Step 1: Identify your pattern before choosing a protocol.
Most people don’t actually tolerate detox well when capacity has not been assessed first.
The Environmental Case Review is the first step in the Pure Alternatives System. It is designed to help identify what your body is carrying, what it can currently tolerate, and which path of support is most appropriate next.
For many people, symptoms don’t arise from a single exposure or event, but from an accumulation of environmental load over time — shaped by physiology, stress, genetics, and lived experience. When testing finally provides answers, it often brings both clarity and overwhelm.
This 12-week guided Environmental Case Review is designed to help make sense of that information carefully and thoughtfully. Rather than rushing toward protocols or detox strategies, the focus is on interpretation, context, capacity, and pacing — so decisions are grounded in what your system can realistically tolerate right now.
After your review, you will have a clearer understanding of your pattern and the next appropriate step. If continuation is appropriate, you may be guided into a structured support path designed to build capacity, support progression, or continue the work in the right sequence.
How This Fits Into the Pure Alternatives System
The Environmental Case Review is not meant to function as a random detox consult or isolated lab review. It is the starting point for understanding your current pattern and determining what your body can actually support.
From there, the next step may involve one of two general paths: building capacity and stability first, or moving into more targeted progression if your system is ready.
What Happens After Your Review
Based on your results, you will be placed into one of two paths. This is not chosen arbitrarily — it is determined by your current physiological capacity, symptom pattern, and what your system can realistically tolerate.
Path A — Build Capacity
For individuals with lower tolerance, higher reactivity, or signs of system overwhelm. The focus is on stabilizing the system, supporting energy production, improving elimination pathways, and reducing reactivity before any direct detox or targeted interventions are introduced.
Path B — Targeted Progression
For individuals with adequate capacity who are ready for more direct support. The focus is on addressing underlying patterns, supporting detox pathways more actively, and progressing forward while maintaining stability and resilience.
What This Means Going Forward
The Environmental Case Review is the first step. It does not commit you to a long-term program.
After your review, your next step is determined based on your capacity and your case pattern.
Path A — Build Capacity
Typically involves foundational support and stabilization. This is often shorter in duration and lower intensity, focused on helping your system tolerate further work.
Path B — Targeted Progression
For those with adequate capacity, this may involve a more structured and extended approach to addressing underlying patterns over time.
You will not be placed into anything without clarity. Recommendations are discussed with you first, and you decide whether to continue.
This structure helps prevent the common pattern of starting too aggressively and feeling worse. Instead, the work begins where your body can actually respond and build from there.
Who this is for
- You’ve tried detox products or protocols and felt worse
- You haven’t tried detox, but symptoms persist and you want clarity before taking the next step
- You suspect environmental exposures may be contributing to symptoms and want a structured review
- You want interpretation and a paced plan based on capacity — not another aggressive protocol
- You want to understand whether your body needs foundational capacity support or more targeted progression
Who this is not for
- You’re looking for a quick cleanse, one-size-fits-all detox, or a “push through symptoms” approach
- You’re seeking emergency or urgent medical care
- You only want a supplement list without assessment, interpretation, or sequencing
- You do not want to consider follow-up support if your case requires a longer process
What’s Included
- A comprehensive environmental laboratory assessment, including a full EnviroTox panel
- A structured 12-week review period with weekly 30-minute guided sessions
- Professional interpretation of test results in the context of symptoms, health history, and current physiological capacity
- A clear pattern breakdown to help explain where load, capacity, and symptoms may be intersecting
- Guidance on whether your next step is capacity-building, targeted progression, or continued stabilization
- Thoughtful pacing to help prevent overwhelm, misinterpretation, or rushed decisions
Additional or follow-up testing may be recommended as needed and is always optional.
Investment
$2,997
Includes a structured 12-week Environmental Case Review with weekly 30-minute guided sessions, professional interpretation, and paced recommendations focused on assessing physiological capacity — not forcing detox.
Payment structure:
• $1,600 due at booking
• $698.50 billed in Month 2
• $698.50 billed in Month 3
Environmental laboratory testing is ordered based on clinical indication. Additional or follow-up testing may be recommended and is always optional.
If continuation is appropriate after your review, next-step support options will be discussed based on your capacity, goals, and case pattern.

Laboratory Assessment Used
The Environmental Case Review uses a comprehensive environmental toxicity assessment to identify patterns of chemical exposure across multiple chemical classes.
Rather than looking at isolated markers, results are interpreted in context — including detox capacity, elimination pathways, bile flow, nutrient demand, and overall physiological stress — before any recommendations are considered.
This approach helps explain why many people feel worse when detox is started too early, and why capacity must be understood before attempting removal.
Many people seek an Environmental Case Review not because they’ve attempted detox, but because symptoms continue despite years of thoughtful effort.
Fatigue that doesn’t resolve with rest. Head pressure, brain fog, or anxiety that feels out of proportion. Digestive issues, inflammatory flares, hormonal disruption, or increasing sensitivity to foods, supplements, or environments.
Often, meaningful steps have already been taken — dietary changes, stress reduction, and other supportive approaches. Some individuals may even be working with practitioners. And yet, something still feels unresolved.
In many cases, what’s being missed isn’t a diagnosis — it’s capacity.
Environmental exposures place a continuous demand on the body’s systems of processing and elimination. When bile flow, mineral status, hydration, lymphatic movement, or overall resilience are insufficient, that demand accumulates. Symptoms are not random; they reflect a system carrying more than it can currently manage.
This is why some people feel worse when detox is attempted later — not because detox is inherently harmful, but because it is introduced before the body has the capacity to handle it.
Frequently Asked Questions
Ready to Get Started?
If this approach resonates with you, the next step is to schedule your Environmental Case Review.
This offering is intentionally structured for individuals navigating complex environmental health patterns who would benefit from guided interpretation, careful sequencing, and ongoing support. Before moving forward, we’ll confirm that this level of care is appropriate for your needs and that the timing is right.
The review begins with assessment and interpretation. From there, the next step is determined by what your body can realistically tolerate and what kind of support is most appropriate.
If you’re not sure where to begin, that’s completely normal. The first step is simply identifying which system needs attention first.
If you're ready to go deeper, we can begin with an initial consultation to determine which data is needed first, including whether testing will be most helpful.
