Technology and Preventive Medicine Converge in New Franchise Healthcare Model
Castle Rock Hormone Health is building around repeat consultations, steady data review, and a franchise model meant to carry that rhythm into more cities. Its services – hormone optimization, medically guided weight loss, peptides, and other wellness offerings for both men and women – are held together by continuity, with patients refining their health over time rather than engaging only when symptoms arise.
A Franchise Bet
Castle Rock says it has served more than 10,000 patients nationwide and plans to open 100 to 250 clinics in 2026. The question beneath the numbers is whether a healthcare company can grow quickly without making care feel rushed.
People who seek hormone-related care often arrive with concerns they’ve carried for a long time – energy, weight, sleep. Castle Rock describes its model as a patient-provider partnership built on regular diagnostic testing, clinical consultations, and continuous follow-up, allowing providers to evaluate trends and refine treatment over time rather than relying on isolated snapshots.
What Technology Does
Digital tools organize lab work, manage recurring follow-ups, and give providers a longer record of patient information – context that one short visit rarely captures.
“Technology enables consistency in patient experience while allowing providers to personalize treatment plans based on objective data,” said Christopher Stolzman, CEO and Co-Founder.
The longer view matters most in the exam room, where lab results often mean little without context and follow-up. Dr. Lee Moorer, Co-Founder and CMO, framed it this way: “Ongoing data and monitoring allows providers to make informed clinical adjustments, supporting improved patient outcomes and increasing long-term engagement.”
Membership and Trust
Castle Rock’s subscription model gives patients a regular cadence of contact – recurring consultations, repeated monitoring, and clearer expectations about what comes next. The company’s view is that patients remain more engaged when care is structured as an ongoing partnership rather than an episodic interaction.
Cash-pay pricing simplifies the front end of that experience. Medical billing often creates confusion long before any clinical discussion begins, especially in private care where costs can feel hard to predict. Transparent pricing gives patients a clearer starting point – what they’ll pay, what they’ll get, and what comes next.

















