Why I Expanded Into Aesthetic & Regenerative Medicine

As an OB-GYN, I’ve spent my career caring for women through some of the most important stages of their lives—pregnancy, postpartum recovery, and the transition into perimenopause.

But what stayed with me most wasn’t always the diagnoses or treatments.

It was what patients would say quietly at the end of the visit.

“Why does my skin feel looser after having kids?”
“I look tired all the time.”
“I don’t feel like myself anymore.”

These weren’t urgent medical concerns. They weren’t life-threatening.

But they mattered.

And I could see that they affected how women felt about themselves—how they showed up in their daily lives, their confidence, and their overall well-being.

Over time, I began to notice a gap.

Traditional medicine is incredibly effective at diagnosing and treating disease. But many of the concerns women shared didn’t fall neatly into that category. They were often brushed aside as “normal” changes—something to accept rather than address.

That never sat right with me.

Because just because something is common doesn’t mean it should be ignored.

So I made the decision to expand my practice into aesthetic and regenerative medicine.

Not to step away from women’s health—but to continue it in a more complete, more holistic way.

To support not just physical health, but how women feel in their own skin.

Because feeling like yourself again shouldn’t be optional.