In a heartfelt episode of Mornings with Missy, host Missy sits down with Carrie Wolhart, a dedicated nurse practitioner and owner of Quick Med Health in Henryetta, Oklahoma. The conversation delves into Carrie’s inspiring journey, the realities of women’s health, and the transformative power of hormone replacement therapy (HRT). Drawing from personal stories and professional expertise, Carrie emphasizes community, resilience, and proactive wellness. Here’s a breakdown of the key moments from their real-talk discussion.
From Tech to Nurse Practitioner: Carrie’s Path in Healthcare
Carrie Wolhart’s entry into the medical field feels almost predestined. With both parents working in healthcare, she describes it as “in my blood.” Starting as a tech, she steadily advanced to become a nurse practitioner. Living locally in Oklahoma’s Green Country area, Carrie recognized a significant gap in accessible healthcare – long waits at hospitals and overrun emergency rooms. This disparity motivated her to pursue her NP certification specifically to open a clinic that offers walk-in availability and addresses urgent care needs.
Her entrepreneurial spirit shone through early on. From a young age, Carrie was always finding ways to “turn a dollar into more,” even flipping her laundry money. This mindset carried into adulthood, where she balanced motherhood, education, and business ambitions.
A Mother’s Journey: Raising a Child with CHARGE Syndrome
Carrie is a mom first, with three wonderful boys. Her youngest, now five, has CHARGE syndrome—a rare genetic condition similar to the autism spectrum, with outcomes ranging from highly functional to severe. Diagnosed around day seven after birth in April 2020, the news came amidst preparations for his open-heart surgery due to a congenital heart condition.
Daily life involves managing sight and hearing deficits, a malformed ear leading to hearing loss in both ears, and balance issues from inner ear and vision problems. Despite a grim initial prognosis—doctors warned he might never feed himself – her son has thrived with therapy at the faith-based Little Lighthouse school in Tulsa. “He’s really proving them wrong,” Carrie shares proudly.
The diagnosis unfolded during the height of COVID-19, adding layers of isolation. Carrie processed the information alone in the NICU, while her husband waited in the parking lot for eight hours a day. “You had to grow up really quickly,” she reflects, highlighting the stress of relaying complex medical details to a non-medical partner while grappling with fear and uncertainty.
Finding Strength in Family, Faith, and Community
Carrie’s coffee mug, emblazoned with “Strength,” serves as her daily mantra: “If we don’t have strength, then what do we have?” She draws this from her faith, family, and friends, emphasizing that no one walks through challenges alone. “It’s who we have around us that are holding us up.”
Community is a core theme. Carrie joined the show to foster connections among women, creating a sense of familiarity even for those who’ve never visited her clinic or Missy’s dealership. “When we see each other out on the street, it feels like we know each other,” she says. This bond, built through shared stories on social media and TV, underscores the show’s mission of real women, real talk.
Why Henryetta, Oklahoma? Revitalizing Local Healthcare
Choosing Henryetta, Oklahoma for Quick Med Health wasn’t random—it’s the “million-dollar question,” as Missy puts it. Carrie feels deeply tied to the area, where her children attended school (Henryetta and Dewar). She saw the lack of urgent care options compared to larger cities, forcing locals to rely on overwhelmed ERs.
After years in healthcare management, Carrie craved autonomy: “I wanted to be my own boss. I didn’t want to be told what was right or wrong.” Prioritizing patients over finances, she invested in a historic but dilapidated Main Street building, transforming it into a vital community hub. The area has since sustained her clinic and a neighboring one, with Carrie maintaining a supportive friendship with its owner, Susan.
Her “helping heart” drives the clinic’s evolution, offering sick visits, chronic disease management, wound care (both in-clinic and at-home for elderly patients), and more. “I want to help anyone and do anything that this community needs,” she explains, blending urgent care with wellness and restoration.
Breaking Taboos: The Reality of Hormone Shifts in Women
As women age, many experience a sudden “I don’t care” attitude or loss of filter—often mistaken for a spiritual awakening. Carrie clarifies: “That is our hormones shifting.” Missy shares her mid-50s realization: “You just wake up one day and realize this isn’t normal.” It’s a taboo topic, with traditional medicine dismissing symptoms as inevitable aging. “We should just deal with it,” but Carrie insists, “That is not true.”
Symptoms are more extensive than expected: sleep disturbances (difficulty falling or staying asleep), low zest for life, irritability (beyond “just emotional”), physical changes like vaginal atrophy and decreased sex drive, weight loss resistance, migraines, and skin/hair alterations. Missy recounts her own “witchy” grouchiness, unexplained anger, and vanished drive: “Where was the drive? Nothing has changed.”
Social media echoes this, with women hitting a certain age and shedding filters due to hormonal imbalances, not enlightenment.
Debunking Myths and Understanding HRT
Many women suffer silently, told by doctors to “exercise more” despite efforts. Carrie notes this advice stems from outdated medical training: “What these providers are telling you is not right or wrong. It’s what we were taught.” Labs often show “normal” ranges (e.g., testosterone 2–40), but symptoms indicate otherwise. “Normal is just a range,” she says. “If you’re symptomatic, you’re not normal.”
By age 40, women lose about half their testosterone reserve, exacerbated by nutrient-poor modern diets (e.g., needing 12–20 bowls of kale for past nutritional value). Genetics and hormone carriers play roles – diet helps but isn’t enough.
HRT isn’t one-size-fits-all; it’s individualized. Missy was encouraged by the lab-based approach: “We’re going to do your labs and go from there.” Her low levels were a revelation: “There wasn’t a protein shake that was going to do it for me.”
The HRT Process: Simple, Effective, and Life-Changing
The process is straightforward: Start with a consultation to discuss symptoms, followed by extensive lab work. Results determine candidacy and method—orals (daily rollercoaster), injections (weekly fluctuations), or pellets (Carrie’s favorite for steady 3–4-month release).
Pellets involve minimal discomfort—a quick “prick”—and last months, ideal for busy lives. Benefits emerge subtly: The worst symptom (e.g., mood shifts) improves in 7–10 days and returns first when due for renewal. Missy experienced dramatic mood stabilization.
Age range? Anyone 18+, with clients up to 96. It’s not just for menopause—younger women benefit too. Brain health is a key perk: Hormones enhance clarity and cellular synapses, countering fog. “Beauty starts within,” Carrie says, impacting every system, including skin.
Expanding Horizons: Other Services at Quick Med Health
Beyond HRT, Quick Med offers comprehensive wellness for all genders. Highlights include vaginal rejuvenation (tying into HRT), laser treatments (skin tightening, body contouring, resurfacing, hyperpigmentation, hair removal), facials, chemical peels (“peel season” is here), IV hydration, neuromodulators like Botox, fillers, and PRP (platelet-rich plasma from your blood for regeneration).
Carrie stresses education: “Do your research. Be your own advocate in healthcare.” Missy admits she’s only scratched the surface with HRT and Botox—there’s much more to explore.
Toast to Community and Future Conversations
Shoutout to Rheba’s Buds & Blooms for the table florals. Carrie will return for deeper dives, like vaginal rejuvenation. Viewers are invited to submit cup photos and stories via email for features.
As women, Carrie and Missy agree: Juggle with grace, like a swan paddling beneath calm waters. When pursuing your passion, “everything else is going to fall in place.” Tune in Tuesdays at 10 a.m. for more empowering stories. Cheers to strength, health, and connection!