medical team
who actually
writes the prescription.
a layered clinical model — a named medical director sets the protocol, state-licensed nurse practitioners review your case, and a separate licensed pharmacy prepares the medication. three distinct entities.
the named medical director
a named MD signs the protocol.
medical oversight
Every case is reviewed by a licensed clinician under medical-director oversight. Medical director information will be published once our supervising physician's services agreement is finalized.
medical director · on file
pending msa closename
Pending publication. Will appear here when the medical director's services agreement is countersigned.
license
Pending publication. The medical director holds a current California Physician & Surgeon license, verifiable through the Medical Board of California's public license search once their name is published here.
bio
[Short clinical-practice background pending — board certification, years of practice, areas of focus relevant to GLP-1 prescribing.] Bio copy will be published once the supervising physician's services agreement is finalized.
scope
Clinical-protocol authorship, escalation authority for borderline cases, MedWatch reporting, and signing standing orders for the prescribing professional corporation.
Pending finalization of services agreement. This page will be updated with full bio, photo, and signed scope-of-work the day the MSA is signed.
The medical director's scope, in writing:
- writes the clinical protocol used by all prescribing clinicians
- holds escalation authority for cases NPs flag as borderline
- signs standing orders for the prescribing professional corporation
- files MedWatch reports for any reportable adverse event
- reviews and signs off on protocol changes before they ship
Norm has one named MD and a clinical-partner arrangement that hasn't closed yet. We'd rather state that plainly than overstate credentials.
prescribing clinicians
who actually writes the prescription.
prescribing clinicians · on file
pending partner contractNorm Health LLC partners with [clinical-infrastructure provider — name pending] to source licensed nurse practitioners. Each prescribing clinician holds a current state license.
coverage
California only at launch. Additional states will be listed here as state-by-state licensing completes.
routing
Initial intakes route to a nurse practitioner first. Borderline cases or any case the NP flags escalate to the medical director for review.
Partner name and the list of contracted states will appear here once the contract is countersigned.
Nurse practitioners work under the medical director's clinical protocol. Case routing sends initial reviews to NPs first, with escalation to the medical director for borderline cases or any case the NP flags.
clinicians in the platform
how clinical decisions get made.
Five concrete things our platform does to keep clinical decisions tethered to a licensed clinician — written, audit-logged, and opt-out-able.
every initial intake reviewed
Every initial intake is reviewed by a licensed clinician before any prescription is issued.
auto-approval is gated
Auto-approval is gated to documented routine reorders only — and only after a clinician has previously approved the patient's case. Disclosed in your telehealth consent.
audit-logged decisions
Clinical decisions (approve, decline, dose-adjust, revoke) are audit-logged in HIPAA-compliant infrastructure.
borderline → clinician review
Borderline cases route to clinician review, never to auto-approval.
algorithmic decisions are disclosed and opt-out-able
Algorithmic decisions (auto-dose-escalation, routine-reorder auto-approval) are disclosed in patient consent and the patient may opt out at any time.
three-entity model
how the entities relate.
three-entity model
management services org
the platform — Norm Health LLC. Builds the software, never makes clinical decisions.
prescribing professional corp
the clinicians. Licensed in your state, prescribe under medical-director protocol.
licensed compounding pharmacy
prepares and dispenses the medication. State-licensed; not affiliated with the platform.
Norm Health LLC builds and operates the technology platform but does not employ prescribing clinicians or dispense medication. The prescribing professional corporation employs (or contracts) the licensed clinicians; the licensed compounding pharmacy prepares and ships medication when prescribed. Each entity is licensed and accountable within its own scope.
about the medication
Compounded medications, when prescribed, are prepared by licensed pharmacies and are not FDA-approved. They may be prescribed only when clinically appropriate.
Available in California only at launch. see other states
related
~5 minutes · refunded if declined
Prescription treatment is available only after medical evaluation by a licensed clinician.