WalshDoc

Frequently asked questions

Common questions about WalshDoc screening, questionnaires, labs, and clinician workflow.

Start Patient Questionnaire Clinician Access Request Lab Testing Walsh Protocol
WalshDoc provides informational screening and structured intake tools. It is not emergency care and does not replace diagnosis or treatment by a qualified clinician.

For patients

Where should I start?

If you are exploring WalshDoc on your own, begin on the patient questionnaire start page. If a clinician assigned you a questionnaire, use Patient Access.

Is this a diagnosis?

No. Questionnaire and screening responses are organized for review. Recommendations require clinician judgment.

Can I submit labs?

Lab-related workflows depend on your clinician and service tier. See Lab Testing for overview information.

Lab testing

What labs are commonly relevant?

Walsh-style assessments may consider zinc, copper, ceruloplasmin, histamine, homocysteine, vitamin D, CBC, CMP, pyrroles, and methylation-related markers when clinically appropriate.

Lab testing overview

Who orders labs?

Labs should be ordered and interpreted by an appropriate clinician. WalshDoc helps organize lab information for review — it does not replace medical decision-making.

For doctors and clinicians

How do I get dashboard access?

Submit a Clinician Access Request. Approved clinicians receive workflow tools for questionnaire links, report review, and follow-up tracking.

What can WalshDoc help with?

Structured intake, biotype and toxic burden pattern organization, lab summaries, report drafts, supplement planning workflow support, and follow-up tracking.

For clinicians overview

Biotype scoring

Walsh biotype patterns (undermethylation, overmethylation, copper overload, pyroluria-related patterns) are organized from structured questionnaires and relevant labs. Learn more on the Walsh Protocol page.

Biotype overview

Toxic burden scoring

Toxic burden questionnaires help organize symptom patterns related to environmental exposures, mold, chemicals, and metabolic stress. Results require clinician review.

Toxic burden overview