Not sure if regenerative medicine is right for your situation?

Most people who reach out to ClearPath don't know if they're a candidate. That's the point of the call — to find out.

Regenerative medicine tends to be most relevant if…

Your condition has been present for a while.

Most patients have been managing their condition for 6 months or more. Something that happened recently and hasn't yet been assessed through the standard pathway isn't typically where we start.

You've tried the conventional options.

Medication, cortisone or steroid injections, physiotherapy, activity modification. If you've been through some or all of that and still haven't found full resolution, that's the profile that tends to present the strongest case for exploring regenerative options.

You're not looking for a guaranteed outcome.

Regenerative treatment isn't a guaranteed fix. It has shown promising results for the right candidates in appropriate clinical settings. But it doesn't work the same way for everyone, and a reputable specialist will tell you that before you commit to anything.

You're open to a private-pay option.

Regenerative medicine isn't covered by standard insurance. Most patients fund it out of pocket, through HSA/FSA, or through financing options available through the specialist. If cost is a barrier, it's worth having that conversation directly with your care coordinator — there are options worth knowing about.

And some situations where it probably isn't.

We'd rather be straight with you than waste your time.

Regenerative treatment is unlikely to be the right path if your condition has progressed to a stage where the tissue can no longer respond to a biological intervention. It's also not appropriate if you're currently managing an active infection, undergoing chemotherapy, or in certain other medical situations — your physician will cover this in the evaluation.

And if you're looking for a quick fix, a guaranteed outcome, or a treatment that doesn't involve any commitment of time or resources — this probably isn't it.

If any of that applies to you, your care coordinator will tell you on the call — before you meet with anyone.

The honest answer is: we don't know until we look.

No one can tell you whether you're a candidate without reviewing your specific situation. Not us. Not a website. Not a general practitioner who's never assessed a regenerative case.

The only way to get a real answer is to have your situation properly reviewed — by someone with the clinical knowledge to evaluate it accurately.

That's what the specialist evaluation is for. And the care coordinator call is the first step to finding out whether it's worth getting there.

Here's what happens when you reach out.

Step 1: You tell us about your situation — a short form, two minutes, no commitment.

Step 2: Your care coordinator calls you — a 10-minute conversation, no sales pitch, honest feedback on fit.

Step 3: If it looks like a realistic option, we match you with a vetted specialist in your area for a proper evaluation — at no cost to you.

→ Read the full process

The only way to know is to ask.

Your care coordinator will give you a straight answer — including if the answer is that this probably isn't the right path for your situation.

Find out if I qualify →

At no cost to you. No obligation to proceed.

Tell us about your situation.

A short form, no commitment. Your care coordinator will be in touch within 24 hours.

Tell us about your situation.

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