For a history of preeclampsia, gestational hypertension, or placental dysfunction
Every woman who comes through a hypertensive pregnancy complication is left with two open clinical questions. Most have had neither answered.
Open question 1
Women with prior preeclampsia carry roughly a 15–25% recurrence risk in the next pregnancy. Most go into that pregnancy with no structured prevention plan, no first-trimester risk assessment, and aspirin started too late, at the wrong dose, or not at all.
Open question 2
A history of preeclampsia is associated with roughly a two- to three-fold higher long-term risk of cardiovascular disease — chronic hypertension, heart disease, stroke, and heart failure — building over years and decades. These are population-level associations, not a personal verdict. But most women are never told the map changed at all.
In 2020 the American Heart Association listed adverse pregnancy outcomes as risk-enhancing factors for atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. The standard primary-care risk calculators still leave pregnancy history out. This program puts it back in.
The Program
Same lab infrastructure, same consultation framework. You enter through whichever chapter your life is in right now.
Chapter One
For women planning another pregnancy after preeclampsia, gestational hypertension, growth restriction, or a placenta-related preterm delivery. Time-sensitive and evidence-backed:
Chapter Two
For women who are done having children, or not actively planning, who want the cardiovascular conversation that should have happened years ago — the missing piece between an obstetric history and a cardiologist's office:
How it runs
A phenotype-matched lab panel ordered through telehealth and drawn at a Quest or Labcorp near you. Results come back to me. You don't chase them.
A real consultation — sixty to ninety minutes. We walk through what your labs and your pregnancy history say about your specific picture, and what is modifiable.
A written action plan you keep, plus the handoff summary for your OB, your primary care doctor, or the preventive cardiologist we route you to.
Twenty minutes to see whether this is the lane for you.