From your first assessment to long-term maintenance, every CLCC patient follows the same structured journey. Here is what that looks like, stage by stage and month by month.
The CLCC patient journey runs through eight structured stages: Assessment, Disease Mapping, Severity, System Involvement, Program, Review, Progress Tracking, and Maintenance. Most patients see their first structured review by month two or three, with a fuller trajectory assessment around month six, though timelines vary by condition, severity, and individual response.
Your first visit is a comprehensive clinical evaluation, not a routine consultation. Complete case history, lifestyle patterns, existing investigations, and physical examination are reviewed together before anything else happens. This is the foundation every later stage builds on.
Your assessment findings are mapped against the CLCC Disease Expression Model, identifying which of the seven dysfunction categories, gut and liver function, metabolic health, immune and inflammatory activity, the nervous system and stress response, hormonal balance, cardiovascular health, and structural tissue, appear active in your case.
How your condition is affecting daily function is scored: symptom burden, impact on daily activity, medication dependency, and relevant biomarker findings, giving a clear picture of where your condition currently stands.
How widely the condition has spread across your body's systems is assessed. A presentation confined to one system is approached differently from one where several systems are involved at once, since the second usually needs a broader, more coordinated response.
Based on severity and system involvement, you are placed on a structured care program calibrated to the scope of what needs to be addressed. More contained presentations receive a more focused protocol. Multi-system presentations receive a broader, more comprehensive one.
Your care plan is reviewed at defined intervals rather than on an ad hoc basis, to check whether it is producing the expected response and to adjust it where it is not.
Objective markers, lab results, functional scores, and symptom tracking, are monitored at each review point, so progress is measured against evidence rather than assumed from how a given week has felt.
Once meaningful improvement is achieved, care shifts to a structured maintenance phase: sustaining the gains, watching for early signs of the condition beginning to return, and adjusting before it does.
The pace of improvement depends on your specific condition, its severity, and how closely the protocol is followed. This is a general guide to how the first six months typically unfold, not a fixed schedule.
Your structured assessment, disease mapping, severity scoring, and initial care program begin in this first month. Early focus is on reducing the load driving your condition: dietary correction, initial supplementation where indicated, and physical rehabilitation if relevant to your case.
Your care plan continues, with your first structured review checkpoint typically falling in this window. For many patients, early markers of change begin to appear, though the pace of this varies by condition, severity, and how closely the protocol has been followed.
A more substantial review point, often including repeat biomarker testing, to assess whether your care plan is producing the expected response. The protocol is adjusted here based on what the evidence shows, not left unchanged by default.
A meaningful assessment of your overall trajectory. Patients responding well may begin transitioning toward the maintenance phase. Those who need more time continue with an adjusted, more targeted protocol. Timelines vary meaningfully by condition and individual, and this stage reflects where you are, not a fixed deadline.
Every patient journey at CLCC begins the same way: a comprehensive evaluation that maps what is actually driving your condition, before any care plan is built.