Here's exactly what happens when you reach out to ClearPath.

No surprises. No pressure. Every step is explained upfront — and nothing happens without your agreement.

Care coordinator on a call with a patient

Here to help you find the right path forward.

1

Getting started

You fill out a short form.

It takes about two minutes. We ask a few basic questions about what you're dealing with — how long it's been going on, what you've already tried, and what you'd most want to get back to. No medical records required. No commitment of any kind.

What happens next: Your information is reviewed by your care coordinator, who will reach out within 24 hours.

2

Your care coordinator call

A member of our team calls you.

Your care coordinator is the first person you'll speak to at ClearPath. Their job is simple: understand your situation properly and make sure the next step is the right one for you.

They'll ask about your condition, your history, and what you've already tried. If a physician consultation makes sense, they'll get you scheduled. If it doesn't, they'll tell you that too.

The call takes around 15–20 minutes.

3

If you're a good fit

We match you with a specialist in your area.

If your care coordinator believes you're a reasonable candidate, ClearPath will match you with a vetted regenerative medicine specialist in your area — a board-certified physician who has been reviewed by our clinical team.

We only work with specialists who meet our clinical standards.

What "vetted" means: Board-certified. Using established clinical protocols. Sourcing biologics from FDA-registered labs.

4

Your specialist evaluation

You meet with the physician.

Your specialist evaluation is where the actual medical assessment happens. A board-certified physician reviews your condition, your history, any imaging you have — and gives you a clear, honest medical opinion.

They'll tell you whether they believe you're a candidate for regenerative treatment, what a realistic protocol would look like for your specific case, and what outcomes would be reasonable to expect.

They'll also tell you if they don't think it's the right option — and point you toward whatever they believe would actually help.

This evaluation is at no cost to you.

5

You decide

What happens next is entirely your choice.

You leave the evaluation with a proper medical opinion and a clear picture of your options. There's no pressure to proceed with anything. No follow-up designed to push you toward a decision you haven't made.

If you decide to move forward with treatment, your specialist will walk you through exactly what that involves, what it costs, and what to expect. If you decide not to, that's completely fine.

ClearPath's role ends when you have the information you need to make your own decision.

Ready to get started?

Fill out the short form and your care coordinator will be in touch within 24 hours.

Get started →

At no cost to you. No obligation to proceed.

Questions we hear most often

Yes. ClearPath's service — including your care coordinator call and the specialist match — is at no cost to you. If you proceed with treatment, that cost is between you and the specialist directly. Your care coordinator will walk you through typical ranges before you commit to anything.

Board-certified physicians with specific training in regenerative medicine. We review their credentials, their protocols, and the standards they operate to before accepting them into the ClearPath network. We don't work with every clinic that asks.

ClearPath works with specialists across a range of conditions — joint pain, limited mobility, soft tissue injuries, degenerative conditions, and more. The best way to find out if your specific situation is relevant is to speak with your care coordinator. They'll tell you straight.

Then we'll tell you that — directly, and without dressing it up. Not every case is appropriate for regenerative treatment, and it doesn't help anyone to pretend otherwise. If it's not the right path for your situation, your care coordinator will say so, and where possible, suggest what might actually be more useful.

No. The care coordinator call is a conversation — not a sales call. The specialist evaluation is a medical consultation — not a pitch. If either of those experiences ever feels like pressure, something has gone wrong and we want to know about it.