Step one: the online intake
You begin with an online intake — a structured set of questions about your health history, current medications and supplements, allergies, and what you're hoping to address. It takes a few minutes and it's the single most important input to everything that follows, because it's the information a licensed provider uses to decide whether peptide therapy is appropriate and which peptide, if any, fits.
There are no trick questions, and there's no benefit to optimizing your answers toward a 'yes.' The review is only as good as what you tell it.
Step two: a provider reviews you
A licensed provider reviews your intake. From there, a few things can happen: they may approve a prescription, send follow-up questions, ask for baseline labs before deciding, or decline if peptide therapy isn't right for you. Any of those is a normal outcome, and a decline isn't a dead end — it's the system working.
Nothing is dispensed without that review. There's no path on this platform where a peptide reaches you without a provider signing off first.
Step three: ongoing, lab-guided care
If you're prescribed a peptide, the relationship doesn't end at checkout. For several peptides your provider orders baseline and follow-up labs to guide care over time, and your care team stays reachable for questions, side-effect concerns, and adjustments.
Think of it as a continuing clinical relationship rather than a one-time transaction. That ongoing oversight is a meaningful part of what makes supervised peptide therapy different from buying vials off the internet.