Someone shows up exhausted, sleeping badly, carrying weight that will not budge, and the usual fifteen-minute appointment ends with a prescription and a follow-up in six months. That gap between what people feel and what a standard visit addresses is where Taylor Medical Wellness sets up shop. The practice, run in Atlanta by board-certified physicians Dr. Ava Taylor and Dr. Eldred Taylor, frames its work around root causes: hormones, metabolism, nutrient levels, and the slow drift of biological age, treated as things you measure before you act rather than guess at.
Bioidentical hormones and diagnostic testing
The clinical menu is broad without feeling padded. On the functional and regenerative side, the headline is bioidentical hormone replacement therapy, including progesterone pellets, sitting alongside longevity medicine and a genuinely diagnostic battery: biological age and epigenetic testing, bioimpedance analysis, food allergy testing, heavy metal screening, and metabolic assessments. They also list cancer support protocols, which is a serious thing to offer and not a phrase most aesthetic-leaning clinics put on the page. The diagnostics matter here, and they are the spine of how Taylor Medical Wellness works. A clinic that runs epigenetic and metabolic panels before recommending a hormone pellet is operating differently from one that hands out testosterone on a questionnaire, and the testing-first sequence is the most credible signal in the whole offering.
IV therapy options
IV therapy is its own department at Taylor Medical Wellness, and the list reads like the request sheet of patients who already know what they want: NAD+, glutathione, high-dose vitamin C, the Myers Cocktail, iron infusions, chelation, and ozone therapy. Some of these have stronger evidence behind them than others, and a careful reader should treat the more experimental drips as exactly that. What I appreciate is that the practice does not hide the breadth or dress every infusion up as a cure. It presents them as options a physician walks you through, which is the honest framing for this corner of medicine. The same instinct shows up across the rest of the site, where each service comes attached to a reason and a method rather than a marketing line.
Weight management and integrative care
Weight management leans on the drugs people are asking about now: semaglutide and tirzepatide programs, run as supervised medical protocols, not a quick script handed over a counter. Around that sit integrative psychiatry and pain management, which rounds Taylor Medical Wellness into something closer to a primary-care alternative for adults who want the holistic route than a single-service spa. The fact that one office covers hormones, nutrition, mood, and pain means a patient is not bouncing between four disconnected providers, and for people managing several overlapping issues at once that consolidation is a practical advantage worth naming.
Physician-performed cosmetic procedures
Cosmetic work is here too, and the detail that earns trust is who performs it. Botox, dermal fillers, Sculptra, and microneedling are all done by physicians, not delegated down a chain to a technician. That choice costs the practice efficiency and tells you something about how Taylor Medical Wellness positions itself: as a medical office that happens to do aesthetics, not an aesthetics business with a doctor's name on the door. The practice also carries its own Taylor MD supplement line for sleep, energy, and adrenal support, which is a common move for clinics like this and worth knowing about so a patient can weigh in-house products with clear eyes against the consult that recommends them.
Patient reviews and accountability
Reputation is where I want more than a polished homepage, and the picture for Taylor Medical Wellness is partial but not empty. The Yelp listing is active and carries 44 photos, though a confirmed review tally did not surface. Facebook shows a small sample, seven reviews, with 94 percent recommending the practice; that is a high share from a short list, so read it as encouraging without treating it as decisive. The Better Business Bureau lists Taylor Medical Wellness but does not show it as accredited, and no rating came through clearly. There was no confirmed Google star average to point to either. The site itself runs patient testimonials, which are pleasant to read but are curated by definition and deserve less trust than independent platforms.
None of that is a red flag. It is the normal footprint of a specialized clinic whose patients tend not to leave long public reviews. A buyer who likes a deeper paper trail will simply have less to go on, and that is fair to say plainly. The presence across Yelp, Facebook, and the BBB at least means Taylor Medical Wellness is a real, traceable entity, and the two named physicians give the whole thing an accountability that anonymous wellness brands rarely match. When a patient can read about Dr. Ava Taylor and Dr. Eldred Taylor by name and credential, the practice has already cleared a bar that a faceless online clinic never reaches.
Contact is handled the way it should be. The phone number and a full street address in Sandy Springs sit on the homepage, there is a contact and directions page, and booking runs through an online intake system. Nobody has to dig or fill out a vague form and hope for a callback. For a practice that wants new patients to commit to bloodwork and a consult, making the front door easy to find is the baseline, and Taylor Medical Wellness clears it comfortably.
The fair caution is one that applies to this whole category, not to this clinic specifically. Integrative and longevity medicine bundles well-established interventions with treatments still early in their evidence, and Taylor Medical Wellness lists both kinds side by side. That is not deception; it is the shape of the field. A prospective patient should go in ready to ask which therapies have solid trials behind them and which are more exploratory, and the two-physician setup means there is someone qualified to answer that honestly across the visit. Costs run higher than a standard copay, which is worth budgeting for before booking.
Set against a national telehealth hormone service like Hone Health, the contrast is clear. Hone is convenient, cheap to start, and runs largely by mail-order labs and video calls, which suits someone who wants testosterone optimization and little else. Taylor Medical Wellness is the opposite proposition: a physical Atlanta office, two physicians you can sit across from, in-person diagnostics, and a service range that spans hormones, IV therapy, weight medicine, psychiatry, and aesthetics under one roof. For a patient who wants depth, continuity, and a doctor in the room, Taylor Medical Wellness is the stronger fit. Geography and cost are the predictable trade-offs, and both are worth knowing going in. The published evidence, two named credentialed physicians and a diagnostics-first method, is enough to justify a call.
Business address
Taylor Medical Wellness, Weight Loss and Aesthetic Group
5901 Peachtree Dunwoody Rd, C25,
Atlanta,
GA
30328
United States
Contact details
Phone: 678-443-4000
Fax: 678-443-4090