Your Questions, Answered
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Functional Medicine packages are a structured, episodic deep-dive — built to investigate and correct a specific set of symptoms over a defined program. Concierge Membership is an ongoing primary care relationship, not a one-time program. Most people start with Functional Medicine to address something specific, then move into Concierge once they want continuous access — though either can be a starting point on its own. Take the free Symptom Self-Assessment if you're not sure, or just reach out directly.
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No. Manna Wellness operates on a direct-pay model — this is what allows for the time, access, and depth that insurance-based practice isn't structured to provide. Many patients use HSA/FSA funds toward visits; check with your plan administrator on eligibility. (Whether labs are included or billed separately depends on which program you choose — see the Functional Medicine and Concierge pages for specifics.)
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Physician care — both Functional Medicine and Concierge Membership — is currently available to patients located in Texas only, due to medical licensing requirements. Digital resources, including courses and the Symptom Self-Assessment, are available nationwide regardless of where you live.
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Yes. All clinical communication and visits run through a HIPAA-compliant platform built specifically for healthcare — not video conferencing software repurposed for medical use.
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If you're experiencing a medical emergency, call 911 or go to your nearest emergency room immediately. Messaging and visits — across both Functional Medicine and Concierge — are for non-emergency care and ongoing management, not situations requiring immediate, in-person intervention.
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No. Faith is genuinely part of how Dr. Morgan approaches medicine — care, stewardship, and seeing the whole person, not just a chart of symptoms — but it's not a requirement for the people he treats. Every patient is welcome, regardless of belief.
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Because it's not branding — it's the actual framework behind how care here is approached: the conviction that the body was created with order and the capacity to heal, and that caring for it well is a form of stewardship. That conviction shapes the how, not who's eligible for care.