kristy.ramnarine@cnc3.co.tt
Kerry Montano holds a BA in Health and Nutrition from Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario, and is also a certified health coach and personal trainer.
Her passion has always been helping people adopt healthier lifestyles through nutrition, fitness, and wellness. But it was her own health journey that inspired her to introduce hormone optimisation services to Trinidad and Tobago.
Montano recalled that her body began experiencing several uncomfortable changes. After consulting her primary care physician, she was told everything was fine.
“I didn’t want to accept that because I knew my own body,” she explained. “I was fortunate enough to travel to the United States, where a clinic tested my hormones. That’s when I realised things were starting to change a little bit. I caught it early enough, they did a little tweaking, and I felt amazing.
“The problem was that I had to travel every 3–4 months for treatment. It was very expensive and not sustainable. I realised there were so many other women in Trinidad feeling the way I did and much worse.”
Determined to create change, Montano reached out to her childhood friend, Dr Shane Stone, a family practice physician with more than ten years of experience in primary care, preventive medicine, sports medicine, hormone management (including pellet insertion), and sexual dysfunction.
“I told him, ‘There is nothing here. Some people are fortunate to travel, but for others, there is nothing.’ He agreed to come back home and help me with it,” Montano said.
Together, they launched Lyf Medical, a clinic dedicated to hormone optimisation and HRT (hormone replacement therapy)—three years ago.
Hormones are complex and powerful chemicals. If their levels are not optimised, this can cause certain symptoms that make you feel like you’re not in control of your body. Even small imbalances in many hormones can cause significant changes in the body, sometimes leading to conditions that require treatment to maintain health and improve quality of life.
“It has been so rewarding to see the changes in our patients, both women and men,” Montano said.
“When they come back and say, ‘I feel amazing,’ it makes everything worthwhile.”
Dr Stone shared that upon returning to Trinidad, he realised that while there are excellent OB/GYNs locally, access to HRT treatment options remains severely limited.
“Hormone optimisation refers to diagnosing and treating hormonal imbalances, which can manifest as fatigue, weight-loss resistance, poor muscle build, brain fog, erectile dysfunction, mood disturbances, and other quality-of-life issues,” he explained.
“I am licenced in Texas, so I can write prescriptions there, and patients or their friends can bring them down. It’s a way to bridge the gap until better access is available here.”
Importantly, he emphasised that Lyf Medical’s goal is not to replace existing providers.
“There is no intention to take patients away from their OB/GYNs. In fact, we encourage patients to continue regular checkups, mammograms, and pap smears,” he said. “Healthcare should be a team effort, with doctors collaborating for the best outcomes.”
For Montano and Dr Stone, Lyf Medical is about more than just medicine; it’s about advocacy, awareness, and ensuring access to treatments that can transform quality of life.
“Women’s health is now getting the funding it deserves in many first-world countries,” Dr Stone noted. “This has been the standard of care for a very long time. The data is out there, and it’s important not to believe the rhetoric from 20 or 30 years ago. It’s just not true anymore.
“For us, it’s about changing that narrative here and giving women and men the care they deserve.”
When Lyf Medical first launched, Montano said it was promoted mainly through Facebook advertising.
“It grew exponentially just by word of mouth, so we don’t run those ads anymore,” she explained.
“There are many people out there who want to get help, including me. We go into a lot of detail with our clients, including hormonal tests. We are very thorough with constant monitoring and safety checks. It’s not just a one-and-done thing.”
Montano also highlighted how men have been stepping up to support their partners’ care.
“More husbands are attending visits, they’re understanding more, and they’re really, really empathetic,” she said.
“Sometimes a husband will come in and say, ‘My wife has improved; you’ve saved our relationship,’ and that is really nice to hear. There is a lot of misunderstanding out there, but we are seeing people go back to work who were unable to work before. That’s life-changing.”