A patient drove in from Bonaire last month with a stack of paperwork from three previous providers — two aesthetic clinics and a primary care office — and a single question: which of the things she had been told was actually true. That question is the reason this article exists. Patients across Houston County and the Warner Robins area have been asking some version of it for years, and the answer deserves to live somewhere they can read it before they spend another afternoon in a consultation room.
I am not going to tell you Revitalize is the best med spa in Bonaire, Georgia. That phrase is a marketing claim, and marketing claims do not survive contact with patient outcomes. What I can tell you is how we actually run the practice, what middle Georgia patients consistently come to us looking for, and how to evaluate whether we are the right fit for what you need. From there you can decide.
Who actually drives in from Bonaire and the surrounding area
The patients who travel to our Warner Robins clinic from Bonaire, Perry, Centerville, Kathleen, and the broader Houston County footprint share a pattern. They have usually tried something local that did not deliver — a Botox visit that left them frozen for four months, a weight-loss protocol that handed them a prescription without ordering labs, a hormone consultation that lasted twelve minutes and ended with a generic pellet recommendation. They are not anti-aesthetics or anti-medicine. They are tired of being treated like a transaction.
The drive from Bonaire to our Warner Robins location at 840 SR 96 is fifteen minutes on a good day. Patients tell me that is not the deciding factor — the deciding factor is whether the visit is worth the parking lot. I take that seriously. The structure of every appointment is built around the assumption that a patient drove from somewhere, took time off, and expects something more than a rushed handoff.
What we actually offer at the Warner Robins location
The Warner Robins clinic phone is (478) 366-1244. Online booking runs 24/7. The full clinical catalog is available at this location — and if your situation needs something we cover, you do not need to drive to Columbus or anywhere else.
The services patients in the Bonaire and Warner Robins area most frequently come in for:
- Hormone therapy for women — perimenopause and menopause work, with bioidentical protocols
- Men's hormone therapy — TRT, Biote pellets, full panels including SHBG and free testosterone
- Medical weight loss — GLP-1 protocols built around lab data, not just BMI
- Aesthetic treatments — Botox, fillers, microneedling, laser, peels
- IV therapy for documented clinical indications
- Sexual wellness, hair restoration, and the adjacent specialty work
When I evaluate a new patient, I am almost always looking at two or three systems at once because that is how middle-aged physiology presents. A 47-year-old woman who comes in asking about Botox often has sleep disruption, central weight gain, and a libido shift she has not mentioned to anyone. The aesthetic concern is real, but it is rarely standing alone.
The clinical philosophy — what fifteen years of acute care taught me
I spent more than seventeen years in emergency medicine, the cardiac ICU, and the cath lab before opening this practice. That experience shapes how I run consultations in ways that matter. In acute care you learn quickly that the patients who get hurt are usually the ones who got a treatment without a workup, or got a workup that nobody actually read. I see this in the aesthetic and hormone space constantly — patients on pellets nobody is monitoring, patients on GLP-1s without baseline metabolic labs, patients getting filler in anatomical zones the injector did not understand.
Four principles drive how I practice:
Workup before treatment. I do not write a prescription or load a syringe without the data that justifies it. For hormones that means a comprehensive panel — estradiol, progesterone, total and free testosterone, SHBG, DHEA-S, full thyroid including reverse T3, fasting insulin, HbA1c, lipid panel, hs-CRP. For weight loss it means metabolic markers and a real history. For aesthetics it means face-in-motion assessment, not a photograph.
Conservative dosing. Whether the intervention is a Botox dose, a starting testosterone level, or a GLP-1 titration, I start lower than most providers. Two reasons. First, you can always add. You cannot subtract a four-month neuromodulator effect or six weeks of an overshot hormone level. Second, the patient who reports steady improvement at a moderate dose with a planned two-week recheck is going to do better long-term than the one who got loaded at week one and is now living with side effects.
Honesty about candidacy. If what you are asking for will not give you what you actually want, I will tell you. I turn patients away regularly — not because the request is unreasonable, but because the anatomy or the lab picture says a different intervention is the right move. A meaningful percentage of patients are surprised by that conversation. Most thank me for it later.
Continuity over transactions. The conditions we treat — hormonal decline, metabolic dysfunction, the slow drift of facial aging — are long-arc clinical relationships. I am not interested in patients who come in once. I am interested in patients I can follow for years and adjust the plan as their physiology shifts.
Ready to schedule at Columbus or Warner Robins?
Online booking is open 24/7. The JaneApp portal handles both locations — pick the one that works for your schedule. Call either clinic during business hours if you prefer to talk through scheduling first.
What I look for at the first visit
The first visit is structured to gather everything I need to make a real recommendation at the second visit. I am asking about:
- Medical and surgical history, including anything you have tried that did not work
- Current medications and supplements — every single one, including the gas station pre-workout
- A symptom inventory in your own words, ranked by what bothers you most
- Family history relevant to hormones, cardiovascular disease, and cancer
- Sleep architecture, stress load, alcohol use, training history
- The two or three goals you actually care about, and the things you do not want to do
Lab work is ordered at this visit if you do not have recent results. I want a full panel, not a screening test. The reference range your last provider used to tell you that you were "normal" was built across an entire adult population — it tells me almost nothing about whether your current numbers are appropriate for your physiology and your symptoms.
The second visit is the lab review. We sit down with the data together. I walk you through what each marker means in your specific context, and we build the treatment plan from there. By that visit, you are looking at the same numbers I am, and the conversation is grounded in something real.
The Bonaire and Warner Robins context, specifically
A few things that come up consistently with patients in this area. Many work shifts at Robins Air Force Base or commute into Macon — that schedule wrecks cortisol patterns and sleep architecture, and it shows up in the labs. Patients who have been deployed or who serve actively have layered exposures and stress profiles that need to be considered when interpreting hormone levels. The summer heat in middle Georgia drives chronic dehydration that masquerades as fatigue and headache. None of these are exotic. All of them affect what the workup needs to look at.
The geographic point is that you do not need to drive to Atlanta for a thoughtful workup. The clinical model in Warner Robins is identical to what we run in Columbus. Same lab partners. Same compounding pharmacy partners. Same protocols. Same provider — I rotate between both locations on a published schedule and the JaneApp portal will show you which days I am at which clinic.
How to actually book
In order of speed:
- Online booking, 24/7. The JaneApp portal handles the full appointment catalog. If you are not sure what to book, the comprehensive workup pathway will route you to the right consultation type.
- Call (478) 366-1244 during business hours. The front desk can talk through scheduling and flag specific provider preferences.
- Walk in for scheduling questions during business hours. Less efficient than calling but available.
New-patient appointments are usually within one to two weeks. Urgent needs — a medication refill that is timing out, an acute issue — can usually be accommodated faster. Call directly for those.
The clinical next step
If you are reading this because you are weighing whether the drive from Bonaire to our Warner Robins clinic is worth it, the only honest way to know is to bring me your top three concerns and whatever lab work you have. We will spend the first visit building the picture and the second visit deciding what to do about it. That is the structure. There is no soft sell version of it, and there is not a faster version that produces better outcomes.
Book the consultation, bring your medication list, and bring the labs. We will start there.
Medical disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Individual clinical decisions should be made in consultation with a qualified healthcare provider following appropriate evaluation. References to specific treatments, dosing, or protocols are informational.
Travis spent 17+ years in high-acuity clinical medicine — emergency, cardiac ICU, and cath lab — before founding Revitalize. He is a Certified Platinum Biote hormone therapy provider, the published author of You're Not Broken — You're Unbalanced, and the founder of the Rebuild Metabolic Health Institute. His clinical writing reflects the same precision he brought to critical care: specific, honest, and built around what actually works.
Ready to talk it through with a clinician?
Book online or call either Georgia location. Every visit starts with a consultation.

