
It’s Naturopathic Medicine Week — the second week of May. Across North America, naturopathic doctors are doing what they do every week of the year. They’re helping patients get ahead of their health before problems take root.
At Alive Integrative Medicine, this week gives us a chance to talk about something we care deeply about. We want to highlight the screening exams most people skip, why those gaps matter, and how a naturopathic doctor can help you get answers you’ve never had before.
One of the most common things we hear from new patients is: “I feel pretty good, so I didn’t think I needed to come in.”
We understand that. Life is busy. Doctor’s appointments feel like something you do when you’re sick. If nothing obviously hurts, it’s easy to assume everything must be okay.
However, that assumption can be misleading. Most serious health conditions develop silently for years before any symptoms appear. Insulin resistance, cardiovascular disease, thyroid dysfunction, and hormone imbalances often produce no noticeable signs in their early stages.
Feeling fine is wonderful. But it’s not the same as knowing your health. That’s exactly what naturopathic screening exams are for.
Before we get into the specific exams, it helps to understand what sets naturopathic screening apart from a conventional annual physical.
Your primary care doctor does important work. However, the standard annual exam is often limited. The average visit runs about 18 minutes. Tests focus on detecting diagnosable disease, not optimizing health.
At Alive Integrative Medicine, new patient visits are typically 60 to 90 minutes. Because of this, we can go much deeper. Here’s what that looks like in practice:
Naturopathic medicine doesn’t replace your primary care doctor. Instead, it complements and deepens the care you already receive. And when it comes to screening, we go further.

The standard TSH test is a starting point — but it’s not a complete picture. Your thyroid governs your metabolism, energy, weight, mood, and hair health. A TSH test alone can miss significant dysfunction.
Subclinical thyroid dysfunction often shows a normal TSH but abnormal T3/T4 levels. This pattern can cause years of fatigue, weight gain, and brain fog. However, it rarely shows up on a basic test. Because of that, many patients go undiagnosed for years.
Heart disease is still the leading cause of death in North America. Yet most people only receive a basic lipid panel as their cardiovascular screen. Total cholesterol alone is a poor predictor of heart disease risk.
Understanding your real cardiovascular risk means you can make targeted changes. Furthermore, it means you can often avoid the trajectory toward heart disease entirely — before it becomes a crisis.
Hormone imbalances are among the most common — and most commonly missed — drivers of the health complaints we see. Fatigue, weight changes, low libido, anxiety, poor sleep, and brain fog can all be rooted in hormonal dysfunction.
Yet most patients have never had a comprehensive hormone panel.
For women, we assess estradiol, progesterone, testosterone, DHEA-S, SHBG, and FSH/LH. We look at these in the context of cycle phase, life stage, and symptoms. For men, we evaluate total and free testosterone, estradiol, DHEA-S, SHBG, and LH.
We also assess cortisol patterns through a four-point salivary or urinary cortisol test. The adrenal response to stress affects every other hormone in the body. A standard blood draw doesn’t capture this well.
Hormones don’t work in isolation — they function as a system. Therefore, we treat them that way. A comprehensive panel gives us a map of how your hormones are interacting, not just a single number out of context.
Iron deficiency is one of the most common nutritional deficiencies in the world. It’s also one of the most underdiagnosed. Most people only receive a complete blood count (CBC) that checks hemoglobin. By the time hemoglobin drops, iron stores have already been depleted for months.
Low ferritin — even with a normal hemoglobin — commonly causes fatigue, cold intolerance, hair loss, and cognitive difficulties. It’s very treatable. However, you have to know to look for it first.
Pre-diabetes affects an estimated 1 in 3 American adults. The vast majority don’t know it. By the time type 2 diabetes is diagnosed, significant metabolic damage has often already occurred.
Naturopathic medicine excels at catching metabolic dysfunction in its earliest, most reversible stages.
With this information, we can identify insulin resistance long before it becomes pre-diabetes. From there, we intervene with targeted dietary, lifestyle, and nutraceutical strategies. Because of early action, many patients fully reverse the pattern.
Naturopathic Medicine Week exists to remind us that medicine doesn’t have to wait for a crisis. The naturopathic model of care is built on a foundational principle: the healing power of nature, supported by a practitioner who understands the whole person.
Screening exams are how we put that principle into action. They give us the information we need to support your health proactively, intelligently, and personally.
At Alive Integrative Medicine, we use this week to invite you in. We want to help you understand your body, get tests that give real answers, and build a plan for the long and vibrant life you’re working toward.
You don’t have to wait until something is wrong to take your health seriously. Naturopathic Medicine Week is the perfect moment to begin.
Contact Alive Integrative Medicine to schedule your comprehensive naturopathic screening. Whether you’re new to naturopathic care or a longtime patient, there’s no better time to invest in your health.
Because the best health outcome is the one you never have to recover from.
311 W. 13th Ave.
Eugene, OR 97401
ph: 541-636-3079
f: 866-898-9393