Cutting Through the Noise of Nutrition
Astrid Moller, a licensed clinical nutritionist based in Miami.
Through her practice, Astrid helps adults rebuild their relationship with food in a way that feels sustainable, evidence-based, and deeply personalized.
She works primarily with individuals navigating metabolic conditions such as diabetes, insulin resistance, cardiovascular disease, hormonal imbalances and weight concerns.
But beyond the diagnoses, she supports people who feel overwhelmed.
Confused by conflicting advice.
Frustrated after trying everything.
Unheard within the healthcare system.
Her approach is not built on extremes or short-term fixes.
It’s rooted in science, clarity and real-world sustainability.
Most importantly, she helps her patients feel seen.
Bridging the Gap Between Science and Real Care
Astrid started her business because she noticed a disconnect.
There was solid clinical nutrition science available but many patients weren’t receiving care that reflected it.
Instead, they were navigating trends, quick fixes, and endless social media advice.
She wanted to bridge that gap.
To offer nutrition care that was grounded in research but delivered with humanity.
To create a space where patients could ask questions, understand their biology and build long-term health without fear or confusion.
The Reality of Building Within Healthcare
One of Astrid’s most challenging paths has been navigating the insurance system.
Becoming credentialed.
Securing contracts.
Working through denials and long waiting periods.
It requires persistence and resilience.
When you know patients are waiting for care but access depends on bureaucratic approvals, it becomes personal.
There have been moments of frustration, questioning systems that don’t always reflect real community needs.
But her commitment to expanding access keeps her steady.
Now, her biggest challenge is scaling responsibly.
Demand is growing, especially for evidence-based and bilingual nutrition care.
But for Astrid, growth can never come at the cost of quality.
Healthcare is not just a business, it’s a responsibility.
And if she’s honest, perfectionism can sometimes slow her down.
She cares deeply about doing things correctly, clinically, ethically, structurally.
That thoughtfulness is her strength, even when it requires patience.
At Reignelle, we honour women like Astrid who choose integrity over trends and who are building healthcare practices rooted in science, compassion, and long-term impact.
