Treatment & Management based on glucose and A1C alone
Boxed into restrictive fad diets that don't improve numbers
Too much conflicting advice that is overwhelming
Lack of personalized treatment
Coexisting medical conditions that complicate diabetes management
Relying on random strategies without expert guidance
The Diabetes Shift
offers a
holistic diabetes
reversal system
that will
transform your
health and life.
Regain Control Over Your Health
Break Free from Deprivation Diets
Achieve Sustainable Weight Loss
Overcome the Challenges of Coexisting Conditions
Receive Tailored Support and Guidance
Simplify Your Diabetes Management
"I don’t pretend to understand the body chemistry at work here and frankly I am more interested in the results and less concerned about how it happened. I was skeptical in the beginning, but as time marched on I believed that I found a program and a provider who really understand the mechanics of my body and worked with me to improve my life."
Jeff W.
The Diabetes Shift
offers a holistic diabetes
reversal system that will
transform your health and life.
Regain Control Over Your Health
Break Free from Deprivation Diets
Achieve Sustainable Weight Loss
Overcome the Challenges of Coexisting Conditions
Receive Tailored Support and Guidance
Simplify Your Diabetes Management
"I don’t pretend to understand the body chemistry at work here and frankly I am more interested in the results and less concerned about how it happened. I was skeptical in the beginning, but as time marched on I believed that I found a program and a provider who really understand the mechanics of my body and worked with me to improve my life."
~ Jeff W.
Take the first step towards better health by undergoing a thorough health assessment, including a detailed body systems survey and optional blood work, to uncover the root causes of your health issues.
Your Health Assessment will be reviewed and evaluated. This allows us to identify the root causes of your health issues and create a customized treatment plan tailored to your specific needs.
With a personalized functional health report, you will receive a customized treatment plan and recommendations to help you understand your path to functional health and achieve your goals.
Imagine a life where diabetes no longer controls your daily activities, energy levels, or peace of mind. You’ve likely tried managing your condition with medications, strict diets, and conflicting advice, only to feel frustrated and stuck. This is where The Diabetes Shift comes in. As your guide and coach, I’m here to help you navigate the complex world of diabetes management and find a clear path to lasting health.
The Diabetes Shift is not just another generic program; it’s a personalized, holistic approach tailored to your unique needs. We understand that every person’s journey with diabetes is different, so our strategies are designed specifically for you. By focusing on the root causes of your diabetes and addressing coexisting conditions, we create a plan that works for your lifestyle, not against it.
Our approach saves you from the six major problems that stall diabetes remission: managing glucose and A1C alone, being boxed into restrictive fad diets, information overload, lack of personalized treatment, dealing with coexisting medical conditions, and the frustration of trial and error strategies. Instead, we offer a comprehensive system that simplifies diabetes management and helps you regain control over your health.
Imagine waking up each day with stable blood sugar levels, more energy, and a clear plan for your health. You’ll enjoy delicious, balanced meals without feeling deprived, and you’ll see real progress in your weight and overall well-being. More importantly, you’ll feel confident and empowered to make informed decisions about your health.
Working with The Diabetes Shift means having a dedicated partner who understands your challenges and is committed to your success. We provide continuous support, adjust your plan as needed, and celebrate your milestones with you. We aim to help you achieve sustainable health improvements, reduce your dependency on medications, and live a fulfilling life free from the constant worry of diabetes.
So, why is working with a coach like me so important? Because I’ve been where you are. I understand the struggles and the desire for a better, healthier life. With my expertise and personalized approach, I can help you break free from the cycle of frustration and truly transform your health. This isn’t just about managing diabetes; it’s about reclaiming your life.
Take the first step towards a healthier, happier you by booking a 30-minute strategy session with The Diabetes Shift. Let’s work together to create a future where diabetes doesn’t hold you back but propels you to new heights of well-being and vitality. Your journey to better health starts here.

Imagine a life where Type 2 diabetes doesn't dictate your day. Sounds too good to be true? It's not.
This simple guide will show what's possibly being missed and the probable root causes to blood sugar challenges.
"How I Dropped My A1c from 9.6 to 6.0 in 90 Days" is loaded with information to help break free from conventional wisdom.
Learn how to put type 2 diabetes into remission and restore the foundations of good health. Let me be your guide!
"There’s been a very well coordinated program by the doctor with thoroughness in checking into my blood chemistry and physiological makeup. I’m feeling myself again. At one time when I was getting medications from my regular doctor I was getting numbness and tingling in one of my legs from diabetic neuropathy. But since I’ve gone on this program and followed it, the numbness has gone away, my legs feel springier, I actually walk my dog and even started to jog a bit. And at one time I couldn’t cut my grass without taking a five minute break every ten minutes. Dr. Bletzinger’s program has been tremendous and I hope to continue the success that’s going. It’s been very successful and I appreciate the doctor’s help."
Richard H.

Dr. Joshua Bletzinger, DC is a leading functional medicine practitioner in the Chicago area.
After watching his father lose his battle with type 2 diabetes, Dr. Josh made it his mission to prevent others from experiencing the same health conditions. He set out to create a clinic that can help people reverse their conditions and take charge of their health.
Dr. Josh creates customized and individualized care plans that 1) arrest the progression of chronic health challenges, 2) enables the body to heal itself and 3) teaches the individual how to navigate a lifetime of vitalistic health.
Dr. Josh has extensive postdoctoral training in functional medicine, functional endocrinology, and clinical nutrition. He continues to pursue an exhaustive education in the care of chronic health challenges.

You Are Not Lazy. You Are Under-Recovered.
There is a belief that lives rent-free in the minds of driven people: if you are tired, you are not working hard enough. If your performance is slipping, you need more discipline. If you cannot recover between training sessions or demanding workweeks, that is a character problem to solve.
I want to offer a different framework entirely.
In two decades of working with athletes, active professionals, and high-output individuals, I have seen this pattern consistently: the people most likely to dismiss their fatigue as weakness are often the ones with the most significant recovery deficits. Not because they lack discipline. Because their output has been exceeding their recovery capacity for months, sometimes years, and the gap has been quietly compounding.
This is not a motivation problem. It is a physiology problem. And physiology responds to precision, not to willpower.
Recovery is not rest in the passive sense. It is not simply the absence of activity. Recovery is an active physiological process, a cascade of hormonal, neurological, metabolic, and structural events that restore the body's capacity to produce output again.
When that process is incomplete, when the cascade is interrupted, abbreviated, or chronically underpowered, the body does not return to baseline. It starts the next day, the next training session, the next workweek already in deficit. And over time, those deficits accumulate into what researchers have called non-functional overreaching: a state where continued effort produces diminishing or negative returns because the system cannot restore itself fast enough to keep up.
This distinction between functional and non-functional overreaching is well-established in sports science. A landmark review in the European Journal of Sport Science outlined how high-performing individuals often cannot differentiate between productive training stress and accumulated deficit because the early symptoms are nearly identical. Fatigue feels like fatigue, whether it is building capacity or depleting it.
When I assess a patient for chronic fatigue or stalled performance, I am looking at two primary systems. Both must recover adequately for output to remain sustainable. When either is compromised, the deficit accumulates in ways that are often invisible until the wall appears.
Your spine, joints, and connective tissues absorb and transfer mechanical load with every movement you make, during training, during work, during daily activity. When spinal mechanics are altered, or when soft tissue tolerance has been exceeded without adequate restoration, the nervous system begins compensating. It recruits accessory muscles, alters movement patterns, and modifies load distribution to protect vulnerable structures.
This compensation is intelligent. But it has a cost. The neurological overhead of managing altered mechanics runs continuously, at the gym, at the desk, during sleep. That overhead is one reason why patients with structural imbalances often describe feeling tired even after a full night of rest. The structural system was not off. It was still working.
Research on spinal load and neurological demand supports this. Panjabi's foundational work on the stabilizing system of the spine demonstrated that passive instability forces the neuromuscular system into continuous active compensation, a process that has real metabolic consequences beyond the structural ones.
On the biochemical side, recovery depends on the coordinated function of several interconnected systems: cortisol and HPA axis regulation, blood sugar stability, inflammatory resolution, mitochondrial restoration, and sleep architecture. When any of these is disrupted, recovery becomes incomplete.
Cortisol, for example, plays a central role in mobilizing energy during stress and returning the body to baseline afterward. In a well-recovered individual, cortisol peaks in the morning, tapers through the day, and reaches its lowest point at night, allowing deep sleep and cellular repair. In a chronically under-recovered individual, this rhythm flattens. Morning cortisol is low. Evening cortisol is elevated. Sleep quality degrades. The restoration cycle never fully completes.
The relationship between HPA axis dysregulation and athlete burnout is well-documented. A review in Sports Medicine identified disrupted cortisol rhythm as one of the most consistent biomarkers in non-functional overreaching, often detectable before performance decline becomes obvious.
Mitochondrial function is the other side of this equation. Mitochondria are responsible for converting fuel into usable cellular energy. Chronic training stress, oxidative load, and inadequate micronutrient support can reduce mitochondrial efficiency over time, meaning the same amount of sleep and fuel produces less restorative energy output. This is one reason why duration of sleep does not reliably predict recovery quality. The issue is not always how long you sleep. It is what your cells are doing while you sleep.
The patients who arrive at Spine Pain and Performance Center or RPA Health most confused about their fatigue are almost never sedentary. They are the ones who have been training consistently, eating reasonably, sleeping seven or eight hours, and still cannot understand why they feel like they are running at 60 percent.
What we find, consistently, is that their recovery systems have been outpaced by their output. The structural side is managing compensations that were never fully resolved. The metabolic side has a cortisol rhythm that never fully drops, a blood sugar pattern that is destabilizing overnight or under training load, or an inflammatory baseline that is elevated enough to impair cellular restoration without being high enough to show up as a flag on a standard panel.
None of this is visible from the outside. These are driven, capable, functioning individuals. The deficit is internal. And it compounds quietly until something gives.
The most common clinical miss in under-recovered patients is treating the output problem rather than the restoration deficit.
A patient reports declining performance. They are advised to reduce training load, take more rest days, and sleep more. This is reasonable advice, but if the recovery systems themselves are impaired, adding rest does not solve the problem. The mitochondria are still inefficient. The cortisol rhythm is still disrupted. The structural compensation is still taxing the nervous system overnight. More time off produces limited improvement because time is not what is missing. Function is.
This is consistent with what research on overtraining syndrome in Sports Medicine describes: rest alone is often insufficient when underlying biochemical and neuroendocrine dysfunction is present. Resolution requires addressing the specific systems that have been impaired.
Recovery capacity is a trainable, measurable system. It is not fixed. But improving it requires knowing which systems are underperforming and why.
From a structural standpoint, that means assessing spinal mechanics and movement patterns to identify where the nervous system is compensating and reducing that overhead so restoration can occur more completely during rest.
From a metabolic standpoint, that means evaluating cortisol rhythm, inflammatory markers, blood sugar stability, and micronutrient status to identify where the restoration cascade is breaking down. These are functional assessments, not a standard annual panel.
When both systems are addressed together, the improvement in recovery quality is often significant. Patients report better sleep, higher sustained energy, and improved performance output, not because they started working harder, but because their system can finally restore itself properly between efforts.
Chronic fatigue in high-performing individuals is most often a recovery deficit, not a discipline deficit.
Recovery is an active physiological process. When the systems that drive it are impaired, more rest does not solve the problem.
Structural compensation from altered spinal mechanics creates neurological overhead that runs continuously, including during sleep.
Cortisol rhythm disruption, mitochondrial inefficiency, and inflammatory load are among the most common metabolic recovery impairments and are frequently missed by standard workups.
Identifying which specific systems are underperforming is the only reliable path to restoring sustainable output.
If your effort level has stayed consistent but your output and energy have not, the missing variable is likely recovery capacity, not discipline. A Movement Intelligence Assessment at Spine Pain and Performance Center evaluates the structural side of this equation. A Functional Health Strategy Session at RPA Health looks at the metabolic picture. Both are designed to give you clarity, not generic advice.
** (JAMA 2012 Dec 19; 308 (23): 2459-96)
** Results may vary from individual to individual and are not guaranteed.
This site is not a part of Facebook website or Facebook Inc. Additionally this is not endorsed by Facebook in any way.
FACEBOOK is a trademark of FACEBOOK, Inc.
Disclaimer: This site is for informational purposes only. It is not designed to substitute for professional and individualized health advice. Please do not stop or start taking any prescription medication without the advice of your prescribing doctor, as this can be very dangerous to your health. You should always consult with your prescribing doctor regarding prescription drugs.
© RPA Health 2024 - Privacy Policy | HIPAA | Disclaimer