A clinical approach
to weight
management.
Your doctor reviews your health picture before discussing any pathway. Every care plan is built around your individual assessment. No clinic visits required.
Weight management is
clinically complex.
A range of metabolic and lifestyle factors can influence weight. A doctor assesses these together before recommending any approach.
Qualified Australian doctors
Calorie restriction alone
Dietary restriction without clinical assessment often misses underlying metabolic factors.
Appetite and hunger signals
The regulation of appetite is complex. It varies significantly between individuals.
Metabolic adaptation
The body's metabolic rate can shift over time. A practitioner assesses this as part of your overall picture.
Sustained weight management
Ongoing clinical oversight aims to support more sustainable outcomes than unassisted approaches.
Individual health factors
Metabolic and lifestyle profiles vary. A clinical assessment considers your individual circumstances.
Activity and lifestyle
Exercise is one factor among many. A clinical approach considers your full health picture, not activity in isolation.
A care plan built
around your assessment.
Your Care Journey
A clear schedule of consultations and reviews with your qualified, experienced doctor across your care journey.
Begin your assessmentIllustrative care schedule, not a representation of individual results.
At every check-in
Doctor-led reviews
Clinically monitored
A structured pathway
Your care, coordinated
Where deemed medically appropriate, your doctor coordinates the next steps of your care plan with you. You are supported between consultations, with reviews scheduled as needed.
Carefully assessed. Personally tailored.
A care plan tailored to your individual assessment
Consultations with qualified, experienced Australian doctors
Reviewed and adjusted at scheduled check-ins
Your 4-step journey
to lasting results.
Complete your assessment
Answer questions about your health history, current circumstances, and goals.
Consult with a doctor
A telehealth appointment with a qualified, experienced doctor to review your assessment and discuss your options.
Receive your care plan
Where clinically appropriate, a personalised care plan is issued and your clinical pathway begins.
Ongoing monitoring
Follow-up appointments to review progress. Dosage may be reviewed and adjusted at scheduled check-ins.
Qualified Australian doctors
Weight management
informed by your assessment.
Metabolic assessment
Pathology may identify relevant metabolic factors that inform your care plan.
Metabolic considerations
A range of metabolic and lifestyle factors can influence weight. Your doctor considers these as part of a clinical assessment.
This approach may be
relevant for you if…
Your doctor will assess whether a clinical approach may be appropriate for your individual circumstances during your consultation.
Persistent weight concerns
Managing weight that has not responded to conventional approaches over time
Conventional approaches insufficient
Dietary and exercise changes alone have not produced sustainable outcomes
Relevant metabolic or health factors
A range of metabolic and lifestyle factors can influence weight and may be relevant
Telehealth suits your circumstances
Prefer to consult from home, without in-person clinic visits
Significant life stage changes
Weight concerns connected to post-pregnancy, perimenopause, or other life stage transitions
Looking for clinical oversight
Seeking a structured, doctor-guided approach rather than self-managed plans
Telehealth consultations for Australian adults
Assessment-first.
Doctor-led throughout.
All consultations conducted by qualified, experienced Australian doctors
every care plan is built around your individual assessment
consultations from home, no clinic visits required
Frequently asked
questions
Individual results vary based on your unique biology and commitment to the program. Assessment findings do not guarantee a particular outcome.
Telehealth is not suitable for all weight or metabolic health concerns. Your doctor may recommend in-person assessment, urgent care, GP review, specialist referral, further investigation or no treatment depending on your circumstances.