---
title: "Supporting Every Kind of Family | Naturopathic Support for LGBTQ2S+ Families"
entity: "blog"
canonical_url: "https://www.bodycotoronto.com/blog/naturopathic-support-lgbtq2s-families"
markdown_url: "https://www.bodycotoronto.com/llms/blog/naturopathic-support-lgbtq2s-families"
lastmod: "2026-06-20T09:00:46.000Z"
---

By Dr. Margot Lattanzi, Naturopathic Doctor

When people hear "LGBTQ2S+ care," a lot of what comes to mind is the basics: using the right pronouns, having a gender-neutral washroom, a flag sticker in the window. Those things matter, and honestly, they should be standard everywhere, not something worth pointing out.

Real LGBTQ2S+ care goes further. As a naturopathic doctor with over 8 years of experience, it means meeting families exactly where they are, in whatever shape that family takes.

A patient feeling safe enough to tell me they're on testosterone. A parent telling me their teenager just came out. Someone sharing that they're three rounds into a fertility journey that doesn't look like the "typical" path.

None of that should come with bracing for a reaction.

The more I know about what's actually going on in someone's life and body, the better I can help. There's no version of this care that involves judgment, only the version where I show up better informed.

Here are a few of the common ways I support families through this work.

## Fertility Support for Every Path to Parenthood

Family building doesn't follow one script. For some couples, that means IUI or reciprocal IVF. For others, it means working with a surrogate or moving through the long process of adoption or fostering. Each of these paths comes with its own physical, emotional, and hormonal demands, and most fertility care still assumes a single, narrow version of what that journey looks like.

Naturopathic support can meet you at whatever stage you're in. That might mean nutrient repletion and cycle tracking before a treatment cycle, comprehensive bloodwork to catch what a standard panel misses, or simply having a place to talk through how your body and your stress levels are holding up while you wait.

None of this requires a textbook scenario to qualify for support. If you're building your family in any way, there's a place for this kind of care in that process.

## Hormone Therapy Support for Patients in Transition

For patients on hormone therapy, the questions that come up often go beyond what an endocrinologist's appointment covers. How's my energy holding up? Are my nutrient levels keeping pace with these changes? What's going on with my sleep, my mood, and my skin? These are real, valid questions, and they deserve real answers, not a shrug because they fall outside someone else's scope.

Naturopathic care here works alongside your existing care team, not instead of it. That might look like monitoring nutrient levels that shift with hormone therapy, supporting energy and mood through different phases of transition, or simply tracking how your body responds over time, so adjustments aren't made in the dark. This is collaborative support, built around the treatment plan you and your prescribing physician have already put in place.

Transition isn't a single event. It's an ongoing process, and your body deserves attention throughout all of it, not just at the start.

## Support for Parents Navigating Life Alongside an LGBTQ2S+ Child

A lot of the parents I work with come in for something that sounds straightforward: fatigue, brain fog, trouble sleeping, the usual signs that something's off. And somewhere in that conversation, it comes out that part of what they're carrying is the weight of supporting a child who is trans, non-binary, or otherwise navigating their identity in a world that doesn't always make that easy.

That weight is real, and it's physiological. Worrying about a child's safety, navigating school systems and extended family, holding space for a kid who's still figuring out who they are, all of that is chronic stress, and chronic stress shows up in the body. Cortisol patterns shift. Sleep suffers. Nutrient stores get depleted faster than they're replaced. For parents who are also in perimenopause or another hormonal transition of their own, these two stress loads can stack on top of each other in ways that rarely get connected in a standard appointment.

This kind of stress is also easy to miss, because most doctors aren't trained to ask about it, and most parents aren't used to being asked. Comprehensive bloodwork and an unhurried conversation can catch what a rushed visit doesn't.

You don't need to be in crisis to bring this up. If you're parenting an LGBTQ2S+ child and you've been feeling worn down in ways you can't quite explain, that's worth naming, not pushing through quietly.

## Care That Meets You Where You Are

Whether you're working through a fertility journey, adjusting to hormone therapy, or carrying the quiet weight of supporting a child who's LGBTQ2S+, the goal is the same: you shouldn't have to explain your family before you can talk about your health. Naturopathic care should start from where you actually are, not from an assumption of what your life looks like.

If any part of this feels familiar, comprehensive bloodwork and an individualized plan are a good place to start. You can book a free discovery call to get the full picture of what's going on, and from there, we'll figure out next steps together.

As a naturopathic doctor, Dr. Margot focuses her practice on helping women and families optimize their health and show up feeling their best each day. She helps women and men balance their hormones, correct deficiencies, and optimize their gut health. She is currently accepting new adult and pediatric patients at Body Co for both naturopathic care and acupuncture. For more information on her practice style, additional readings and more, head over to her website at [www.doctormargotnd.com](https://www.doctormargotnd.com) or follow her on social media [@doctormargotnd](https://www.instagram.com/doctormargotnd) .

Disclaimer: Any information is for informational purposes only and is not intended to be used in place of professional medical advice. Always seek the advice of a qualified health care practitioner with any questions or health concerns you may have and before starting any new treatments (including supplements).
