Table of Contents
A Good Beginner Gym Sports Workout

(A simple 3-days-per-week plan for strength, conditioning, mobility, and safer progress)
Starting at a sports training gym can feel exciting—and a little overwhelming. There are racks, machines, turf lanes, sleds, rowers, dumbbells, and people doing movements you’ve never tried. The good news is that beginners don’t need “fancy” workouts to make real progress. What you need is a routine that builds a strong base: healthy movement, full-body strength, simple cardio, and smart recovery.
Most beginners do best with three full-body sessions per week (for example: Monday–Wednesday–Friday). This spacing gives your body time to adapt, recover, and come back stronger. Many beginner plans also emphasize learning the equipment, keeping workouts manageable (often 30–45 minutes), and using rest days or light activity days so you don’t burn out or get hurt.
Below is a beginner-friendly sports training gym plan that focuses on compound movements (moves that train multiple muscles at once), builds functional strength, improves stability, and supports athletic movement.
What “Good” Means for a Beginner Gym Workout
A good beginner workout should do four things:
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Teach your body the basics: squat, hinge, push, pull, brace, carry
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Build total-body strength with safe, repeatable form
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Improve conditioning without crushing your joints or recovery
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Keep you consistent (because consistency beats “perfect” workouts)
Many beginner resources recommend a mix of strength and cardio, with simple progress each week.
The Beginner Rules That Keep You Safe (and Making Progress)
Before you see the plan, use these rules every time you train:
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Start lighter than you think. Your first goal is clean form, not max weight.
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Use the “2–3 reps left” rule. The last few reps should feel challenging but controlled—not sloppy.
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Rest 60–90 seconds between sets for most strength work (longer if needed).
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Stop sharp pain. Muscle burn and effort are normal; sharp pain is not.
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Track just 3 things: weights used, reps done, and how hard it felt (easy/medium/hard).
The Weekly Schedule (3 Days Per Week)
Here’s the simplest structure:
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Day 1: Full-Body Foundation
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Day 2: Full-Body Strength + Core
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Day 3: Full-Body Athletic Circuit + Conditioning
On non-lifting days, keep it light:
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Active recovery: walking, easy bike, mobility work, light stretching
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Rest day: real rest if you’re sore, sleeping poorly, or stressed
Many beginner schedules intentionally include rest and active recovery days so your body can rebuild.
Warm-Up Template (8–12 Minutes)
A warm-up should increase blood flow, wake up your joints, and prepare your patterns.
1) Easy cardio (3–5 minutes)
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Treadmill walk, bike, rower, or elliptical (easy pace)
2) Dynamic mobility (3–4 minutes)
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Hip circles or hip openers
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Arm circles
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Thoracic rotations (upper-back rotations)
3) Movement prep (2–3 minutes)
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Bodyweight squat × 8
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Glute bridge × 10
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Plank × 20 seconds
This kind of warm-up structure is common in beginner routines: light cardio plus movement drills.
The Workout Plan (Beginner Sports Training Gym)
Day 1: Full-Body Foundation (Strength + Easy Conditioning)
A) Squat pattern
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Goblet squat or box squat: 3 sets × 8–12 reps
B) Push pattern
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Incline push-up (hands on bench) or machine chest press: 3 × 8–12
C) Pull pattern
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Seated cable row or dumbbell row: 3 × 8–12
D) Hinge pattern
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Romanian deadlift (light dumbbells) or hip hinge with kettlebell: 3 × 8–12
E) Core stability
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Front plank: 3 × 20–40 seconds
F) Low-impact conditioning (finish)
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Rowing or biking: 8–12 minutes, easy-to-moderate pace
Many beginner guides focus on bodyweight squats, push-ups, rows, bridges, and planks to build an athletic foundation.
Day 2: Full-Body Strength + Core (More Control, Less Speed)
A) Lower body (single-leg)
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Reverse lunge or split squat: 3 × 8–10 each leg
B) Upper push
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Dumbbell bench press or push-up variation: 3 × 8–12
C) Upper pull (vertical pull)
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Lat pulldown or assisted pull-up: 3 × 8–12
D) Carry (athletic core + grip)
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Farmer carry (two moderate dumbbells): 3 × 30–45 seconds
E) Core (anti-rotation)
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Pallof press (cable/band): 3 × 10–12 each side
Optional easy cardio (if you feel good)
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Treadmill incline walk: 10–15 minutes
Some beginner gym routines include an incline treadmill finish to build endurance without sprinting.
Day 3: Full-Body Athletic Circuit + Conditioning (Beginner-Friendly)
This day is about controlled athletic work: steady effort, good form.
Circuit (3 rounds, rest 60–90 seconds between rounds):
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Bodyweight squat × 10–12
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Incline push-up × 8–10
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Cable row × 10–12
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Glute bridge × 12
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Plank × 20–30 seconds
Then finish with:
Conditioning choice (pick one, 10–15 minutes):
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Rower
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Bike
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Treadmill incline walk (easy-to-moderate)
Beginner programs often use short circuits to build work capacity while still practicing the basics.
How to Choose Your Starting Weight (So You Don’t Overdo It)
Here’s a simple method that works:
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Pick a weight you can lift for 8–12 reps with clean form
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The last 2–3 reps should feel hard but controlled
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If you can do 15+ reps easily, it’s probably time to go a little heavier
A great beginner win is using weights that let you move well, recover well, and train again in 48 hours.
What to Do If You’re Sore (And How to Recover Better)
Soreness happens, especially at the start. Recovery is not “doing nothing.” It’s doing the right things to help your body rebuild.
Helpful recovery habits:
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Sleep (your body repairs tissue during sleep)
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Hydration and protein (basic building blocks)
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Light movement (walking, cycling, easy mobility)
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Soft tissue work (foam rolling or gentle stretching)
Sports performance resources often emphasize that recovery helps prevent overtraining and lowers injury risk, especially when you’re building a new routine.
If you’re recovering from an injury or protecting a sensitive area, low-impact conditioning (such as rowing, water exercise, or recumbent cycling) can help you stay active without aggravating healing tissues.
Why Low-Impact Cardio Is a Smart Beginner Choice
Beginners often think cardio must be long, exhausting treadmill sessions. It doesn’t.
Low-impact cardio options that work well at sports training gyms:
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Incline walking
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Cycling/air bike (easy intervals)
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Rowing
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Elliptical
Some beginner cardio guidance emphasizes that cardio can be simple and scalable—like brisk walking—while still building cardiovascular endurance.
Integrative Chiropractic Care for Beginners (How It Fits Into Training)
Many beginners want to train hard, but their bodies may have hidden limits:
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tight hips or ankles that change squat form
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shoulder mobility limits that affect pressing
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one-sided weakness that shows up in lunges
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core bracing issues that stress the lower back
Integrative chiropractic approaches often focus on how the whole body moves, not just where it hurts. In clinical sports settings, the goal is commonly:
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Injury prevention by spotting movement problems early
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Better mobility so your joints move through clean ranges
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Improved recovery using a mix of adjustments, soft tissue care, and corrective exercises
This “movement-first” approach is frequently discussed in integrative sports chiropractic content, including functional movement assessments and targeted corrective strategies.
Corrective exercises: the bridge between “feeling better” and “moving better”
Corrective exercise programs are often described as a way to address imbalances, improve movement patterns, and reduce the risk of injury.
Examples of beginner-friendly supportive movements commonly recommended alongside chiropractic care include:
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Cat-cow
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Glute bridges
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Pelvic tilts
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Thoracic rotations
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Child’s pose
These types of exercises are frequently listed as mobility/core work that supports spinal and joint function.
Should You Get a Chiropractic Adjustment Before or After a Workout?
In general (and depending on your goals):
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Before training: often framed as helpful for mobility, alignment, and movement quality
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After training: often framed as helpful for recovery, soreness, and calming tight tissues
Several chiropractic clinic resources describe this as a goal-based decision—performance/prevention vs. recovery—rather than a strict rule.
A practical, beginner-friendly approach:
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If you’re learning new lifts and want the cleanest movement, consider scheduling before workouts
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If you’re sore and stiff after training, consider scheduling after workouts
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If your schedule is tight, consistency matters most (a regular plan beats a “perfect” timing plan)
Clinical Observations to Apply (Dr. Alex Jimenez’s Integrative Lens)
Across his clinical and educational content, Dr. Alexander Jimenez emphasizes that athletes (and beginners training like athletes) do better when care supports:
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movement quality and joint mechanics (so the body doesn’t compensate)
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early identification of imbalances (before they become injuries)
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progressive training with recovery (so tissues can adapt)
His integrative discussion on sports injury prevention highlights functional movement assessment concepts and targeted care to reduce avoidable setbacks during training.
He also discusses adaptive exercise and safe movement strategies (including mobility, balance work, and controlled strengthening) that match a beginner’s real goal: to build capacity without flaring pain.
Simple Progress Plan (4 Weeks)
Week 1: learn the movements
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Same weights for all sets
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Prioritize form and steady breathing
Week 2: add small volume
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Add 1–2 reps per set (same weight)
Week 3: add a small load
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Add 2.5–10 lb (depending on the lift) while staying in 8–12 reps
Week 4: repeat and clean it up
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Same weight as Week 3, but better form, smoother reps, better control
This kind of “small steps” progression is common in beginner programming: consistency first, then gradual overload.
Common Beginner Mistakes (And the Fix)
Mistake: doing too much too soon
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Fix: 3 training days/week, and protect rest days
Mistake: skipping warm-ups
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Fix: 8–12 minutes, every session
Mistake: chasing exhaustion instead of skill
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Fix: stop sets with 1–3 reps left (especially early on)
Mistake: ignoring mobility and recovery
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Fix: add 10 minutes of mobility or light movement on off days
Quick Beginner Checklist for Every Gym Session
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Warm-up (8–12 minutes)
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Squat pattern + push + pull + hinge
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Core stability (planks, carries, Pallof press)
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10–15 minutes low-impact cardio
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Cool down: light stretching + breathing
If you want a clear, repeatable “start here” routine, this is it.
References
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Planet Fitness. (n.d.). Strength and Cardio Workouts for Beginners.
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Planet Fitness. (n.d.). A Beginner Workout Plan for Your First Week in the Gym.
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Planet Fitness. (n.d.). The Ultimate Full-Body Circuit Workout for Beginners.
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Planet Fitness. (2019). Building a Beginner Cardio Workout Plan to Increase Cardiovascular Endurance.
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Planet Fitness. (n.d.). 5 Best Cardio Workouts for Beginners.
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Mikolo Fitness. (n.d.). Beginner Athlete Workout Guide: Build Your Foundation for Athletic Success.
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Mikolo Fitness. (n.d.). Beginner Strength Training: How to Build a Solid Foundation Step-by-Step.
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Refinery29. (2020). Beginner Gym Moves That Are Actually Fun.
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Under Armour. (n.d.). Your Beginner’s 7-Day Gym Plan to Start Strength Training.
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Sanford Sports. (2024). Why You Should Add Recovery Exercises Into Your Workout Routine.
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Squatwolf. (n.d.). Gaining Muscle & Strength: A Complete Guide for Women.
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10 Fitness. (n.d.). Beginner Gym Workout Routine: What Should You Do First?.
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10 Fitness. (n.d.). Gym Workouts for Beginners Made Easy.
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Asheville Medical Massage. (2025). Corrective Exercises: Restoring Balance and Preventing Injury.
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RP3 Rowing. (n.d.). Best Ways to Stay Fit While Recovering From Injury.
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RP3 Rowing. (n.d.). How to Maintain Cardio Fitness During Injury Recovery.
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Atlas Total Health. (2022). When Should I Get an Adjustment—Before or After I Work Out?.
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Nightlight Chiropractic. (2025). When’s the Best Time to See Your Chiropractor?.
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Elevate to Life. (n.d.). Top 7 Exercises to Support Your Chiropractic Treatment.
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Team Elite Chiropractic. (2022). At-Home Chiropractic Exercises To Speed Up Recovery.
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Arrowhead Clinic. (2025). Beyond the Adjustment: Top Exercises to Complement Chiropractic Care.
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El Paso Back Clinic. (2026). How Integrative Chiropractic Care Prevents Future Injuries in Athletes Using Functional Movement Assessments.
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PushAsRx. (n.d.). PushAsRx (Clinical Education Posts).
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LinkedIn. (n.d.). Adaptive Exercises in Integrative Chiropractic Care (Dr. Alexander Jimenez).
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YouTube. (n.d.). Beginner Gym Routine: Complete Week of Workouts.
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YouTube. (n.d.). The Best Workout Routine for Beginners.
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The information herein on "A Good Beginner Gym Sports Workout for Everyone" is not intended to replace a one-on-one relationship with a qualified health care professional or licensed physician and is not medical advice. We encourage you to make healthcare decisions based on your research and partnership with a qualified healthcare professional.
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Welcome to El Paso's Premier Wellness and Injury Care Clinic & Wellness Blog, where Dr. Alex Jimenez, DC, FNP-C, a Multi-State board-certified Family Practice Nurse Practitioner (FNP-BC) and Chiropractor (DC), presents insights on how our multidisciplinary team is dedicated to holistic healing and personalized care. Our practice aligns with evidence-based treatment protocols inspired by integrative medicine principles, similar to those on this site and on our family practice-based chiromed.com site, focusing on naturally restoring health for patients of all ages.
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Dr. Alex Jimenez, DC, APRN, FNP-BC*, CFMP, IFMCP, ATN, CCST
(Board Certified: Family Practice Nurse Practitioner—Multistate)*
(Licensed Nurse Practitioner & Chiropractor - Multistate)*
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(Board Certified: Internal Medicine)
(Licensed Medical Doctor)
Medical Director, Clinical Director & Collaborative Physician
NPI # 1164426749
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| Primary Taxonomy | Selected Taxonomy | State | License Number |
|---|---|---|---|
| No | 111N00000X - Chiropractor | NM | DC2182 |
| Yes | 111N00000X - Chiropractor | TX | DC5807 |
| Yes | 363LF0000X - Nurse Practitioner - Family | TX | 1191402 |
| Yes | 363LF0000X - Nurse Practitioner - Family | FL | 11043890 |
| Yes | 363LF0000X - Nurse Practitioner - Family | CO | C-APN.0105610-C-NP |
| Yes | 363LF0000X - Nurse Practitioner - Family | NY | N25929 |
Dr. Alex Jimenez, DC, APRN, FNP-BC*, CFMP, IFMCP, ATN, CCST
(Board Certified: Family Practice Nurse Practitioner—Multistate)*
(Licensed Nurse Practitioner & Chiropractor - Multistate)*
Clinical Director
Digital Business Card
Dr. Maria Cardenas, MD
(Board Certified: Internal Medicine)*
(Licensed Medical Doctor)*
Medical Director, Clinical Director & Collaborative Physician
NPI # 1164426749
MD License #: J2933
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