Functional Medicine Articles & Blogs
Maybe You’re Not “Gluten Sensitive”
Feeling bloated after pizza doesn’t automatically mean gluten sensitivity. In Salt Lake County and beyond, gut inflammation, poor digestion, or food imbalances are often to blame. Learn the functional approach to finding real answers.
Bloating Isn’t Normal (Stop Letting People Tell You It Is)
Daily bloating isn’t just “part of life.” In Utah, many cases point to SIBO, food sensitivities, or gut imbalances—not IBS. Discover why bloating happens and how functional gut testing can uncover the root cause.
Heartburn Isn’t Always Too Much Acid… It’s Often Too Little
Still battling reflux after normal tests? For many in Salt Lake City and Utah County, heartburn is caused by low stomach acid, not high. Learn the functional approach to healing digestion and restoring gut health.
Why a GI-MAP Is Probably Your Next Step After a Normal Colonoscopy
A normal colonoscopy doesn’t mean your gut is healthy. Discover how the GI-MAP stool test reveals hidden imbalances, infections, and inflammation for lasting relief. Available in Salt Lake City, Park City, and Utah County.
IBS: Why That Diagnosis Doesn’t Tell You Anything
IBS is a blanket label, not a root cause. If your doctor stopped at “IBS,” it’s time to dig deeper. Learn why advanced gut testing is key for bloating, diarrhea, and constipation in Salt Lake City, Park City, and Utah County.
Fiber: Why It Matters Despite What Carnivore Diet Fans Tell You
Fiber fuels your gut, hormones, and metabolism—despite what carnivore diet followers claim. Discover soluble vs. insoluble fiber, why it matters for long-term health, and how to optimize your intake in Salt Lake County or Utah County.
How Your Gut Affects Your Immune System
Did you know up to 70% of your immune system lives in your gut? Learn how your microbiome impacts immunity, inflammation, and resilience. Serving Salt Lake City, Park City, and Utah County—book a consult for gut health testing today.
The Role of Your Liver in Hormone Metabolism
Discover how your liver processes and detoxifies hormones, why liver health is crucial for hormonal balance, and which foods and supplements support optimal liver function.
Understanding Ovarian Cysts
Learn the different types of ovarian cysts, their symptoms, and how to track your menstrual cycle for hormonal insights without lab testing. Functional medicine tips from a health coach to optimize your hormones naturally.
What Actually Causes PCOS?
Is PCOS caused by insulin resistance? Is it JUST a hormone problem? Is it genetic?
Why "Normal" Lab Results Don't Mean You're Healthy:
Too many women are gaslit by the healthcare system when their labs look “normal,” but they don’t feel normal. You deserve a practitioner who listens, asks better questions, and looks deeper.
The Truth About IUDs vs. Copper IUDs
Discover the key differences between hormonal and copper IUDs, common side effects, and a functional medicine plan to rebalance hormones after removal.
Parasites: Do you need a cleanse?
Parasite cleanses are trending — but are they actually necessary? Learn when stool testing makes sense, what symptoms to look for, and why guessing can do more harm than good.
Local Utah Farmers/Farms
Looking for organic food in Utah? Explore trusted local farms and businesses in Salt Lake, Utah, and Davis counties offering organic vegetables, fruits, meats, and dairy.
Leaky Gut – What It Is and Why It Matters
Leaky gut isn’t just a buzzword — it’s a real root cause of bloating, fatigue, brain fog, and autoimmune symptoms. Here’s how to spot it and heal it holistically.
YEAST: Candida Overgrowth and the Vaginal Microbiome
Recurring yeast infections? Bloating? Brain fog? Candida may be playing a bigger role than you think. Learn how gut and vaginal health are connected — and how a functional medicine approach can help restore balance from the inside out.
Understanding Hashimoto’s: Why Your Labs Might Look “Normal”
Understanding Hashimoto’s can be complicated but it’s not that hard once you understand the basics of how it works. If you’ve been told your thyroid labs are “normal” but you still feel exhausted, foggy, bloated, or like your body is working against you… you’re not alone.Let’s break it down: what’s really going on in Hashimoto’s, what labs are actually helpful, and how we can support healing with a more holistic and functional approach.
Hormonal Birth Control and Mental Health: What You Need to Know
Explore the connection between hormonal birth control and mental health, including its impact on anxiety, depression, and mood swings.
The Truth About Detox Diets
Are detox diets effective? Learn how detoxification works in your body and whether extreme diets or fasts are necessary.
Areas of Practice
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Hair loss, thinning hair, cold hands and feet, unexplained weight gain, chronic fatigue, dry skin, brittle nails, brain fog, poor concentration, nervousness, anxiety, heart palpitations, and irregular heart rhythms can all be signs of an underlying thyroid imbalance. These symptoms are often dismissed as stress, aging, hormonal changes, or burnout, but they may point to deeper issues with thyroid function, metabolism, and hormone regulation.
The thyroid plays a critical role in regulating energy production, body temperature, metabolism, cardiovascular function, and nervous system balance. When thyroid hormones are too low, too high, or not properly converted at the cellular level, the entire body can feel the effects. Many individuals with hypothyroidism, subclinical hypothyroidism, Hashimoto’s thyroiditis, or thyroid hormone resistance experience these symptoms long before lab values fall outside conventional ranges.
Even if you are currently taking thyroid medication such as levothyroxine, Synthroid, or natural desiccated thyroid, you may still experience persistent symptoms. Medication can normalize lab markers while underlying issues like poor T4 to T3 conversion, chronic inflammation, nutrient deficiencies, gut dysfunction, or autoimmune activity remain unaddressed.
Most conventional medical providers test only TSH (thyroid stimulating hormone), which does not provide a complete picture of thyroid health. A comprehensive thyroid panel should include Free T3, Free T4, Reverse T3, thyroid antibodies (TPO and TgAb), and markers of inflammation to better assess thyroid function, hormone conversion, and autoimmune activity.
Taking a functional and integrative approach to thyroid health means looking beyond a single lab value. It involves supporting optimal thyroid function through nutrition, gut health, stress regulation, micronutrient status (including iodine, selenium, zinc, and iron), blood sugar balance, and addressing root causes such as autoimmunity and chronic stress.
If you are experiencing ongoing thyroid symptoms despite “normal” labs, your body may be asking for a deeper, more comprehensive approach to healing and hormone balance.
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Bloating, excessive gas, food sensitivities, irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), acid reflux, heartburn, painful digestion, abdominal discomfort, constipation, loose stools, diarrhea, and unpredictable bowel habits are some of the most common gastrointestinal symptoms people experience. These digestive issues are often normalized or brushed off as “just how my stomach is,” but they can signal deeper imbalances within the gut microbiome and digestive system.
The gastrointestinal (GI) tract plays a central role in nutrient absorption, immune function, inflammation regulation, hormone metabolism, and overall health. When digestion is compromised, it can lead to symptoms such as post-meal bloating, early fullness, cramping, undigested food in stool, chronic constipation, urgency, or alternating constipation and diarrhea. Conditions like small intestinal bacterial overgrowth (SIBO), dysbiosis, leaky gut (increased intestinal permeability), low stomach acid, enzyme insufficiency, and gut-brain axis dysfunction can all contribute to these symptoms.
Food sensitivities and intolerances to gluten, dairy, FODMAPs, histamine-rich foods, or highly processed ingredients may develop when the gut lining is inflamed or when the microbiome is out of balance. Chronic stress, antibiotic use, infections, environmental toxins, and poor dietary patterns can disrupt the balance of beneficial bacteria, allowing opportunistic bacteria, parasites, fungi (such as Candida), or viruses to take hold in the digestive tract.
Comprehensive stool testing and functional gut assessments can help identify underlying contributors, including bacterial overgrowth, parasitic infections, fungal overgrowth, inflammatory markers, digestive enzyme output, bile insufficiency, and microbiome diversity. Understanding these root causes allows for a targeted, personalized approach to restoring gut health rather than relying on symptom-suppressing strategies alone.
By addressing microbial imbalances, supporting stomach acid and enzyme production, repairing the gut lining, and restoring healthy bacterial diversity, it is possible to reduce digestive discomfort and move toward symptom-free eating. The goal is not to eliminate foods indefinitely, but to rebuild a resilient digestive system that can tolerate a wide variety of nutrient-dense foods without pain, bloating, or fear.
If you’ve been told your symptoms are “normal” or that IBS is something you simply have to live with, it may be time to take a deeper, root-cause approach to healing your gut and reclaiming comfortable digestion.
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Excess facial hair (hirsutism), persistent acne, hair thinning or hair loss, low libido, vaginal dryness, painful intercourse, intense menstrual cramps, irregular periods, heavy bleeding, anxiety, mood swings, breast tenderness, chronic fatigue, unexplained weight gain, and difficulty losing weight can all be signs of an underlying hormonal imbalance or menstrual cycle dysfunction. These symptoms are often dismissed as normal PMS, stress, or aging, but they may indicate disruptions in estrogen, progesterone, testosterone, cortisol, insulin, or thyroid hormones.
Hormonal balance is essential for reproductive health, metabolic function, mood regulation, skin health, and energy levels. When hormones fall out of balance, it can affect ovulation, menstrual cycle regularity, and the delicate communication between the brain, ovaries, adrenal glands, thyroid, and metabolic systems. Conditions such as polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), estrogen dominance, low progesterone, hypothalamic dysfunction, adrenal dysregulation, thyroid disorders, and insulin resistance can contribute to these symptoms.
For example, excess androgens (male hormones) may lead to acne, facial hair growth, and scalp hair thinning, while low progesterone can contribute to anxiety, sleep disturbances, and severe PMS. Estrogen imbalances may cause breast tenderness, heavy periods, and mood fluctuations, while cortisol dysregulation from chronic stress can worsen fatigue, weight gain, and cycle irregularities. Insulin resistance can further disrupt ovarian function and hormone production, creating a cascade of metabolic and reproductive symptoms.
Comprehensive hormone testing, including cycle mapping, thyroid panels, blood sugar markers, and functional assessments, can help identify root causes rather than simply managing symptoms with temporary solutions. Addressing nutrition, stress regulation, sleep quality, gut health, micronutrient status, and blood sugar balance plays a critical role in restoring hormonal harmony and supporting a healthy menstrual cycle.
If you are experiencing ongoing hormonal symptoms, painful periods, or cycle irregularities despite being told everything is “normal,” your body may be signaling the need for a deeper, root-cause approach to hormone health and menstrual wellness. True balance goes beyond symptom suppression and focuses on restoring resilience, rhythm, and long-term well-being.
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Are you looking to prevent type 2 diabetes, improve insulin sensitivity, stabilize blood sugar levels, or increase your daily energy? Blood sugar imbalances and insulin resistance can show up in subtle but disruptive ways, including energy crashes, mood swings, brain fog, intense sugar cravings, increased hunger, weight gain (especially around the abdomen), poor sleep, and difficulty maintaining focus throughout the day.
Insulin resistance occurs when the body’s cells become less responsive to insulin, the hormone responsible for moving glucose from the bloodstream into cells for energy. Over time, this can lead to chronically elevated blood sugar, increased inflammation, metabolic dysfunction, and a higher risk of prediabetes, type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and hormonal imbalances. Many people experience early warning signs long before lab values fall outside conventional ranges.
Energy fluctuations, irritability between meals, cravings for sweets or refined carbohydrates, and post-meal fatigue are common indicators that blood sugar regulation may be impaired. These symptoms can also affect cortisol rhythms, sleep quality, appetite hormones (ghrelin and leptin), and overall metabolic resilience.
A personalized, root-cause approach to metabolic health focuses on stabilizing blood sugar through targeted nutrition, balanced macronutrient intake, fiber-rich whole foods, protein timing, stress management, sleep optimization, and sustainable lifestyle modifications. Rather than relying on restrictive dieting or quick fixes, this approach supports long-term metabolic flexibility and consistent energy throughout the day.
With tailored guidance, ongoing support, and individualized strategies, it is possible to reduce sugar cravings, improve mood stability, enhance energy levels, and lower the risk of developing insulin resistance or type 2 diabetes. The goal is not just symptom management, but restoring metabolic balance so you can feel steady, focused, and energized without relying on caffeine or quick sugar fixes.
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Functional strength training focuses on building strength, mobility, balance, coordination, and core stability in ways that translate directly to everyday life. Rather than isolating single muscles on machines, functional training uses compound movements and multi-joint exercises to improve how your body moves, performs, and recovers in real-world situations.
Whether you’re lifting groceries, hiking steep trails, climbing stairs, playing with your kids, rock climbing, skiing, or simply getting up from the floor, functional strength supports the movement patterns your body relies on daily. This approach enhances muscular strength, joint stability, posture, injury prevention, and long-term mobility.
Functional training is appropriate for:
Beginners starting a strength program
Active individuals and athletes
Women seeking bone density and hormonal support
Adults managing back pain or joint instability
Individuals improving balance and fall prevention
Anyone wanting strength that translates to daily life
About Your Coach
Hey! I’m Rachel
I’m a board-certified (NBHWC) functional health + fitness coach based in Utah, and I help women get to the root of their health issues so they can stop feeling exhausted, bloated, and frustrated and start feeling like themselves again.
Need-to-know-info
I work virtually anyway in the US (using Labcorp for testing)
Primarily working with women 20-50
Gut issues, hormone imbalances, thyroid problems, autoimmune conditions, or unexplained fatigue.
Functional labs, treatment protocols, 1:1 coaching, and supplements (not MLM).
I started this work after my own health struggles with hormones and digestion left me searching for answers beyond “everything looks normal.” Functional medicine changed my life and now I get to help other women find that same relief and clarity.
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