My medical training began in Internal Medicine and Emergency Medicine, disciplines focused on identifying disease, treating illness, and responding when health has already begun to decline.
While I valued that work and the lives it allowed me to help, I found myself increasingly drawn to a different question:
How can we help people improve health, function better, perform better, and potentially enjoy a longer, healthier life before disease develops?
More than fifteen years ago, that question led me to pursue additional training and study in bioidentical hormones, nutrition, metabolic health, peptides, and longevity-focused medicine.
As my knowledge expanded, so did my understanding that many of the challenges people experience—fatigue, poor recovery, weight gain, declining performance, hormone imbalance, and accelerated aging—often have multiple contributing factors rather than a single explanation.
Through years of concierge medicine, optimization medicine, and later telemedicine, I had the opportunity to work with people seeking more than disease management. They wanted better health, better performance, healthier aging, and a deeper understanding of their biology.
At the same time, I watched interest in peptides, longevity medicine, supplements, and optimization grow dramatically. Unfortunately, much of the information available became fragmented, protocol-driven, or based on isolated interventions rather than a coordinated strategy.
The Schreiber Precision Method was created to bring structure, physician oversight, and precision to the optimization process.
Rather than approaching health as a collection of disconnected treatments, the goal is to understand the individual, identify meaningful contributors, and build a coordinated strategy where each recommendation supports the next.
In many ways, optimization should function more like a symphony than a collection of random instruments. The greatest results often occur when multiple factors are evaluated together and addressed in the proper sequence.