Service
Mental Performance Review
A careful review for mood, focus, sleep, energy, emotional regulation, and performance when you are functioning but not feeling fully well.
Review frame
What comes into a Mental Performance Review
Inputs
- Labs
- PHQ-9 and GAD-7
- Insomnia screen
- Medication and supplement list
- Sleep, caffeine, alcohol, and substance pattern
- Symptom timeline
- Top goals
Output
- Symptom and timeline summary
- Lab-pattern read in psychiatric context
- Medication, supplement, sleep, and substance review
- Psychiatric-medical differential
- Named pathway for care or monitoring
Not this
- Not emergency care
- Not a diagnosis from labs
- Not a medication or supplement change by website
- Not a replacement for primary care, psychiatry, or therapy
- Not proof that biology explains every symptom
Clinical read
Mental Performance Review is a review product, not a lab-score reaction.
Functioning but not fully well
This route fits when the issue is not crisis, but reduced sharpness, steadiness, energy, sleep quality, or stress tolerance.
Performance has physiology
Sleep, iron, thyroid, B12, glucose, inflammation, hormones, medications, caffeine, alcohol, and psychiatric symptoms can all change performance.
No optimization fantasy
The goal is a better differential and a safer pathway, not a promise of limitless performance.
Process
The work is simple to explain and hard to fake.
- Bring the relevant records and symptom timeline.
- Anchor symptoms with screening tools instead of memory alone.
- Read labs beside sleep, medications, substances, medical history, and psychiatric presentation.
- Separate what is likely, what is possible, what is unlikely, and what needs another clinician.
What to bring
The review works better when the record is complete.
- Labs
- PHQ-9 and GAD-7
- Insomnia screen
- Medication and supplement list
- Sleep, caffeine, alcohol, and substance pattern
- Symptom timeline
- Top goals
Common questions
Questions people ask before they start.
Is the Mental Performance Review a diagnosis?
No. The review organizes the differential and names responsible next steps. Diagnosis, medication decisions, controlled-substance prescribing, and treatment changes require the right clinician-patient relationship.
What records make the review stronger?
Recent labs, prior medication trials, current medications and supplements, sleep pattern, substance and caffeine pattern, symptom timeline, and any relevant screening scores.
Can the answer be that no medical action is needed?
Yes. A serious review should be able to say when a finding does not explain the symptoms or when psychiatric care remains the best next lane.