At Nabi Health, we believe healing starts by honoring the whole human, not just treating a diagnosis. We offer weight-inclusive, trauma-informed care that centers lived experience over rigid rules. Our philosophy is built on curiosity, collaboration, and a deep respect for each person’s autonomy, identity, and evolving relationship with food and body.

We are not perfect. And we do not expect our patients to be either.

This is a space for learning, unlearning, and growing together.

1. See the person, not the problem

We begin with presence, not assumptions. Before any goals or plans, we build a foundation of trust. We approach care with deep respect for the complexity of each person’s body story and lived experience. You are not a diagnosis or a weight. You are the expert in your own life—and we’re here to support your autonomy, body trust, and healing on your terms.

2. Care that heals, not harms

We practice weight-inclusive, anti-diet, trauma-informed care. We reject shame, stigma, food rules, and the false promise of control. We acknowledge the impact of systemic oppression, including fatphobia, racism, ableism, and transphobia on health, identity, and access to care. We do not support intentional weight loss as a treatment goal. Instead, we focus on body trust, autonomy, and sustainable well-being.

3. Health is about life, not restriction

We support people in building lives with more meaning, connection, and choice. Recovery means stepping out of food and body distress and into freedom, embodiment, and values-aligned living.

4. Progress over perfection

Trying again is a strength. We celebrate effort, nuance, and self-compassion over getting it right. We make space for grief, joy, frustration, resistance, and rest. All of it belongs.

5. Grow as we go

Our care is flexible and responsive. We honor nourishment, rest, movement, connection, and nervous system regulation as core to healing and care. We use ACT, intuitive eating, and mindfulness as tools to help patients reconnect with their bodies, not conform to a framework.

6. Healing takes a team

We work in partnership with patients and across disciplines. No one does this alone, not our patients and not our team. Collaboration, transparency, and shared power are core to how we operate. We also recognize that representation matters and are actively working to build a team that reflects the people we serve.

7. We are committed to the work too

There is no perfect way to eat, live, or heal, and we do not pretend to have all the answers. We examine our own biases, stay open to feedback, and invest in ongoing unlearning. Our commitment includes internal training, accountability practices, and compensation for lived-experience voices who help shape our model. This is real care: relational, evolving, and rooted in shared humanity.

8. Technology should support care, not replace it

We use technology to enhance access, reduce friction, and personalize support. Every tool is designed to strengthen the connection, not override it. Patients always know what’s being used and why. Tech at Nabi exists to serve autonomy, not control.