Infusions & micronutrients.
Constantly exhausted, pale, losing hair, struggling to focus — in women this surprisingly often comes down to an actual deficiency, iron above all. We are planning a physician-led infusion service with one clear principle: measure first, infuse second. No wellness cocktails on spec — targeted substitution where a need is proven. Register below if this interests you.
Iron deficiency is the most common nutrient deficiency of all — and hits women particularly often through menstruation, pregnancy and breastfeeding.
Source: WHOHeavy or long periods gradually drain iron stores. The resulting exhaustion is often blamed on everyday life — instead of on the ferritin level.
Source: AWMF guidelinesFerritin, vitamin B12, vitamin D and more can be measured objectively. Only what is missing gets replaced — orally where possible, by infusion where necessary.
Source: WHO / guideline principleWhat we are planning.
Not an infusion menu from a lifestyle catalogue — medicine with an indication:
Ferritin, blood count, vitamin B12, vitamin D, more depending on the question. The infusion starts with the diagnosis — not with the needle.
When tablets are not tolerated or not enough: intravenous iron under medical supervision — with follow-up monitoring.
Substitution of individually proven deficits — tailored rather than one-size-fits-all, with honest information about the state of the evidence.
Infusions take place under medical supervision in the practice: informed consent beforehand, monitoring during, clear documentation afterwards.
Who is it for?
- ·Persistent exhaustion despite enough sleep
- ·Heavy or long periods
- ·Known or suspected iron deficiency
- ·Hair loss, brittle nails, paleness
- ·Vegetarian/vegan diet with substitution questions
- ·After birth or while breastfeeding
Infusion service — register your interest.
No subscription, no commitment. We will contact you once — as soon as this service launches, with full details and pricing.
What you should know.
Do vitamin infusions actually do anything?
Honest answer: with a proven deficiency, yes — with full stores, the added benefit is not scientifically established. That is exactly why lab work comes first with us, not a catalogue. We will also tell you if an infusion is not sensible for you.
Why an infusion instead of tablets?
Tablets are usually the first choice. An infusion makes sense when oral preparations are not tolerated, not sufficiently absorbed, or stores need filling quickly — a case-by-case medical decision.
What does it cost and does insurance pay?
Iron infusions with a confirmed indication are often covered. Infusions without a statutory indication are self-pay. We will publish prices transparently at launch — and as always, you receive a written cost plan first.
No need to wait: many of these topics can already be discussed in our regular consultations today.
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