for medications and instead encourages practitioners to ask: what’s really driving the discomfort? Pain isn’t random. It often points to deeper issues like inflammation, nutrient deficiencies, and microbial imbalances, all of which are rooted in the gut. Tracy breaks down how over-the-counter drugs like NSAIDs can quietly erode the gut lining, interfere with nutrient absorption, and set off a chain reaction that worsens the very symptoms they’re meant to relieve. She also shares why it’s worth paying closer attention to factors like sleep apnea, chronic stress, and low-grade infections that keep the body in a state of physiological alarm, and make pain more intense. The conversation turns toward the gut-brain connection, where neurotransmitters like serotonin and GABA play a powerful role in pain perception. What happens when dysbiosis disrupts their production? How do nutrient shortfalls, especially in B12, magnesium, and tryptophan, shift the nervous system’s response to pain? For practitioners, this is a clear reminder: if you’re not looking at gut health, you may be missing the source of your patient’s pain. Tracy lays out the case for why functional medicine must go beyond managing symptoms to uncovering the systems at play. It starts in the gut, and it can change everything. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 The Gut-Brain-Pain Connection 02:30 Why Reframing Pain Matters 03:50 How NSAIDs and Common Medications Affect Gut Health 08:30 The Impact of Physiological Stress on Pain Perception 11:00 Dysbiosis, Inflammation, and Neurotransmitter Imbalance 18:30 The Role of Digestion, Nutrient Absorption, and Deficiencies in Chronic Pain 34:00 Food Sensitivities, Immune Complexes, and Joint Pain 37:00 Serotonin, GABA, and the Gut’s Influence on the Nervous System 40:30 Why Gut Health Is Central to Functional Medicine and Long-Term Pain Relief Links Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox: https://schoolafm.com/clinical-tips Learn more about SAFM's practitioner training: https://schoolafm.com/our-program Subscribe to our Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@safmchannel Access daily quick tips on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/AppliedFunctionalMedicine/ Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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GLP-1 Gotchas for Practitioners | E4
GLP-1 medications are everywhere right now and for good reason. They suppress appetite, support weight loss, and help manage type 2 diabetes. But what happens when we overlook the ripple effects they can have on the body? In this first episode of Functional Medicine for Real-World Impact, host Tracy Harrison walks through four clinical “gotchas” every practitioner should keep in mind when patients are using GLP-1 agonists. She starts with one of the most common and disruptive complaints: nausea. For many patients, it’s not just the medication. It’s an underlying issue like histamine overload, subclinical hypothyroidism, or nutrient insufficiency that makes the symptoms worse. Tracy also raises a critical question: Are we giving GLP-1s to patients who are already insulin resistant... or already hyperinsulinemic? If so, we may be increasing their risk for hypoglycemia, emotional reactivity, and unintended shifts in body composition. Then there’s the issue of gallbladder health. Slowed motility may reduce appetite, but it can also make existing hepatic biliary congestion worse, especially for those with fatty liver or metabolic disease. Are we screening for this before starting treatment? This episode challenges practitioners to look closer, ask better questions, and avoid assuming that symptom reduction equals success. Medications can be helpful, but only when paired with a deeper clinical lens and a commitment to long-term, real-world health. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Understanding GLP-1 Medications 01:02 Nausea and Dysmotility 05:01 Histamine Overload 08:04 Hypothyroidism and Dysmotility 10:01 Vitamin B6 and Magnesium Deficiency 11:27 Malnutrition Risks 17:00 Hypoglycemia Concerns 20:41 Hepatic Biliary Congestion 25:10 Responsible Use and Dosage 27:00 Importance of Empowering Patients Links Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox: https://schoolafm.com/clinical-tips Learn more about SAFM's practitioner training: https://schoolafm.com/our-program Subscribe to our Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@safmchannel Access daily quick tips on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/AppliedFunctionalMedicine/ Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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Practitioner Missteps in Resolving Metabolic Dysfunction | E3
Most cases of type 2 diabetes could be predicted—and prevented—if we knew how to recognize the earliest metabolic red flags hiding in plain sight. What if your patient’s “normal” labs are quietly pointing to dysfunction—and no one’s looking closely enough to catch it? In this episode, Tracy Harrison shares the story of Jane, a woman in her 40s who feels fine today but is on a predictable path to type 2 diabetes within the next decade. Her fasting glucose and A1C may look great now, but behind the scenes, rising insulin or C-peptide levels are already telling a different story. Tracy walks through the subtle signs of early metabolic dysfunction and why standard lab markers often lull both patients and practitioners into a false sense of security. She pushes for a shift in perspective: What do we make of “optimal” labs when the patient’s diet, stress, or symptoms tell a different story? What can we catch early if we pay closer attention to things like reactive hypoglycemia, eating hygiene, and even overlooked contributors like toxin exposure and gut motility? From the pancreas to the microbiome, Tracy connects the dots in a way that’s practical and actionable for real-world clinical practice. She also shares key tools that can support earlier intervention, from smarter lab assessments to supplements like inositol and berberine. This episode is packed with clinical insights and reminders that prevention starts long before blood sugar goes up, and that patients like Jane are counting on us to see what others miss. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Introduction to Jane and the Roots of Metabolic Dysfunction 02:30 Why Fasting Insulin and C-Peptide Matter 05:10 Hypoglycemia as an Early Warning Sign 09:05 Glucose vs. A1C: What Labs Really Tell You 12:10 The Hidden Impact of Stress and Poor Eating Hygiene 15:10 Gut Motility and Its Role in Metabolic Health 22:10 Pancreatic, Thyroid, and Liver Function in Early Dysfunction 27:15 The Microbiome’s Influence on Insulin and GLP-1 32:05 Diet, Prebiotics, and Feeding the Microbiome 36:30 Supplements That Support Insulin Sensitivity Links Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox: https://schoolafm.com/clinical-tips Learn more about SAFM's practitioner training: https://schoolafm.com/our-program Subscribe to our Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@safmchannel Access daily quick tips on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/AppliedFunctionalMedicine/ Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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What IS Functional Medicine? | E2
Functional medicine rejects symptom-chasing and asks a better question: why did the body stop working the way it’s designed to? In this episode, Tracy Harrison explains what functional medicine really is through the lens of systems engineering. What if we approached the human body like a complex system, where every piece plays a role in either promoting health or driving dysfunction? Using the image of a bonsai tree, Tracy illustrates how we miss the bigger picture when we focus only on the problem we can see. She then takes it a step further with three real-world examples of people who all have hypertension, but for completely different reasons. One person is dealing with blood sugar issues. Another is struggling with nutrient metabolism. A third is unknowingly affected by toxic exposure from decades ago. So how do we help someone heal if we don’t first understand why they’re sick? This episode is an invitation to think differently. It challenges listeners to stop asking what to fix and start asking what’s interfering with the body’s ability to function. Through a systems engineering lens, Tracy shows how personalized assessment and targeted intervention can help restore balance without relying solely on symptom management. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Introduction to Functional Medicine 01:57 Systems Engineering Approach 03:01 Functional Medicine Lens 04:06 Hypertension Example 06:05 Case Study: Mary and Blood Sugar 08:05 Case Study: Bill and Homocysteine 10:17 Case Study: Sue and Lead Exposure 13:20 Customizing Interventional Plans 14:38 Exploring Diagnoses and Root Causes Links Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox: https://schoolafm.com/clinical-tips Learn more about SAFM's practitioner training: https://schoolafm.com/our-program Subscribe to our Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@safmchannel Access daily quick tips on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/AppliedFunctionalMedicine/ Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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Surprising Reasons They Don’t Get Better: Key Clinical Insights for Practitioners | E1
Most cases of recurring IBS aren’t about the gut bugs. They’re about what’s upstream and overlooked. Why do so many patients feel better at first, only to end up right back where they started? Tracy Harrison shares the real reasons IBS, type 2 diabetes, and other chronic conditions often come roaring back. She highlights two patterns that get missed far too often: maldigestion caused by low pancreatic enzyme output (which is closely tied to blood sugar issues) and sluggish gut motility linked to subclinical hypothyroidism, vagus nerve dysfunction, or past trauma. Tracy also breaks down how poor sleep and internal stress quietly derail healing, even when a patient’s lifestyle looks “healthy” from the outside. Is someone really sleeping well, or are they just used to feeling tired? Is their blood sugar problem coming from diet, or from the constant background noise of stress? Tracy connects the dots between oral health, immune dysfunction, and metabolic disease, showing how inflammation in the mouth can ripple through the whole system. She explains why high-dose vitamin D can backfire, how common medications like ibuprofen or PPIs might be sabotaging progress, and what to watch for when a patient’s improvement stalls without a clear reason. At the heart of it all is a question every practitioner needs to ask: Am I offering too much, too fast? Tracy reminds us that real change comes from partnership, not overwhelm. The smartest plan in the world won’t help if it leaves your patient behind. Episode Breakdown: 00:00 Introduction 01:30 Why IBS Often Recurs Despite Initial Improvements 03:20 Maldigestion, Dysmotility, and Blood Sugar Dysregulation 08:03 The Hidden Impact of Sleep and Stress on Immune and Gut Health 15:26 Overlooked Connections Between Oral Health and Metabolic Disease 17:50 The Role of Patient Engagement and Expectation-Setting in Lasting Outcomes 23:27 Risks of High-Dose Vitamin D and Common Supplement Pitfalls 26:30 Medication Use That May Be Stalling Patient Progress Links Get weekly Clinical Tips in your inbox: https://schoolafm.com/clinical-tips Learn more about SAFM's practitioner training: https://schoolafm.com/our-program Subscribe to our Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@safmchannel Access daily quick tips on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/AppliedFunctionalMedicine/ Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm
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Functional Medicine for Real-World Impact - Trailer
Functional Medicine for Real-World Impact offers practical insights to empower healthcare professionals in transforming patient care through applied functional medicine. Join Tracy Harrison as she dives deep into the interconnected nature of physiology, lifestyle, and innovative interventions—bringing clarity to the science behind complex, chronic conditions. Each episode is packed with case scenarios, clinical pearls, and actionable strategies that practitioners can immediately apply for greater patient outcomes. If you’re ready to do your best work and elevate your clinical confidence, this podcast is your guide to meaningful, impactful change in healthcare.
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Functional Medicine for Real-World Impact offers practical insights to empower healthcare professionals in transforming patient care through applied functional medicine. Join Tracy Harrison as she dives deep into the interconnected nature of physiology, lifestyle, and innovative interventions—bringing clarity to the science behind complex, chronic conditions. Each episode is packed with case scenarios, clinical pearls, and actionable strategies that practitioners can immediately apply for greater patient outcomes. If you’re ready to do your best work and elevate your clinical confidence, this podcast is your guide to meaningful, impactful change in healthcare.
HOSTED BY
Tracy Harrison
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