Milwaukee, WI
Ozone Therapy clinics in Milwaukee
Ozone Therapy in Milwaukee, WI
intro
Milwaukee has a smaller integrative medicine market than coastal metros, but a steady demand pattern driven by Great Lakes region chronic Lyme, mold, and post-viral patient populations. clinics in and around the metro advertise ozone therapy, with a concentration in Wauwatosa, Brookfield, and the North Shore suburbs. Froedtert and the Medical College of Wisconsin provide the conventional referral backstop.
Milwaukee ozone providers offer major autohemotherapy, minor autohemotherapy, prolozone, insufflation, and ozonated saline, with 10-pass protocols less common than in Sunbelt metros. Wisconsin does not license naturopathic doctors with full prescriptive authority, so ozone clinics here operate under MD or DO supervision. Local demand often overlaps with Lyme-literate integrative practices that pair ozone with IV antibiotics, vitamin C, or glutathione. Patients should understand that ozone therapy is not FDA-approved for any medical use. The FDA 1976 declaration on ozone as a toxic gas with no known useful medical application has not been revised. The Wisconsin Medical Examining Board has scope over physician conduct, and patients should weigh informed consent, provider credentials, and evidence quality before any package commitment.
Dove Hydration & Wellness
- NAD IV Therapy
- Vitamin IV Therapy
- Ozone Therapy
- IV Therapy
- IV Hydration
Regulatory context
A note on Wisconsin's ozone therapy rules.
The "other" category is a catchall for regenerative wellness modalities with inconsistent federal oversight. Red light therapy devices (photobiomodulation) have narrow FDA 510(k) clearances for acne, muscle pain, and wound healing, not systemic regeneration. Whole-body cryotherapy is NOT FDA-approved for any medical indication and received an FDA safety communication in July 2016 warning of asphyxiation, frostbite, and burn risks. Ozone therapy is NOT FDA-approved for any medical use and the FDA has stated ozone is a toxic gas with no known useful medical application. Condition-specific regenerative offerings (hair restoration with minoxidil or finasteride, ED care beyond PDE5 inhibitors and shockwave) have varying approval depending on route and drug source.
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Wisconsin Medical Practice Act (Wis. Stat. Ch. 448)
Defines practice of medicine and delegation rules for wellness settings. -
Wisconsin Medical Examining Board Rules (Wis. Admin. Code MED)
Governs physician oversight of injectables, lasers, and device-based procedures.
The Wisconsin Department of Safety and Professional Services and Medical Examining Board investigate unlicensed practice and scope violations. Ozone and chelation clinics making disease-treatment claims risk board action. The Attorney General pursues deceptive health claims under the Wisconsin Deceptive Trade Practices Act. Enforcement is moderate and complaint-driven.