Bioidentical hormone replacement therapy (BHRT) is typically provided by licensed clinicians whose scope includes prescribing and monitoring medications – most often physicians (MD/DO), nurse practitioners (NPs), and physician assistants (PAs) with additional training in midlife hormone care. For best results, look for a provider formally trained in BHRT and advanced lab interpretation (e.g., IFM or A4M coursework), who can individualize therapy and follow you closely. If you develop chest pain, shortness of breath, severe headache/vision changes, one-sided weakness, calf swelling, or heavy bleeding, seek urgent care.
Key Points
- Licensed prescribers: BHRT is commonly provided by MD/DO, NP, or PA clinicians; OB/GYN and some internal/family medicine physicians frequently offer it.
- Training matters: Choose someone with formal BHRT education and certifications or CME from organizations like IFM or A4M – they’re trained in lab interpretation and advanced testing (e.g., urine metabolite panels such as DUTCH, saliva, and genetic testing when appropriate).
- Individualized plans: Good care includes intake and risk screening, baseline labs, route/dose selection (e.g., transdermal estradiol, micronized progesterone), and follow-ups to adjust therapy.
- Options and oversight: Both FDA-approved and compounded bioidentical medications may be used; compounded options should come from reputable pharmacies and require closer monitoring.
- We provide responsible, testing-informed BHRT, including bioidentical, compounded options and telehealth where permitted.
Who Can Legally Provide BHRT?
“Who provides BHRT?” really means “Who has the license and the training to prescribe and monitor hormones safely for midlife symptoms?” Legally, many clinicians can prescribe. Practically, the best fit is a provider who does this work regularly, keeps up with guidelines, and can explain why a given route (patch/gel/oral/vaginal), dose, and monitoring plan are right for you.
Common BHRT providers:
- Physicians (MD/DO): family medicine, internal medicine, OB/GYN, integrative/functional medicine.
- Nurse practitioners (NPs) and physician assistants (PAs): prescribing rules vary by state; many practice independently or in collaboration.
- Endocrinologists: some manage menopausal hormone therapy; others focus on complex endocrine disease and may refer to clinics that specialize in symptom care.
Because BHRT is individualized, experience with shared decision-making, risk balancing, and ongoing follow-up is as important as writing the prescription.
How BHRT Is Delivered And Monitored
A responsible clinic typically follows these steps:
- Comprehensive intake & risk screen
Personal and family history (including breast cancer and clotting), medications, symptom review, and goals. - Baseline labs (as indicated)
May include CBC/CMP, lipids, A1C or fasting glucose, thyroid markers when appropriate, and context for estradiol/progesterone as clinically relevant. - Route & dose selection
For many candidates, transdermal estradiol is considered for tolerability and risk profile; micronized progesterone supports uterine protection if you have a uterus and use estrogen. Testosterone in women is individualized and often off-label – benefits/risks are reviewed. - Follow-up & titration (4–12 weeks)
Reassess symptoms, side effects, blood pressure, and pertinent labs; adjust dose/route. Good clinics also address sleep, protein intake, resistance training, and alcohol – habits that support outcomes. - Advanced testing when it adds value
Experienced BHRT providers may use urine hormone metabolite testing (e.g., DUTCH), saliva (e.g., diurnal cortisol), or genetic testing to clarify edge cases – only when clinically indicated and after discussing pros/cons.
We emphasize responsible BHRT informed by testing, with clear education, bioidentical, compounded options when appropriate, and telehealth to support convenient check-ins.
Is One Type Of Provider “Best”?
Not necessarily – the best provider is the one who:
- Has formal hormone training (e.g., IFM/A4M-informed), keeps current with guidelines, and prescribes routinely.
- Explains benefits/risks, offers both FDA-approved and compounded paths when appropriate, and documents informed consent.
- Provides a monitoring plan (what to expect, when to adjust, what labs to repeat).
- Encourages lifestyle supports that influence sleep, mood, bone, and cardiometabolic health.
Be cautious with clinics that promise one-size-fits-all regimens, skip risk discussions, or don’t offer structured follow-up.
Safety, Side Effects & When To Seek Care
Common early effects include breast tenderness, bloating/water retention, spotting/irregular bleeding, skin irritation (with patches/gels), headaches, or mood shifts – often improved by adjusting dose/route or timing.
Call the clinic if effects persist or disrupt daily life.
Seek urgent care immediately for chest pain, shortness of breath, calf pain/swelling, severe headache or vision changes, one-sided weakness/numbness, or heavy vaginal bleeding.
Next Steps
If you’re seeking a BHRT provider, our team can help you evaluate options and outline a safe, individualized plan (including bioidentical, compounded choices and telehealth where allowed).
- Ready to talk it through? Book a discovery call
Sources:
- North American Menopause Society (NAMS). The 2022 Hormone Therapy Position Statement.
- Endocrine Society. Compounded Bioidentical Hormone Therapy Scientific Statement.
- ACOG. Compounded Bioidentical Menopausal Hormone Therapy (Clinical Consensus, 2023).NIH/NCBI. Menopausal Hormone Therapy—risks and benefits overview.
- NIH/NCBI. Menopausal Hormone Therapy—risks and benefits overview.




0 Comments