Dr. Watson has a way he thinks things are, to the point that he’ll straight up ignore what you say so it fits his narrative. I did WellCentric’s program for six months, spent thousands of dollars, did an elimination diet (over the holidays, with absolutely no support—later Dr Watson made several comments complaining about how many of his clients don’t do what he asks them to do) and ended up steadily feeling worse. The supplement regimen that he put me on made me sick, and every time I brought it up he told me that I just needed to take them in a different order/time of day. When I had tried everything I could think of, I asked him to tell me how I should be taking them since apparently I was still doing it wrong. He said, and I quote, “I don’t want to do that, that’s tedious.” In month five, after not feeling better every single appointment, he said that all I needed was another very expensive supplement that I should have been taking this entire time. Why that supplement wasn’t recommended at the beginning wasn’t clear to me. It was also being recommended because of a problem that showed up during the treatment (but when I pointed that out, he didn’t respond). I came to WellCentric hoping for a scientific whole body approach, and that’s not what I got. It felt like after the elimination diet didn’t fix me, Dr. Watson and the nutritionist were totally out of ideas. I kept doing tests that cost multiple thousands of dollars, and I watched Dr. Watson go over the same test results saying different things each time. At the first couple of appointments, my test results were indicative of a complicated problem. Then, after I wasn’t fixed by supplements and an elimination diet, those same labs weren’t that bad and, quote, “every single problem that I was having was due to my gut health.” (Their nutritionist also said some absolutely insane, completely unscientific things. But I think their current nutritionist is different than the one that I worked with, so I’m not going to focus my review on the asinine things that she said.) Apparently, I’m the outlier here, which I guess can only be a good thing. I ended up going to a real doctor, and got some medication for an autoimmune disease it turns out I have, and I’m now feeling better. No thanks to Dr. Watson. (Also, for those who are curious — when you’re not paying for their program, you can continue to log into the portal to see your previous medical records for $160 a month.)