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HealingMaps Take: A Greer healthcare and aesthetics practice organizing peptide therapy by goal — healthy aging, immune, skin/hair, cognitive, performance, recovery, sexual, sleep, metabolic — with multi-route administration. The clinical team and protocols are tailored to each patient’s goals after consultation.

Galen Healthcare & Aesthetics offers 6 specific peptide compounds (BPC-157, TB-500, Sermorelin, Thymosin Beta-4, Epitalon, and Semax), placing it in the top half of the 8 South Carolina peptide clinics in our directory (the median clinic menu offers 6 compounds; the deepest offers 11).

✓ Last verified: April 27, 2026 — Edited & verified by Angelica Bottaro for HealingMaps Editorial Staff

LocationGreer, South Carolina
Address501 Memorial Drive Extension, Unit C & D, Greer, SC 29651
Phone(864) 520-2836
Websitegalenhealthcaresc.com
TreatmentsSermorelin, Ibutamoren, collagen peptides, and peptide protocols organized by goal (aging, immune, skin/hair, cognitive, performance/recovery, sexual, sleep, metabolic)
Conditions TreatedJoint pain and arthritis, skin anti-aging, bone loss, wound healing, muscle mass, gut health, cognitive support, sexual wellness, sleep quality, weight management
AdministrationSubcutaneous injection, Oral tablet, Nasal spray, Topical cream
CostN/A
InsuranceN/A

Who Will Prescribe Your Peptides?

Galen Healthcare & Aesthetics’s listing doesn’t publicly name a specific prescribing clinician. Before booking, ask the clinic to share their prescribing clinician’s full name, license number, and primary specialty.

What this means for you: Knowing who’s writing your prescription matters — that’s who’s responsible for your protocol, dose adjustments, and follow-up. Any actively state-licensed physician, NP, or PA can legitimately prescribe compounded peptides; once you have a name, you can verify their licensure for free at the CMS NPPES Registry and your state’s medical board’s online lookup.

Typical Peptide Therapy Cost in the U.S.

National peptide therapy pricing — based on 487 verified peptide clinics in our directory (April 2026 data). Adjust the calculator below to model your own protocol.

How Much Will Peptide Therapy Cost?
Estimate your monthly and program cost based on HealingMaps proprietary clinic pricing data across 487 verified peptide clinics.
Ongoing monthly
$200–$500
Range: $99–$600/mo
First month (incl. consult + labs)
$550
Range: $449–$950
Estimated program total
$1,550
Range: $944–$3,950
 
First-month setup varies. Some clinics bundle it; others bill consult + labs separately. Ask this clinic for exact pricing.
Your ongoing monthly vs. HealingMaps directory median for this compound Based on 487 verified peptide clinics nationwide
Select a peptide program to see pricing context.

Is Galen Healthcare & Aesthetics the right fit for you?

✓ Choose Galen Healthcare & Aesthetics if:

  • You’re in or willing to travel to Greer — peptide therapy generally requires in-person consultation and ongoing follow-ups.
  • You want flexibility on compounding vs. pre-batched fulfillment — this clinic discloses both 503A and 503B partnerships.

✗ Look elsewhere if:

  • You need to start treatment within the same week. Most peptide programs require baseline labs (1-3 days) plus pharmacy fulfillment (a few more days) before your first dose — plan on 1-3 weeks from consult call to first injection.
  • You’re shopping primarily on price and need per-compound rates published up front. Most clinics share specific pricing only on the consult call. Use our cost calculator above for ballpark estimates and confirm specifics with the clinic.

What to Expect at Your First Galen Healthcare & Aesthetics Appointment

  1. Initial consultation / intake — typically 30–60 minutes reviewing medical history, goals, current medications, and prior labs.
  2. Baseline lab work — most clinics require labs before prescribing growth-hormone secretagogues (CJC-1295/Ipamorelin, Sermorelin) and GLP-1s (semaglutide, tirzepatide), since those compounds modulate endocrine and metabolic pathways. Tissue-repair peptides (BPC-157, TB-500), sexual-wellness peptides (PT-141), and topical compounds are sometimes prescribed without labs. This listing doesn’t explicitly state lab requirements, so confirm on your consult call which panels they require for your specific protocol. Even when labs aren’t strictly required, they’re a smart personal baseline. See our guide to peptide therapy lab work for what to ask about.
  3. Protocol design — this listing publishes a deep menu (6 compounds, including BPC-157, TB-500, Sermorelin, Thymosin Beta-4, and others). Your provider narrows the protocol based on your goals, labs, and any contraindications.
  4. Prescription written + sent to compounding pharmacy — The clinic discloses both 503A and 503B sourcing, so fulfillment may be same-visit (503B pre-batched) or shipped after compounding (503A custom prescriptions) depending on the protocol your provider chooses.
  5. Self-administration training — this listing mentions oral capsule/tablet, nasal spray, topical cream/gel alongside (or instead of) standard subcutaneous injections, which can change the at-home routine. The clinic walks you through whichever format your protocol uses.
  6. Follow-up — typically a 4–6 week check-in to assess response, side effects, and whether dose or compound needs adjustment.

Most Galen Healthcare & Aesthetics patients report the consult-to-first-injection window runs 1–3 weeks depending on lab turnaround and pharmacy fulfillment.

What to Ask on Your Galen Healthcare & Aesthetics Consult Call

The questions below are pulled from the gaps in this specific listing — areas the clinic doesn’t publicly answer that you should clarify before booking. Each one is designed to get you a useful answer in 30 seconds or less.

  • “Which of your peptides is most commonly prescribed for my goals?” Helps you understand whether the clinic’s expertise matches what you’re trying to achieve.
  • “Can you share the supervising physician’s full name and license number?” HealingMaps editorial wasn’t able to match the listed clinical lead to a single CMS NPPES record — verify directly so you know who’s actually responsible for your prescription.
  • “Which lab panels do you require for the protocol you’d recommend for me?” Clinics typically require baseline labs for hormone-modulating compounds (semaglutide, tirzepatide, growth-hormone secretagogues) and may skip them for some tissue-repair or topical compounds. Knowing your clinic’s specific lab requirements helps you compare to peers — and even when not required, baseline labs are smart personal protection.
  • “Is this entirely cash-pay, or do you accept any insurance for the GLP-1 path (semaglutide, tirzepatide)?” Compounded peptides are almost never covered, but brand-name GLP-1s sometimes are with prior authorization.
  • “What’s the total first-month cost — consult fee, labs, and initial prescription combined?” First-month all-in is usually 1.5–2× the recurring monthly cost. Ask for an itemized breakdown.
  • “Is follow-up telehealth-friendly, or are in-person visits required at every milestone?” The listing doesn’t mention telehealth — important to know if you travel or move.
  • “From my consult to my first injection, how long is the typical timeline?” Lab turnaround + pharmacy fulfillment usually means 1–3 weeks. Confirms expectations.

About Galen Healthcare & Aesthetics

Galen Healthcare & Aesthetics operates in Greer, South Carolina and offers peptide therapy to patients across the Greenville metro. The clinic’s peptide menu includes sermorelin, ibutamoren, collagen peptides and related compounds, administered via subcutaneous injection, oral tablet, nasal spray, topical cream. Protocols are provider-reviewed with dose and compound matched to each patient’s target condition.

For more on how peptide therapy works, see our guide to peptide therapy.

How Galen Healthcare & Aesthetics stacks up in the Greenville peptide market

If you’re weighing Galen Healthcare & Aesthetics against other Greenville peptide clinics, one thing stands out: it’s one of only two clinics in the Greenville area we’ve reviewed that openly discloses its 503A FDA-registered compounding pharmacy sourcing.

How we vetted this clinic

Before any peptide clinic lands in our directory, we run it through four checks: Is there a named physician or licensed provider we can verify? Does the clinic publish its specific peptide compounds on its own site (not just a vague “peptide therapy” service page)? Is pharmacy sourcing — 503A or 503B, FDA-registered — actually disclosed? And does the clinic have a real brick-and-mortar address we’ve independently confirmed? See our full vetting rubric →

What People Like

Galen offers the broadest administration mix in the Greenville area — injection, oral, nasal spray, and topical — letting patients pick a delivery route that fits their schedule and comfort level. The Greer location serves the east Greenville metro and upstate communities.

What People Don’t Like

Most specific peptide compounds are not named publicly — the goal-based categories let staff match behind the scenes but require a consultation to see the full compound list. Pricing is not published.

Getting Started at Galen Healthcare & Aesthetics

New patients call (864) 520-2836 or visit the Memorial Drive Extension location. The clinical team identifies the primary goal — aging, performance, recovery, sexual, cognitive — and matches a peptide protocol with the corresponding administration route.

Explore more peptide therapy clinics on our peptide therapy near me directory.

Learn more about this treatment:

Looking for more BPC-157 providers? Browse our directory of BPC-157 and recovery peptide clinics — including options in South Carolina across the United States.

See also: — related HealingMaps coverage.

Frequently Asked Questions

What peptides does Galen Healthcare & Aesthetics offer?

Based on this listing, Galen Healthcare & Aesthetics names 6 specific peptide compounds: BPC-157, TB-500, Sermorelin, Thymosin Beta-4, Epitalon, and Semax. The clinic may offer additional compounds not published on its public listing — confirm the full menu on a consult call.

Is the named clinical lead at Galen Healthcare & Aesthetics verifiable in public records?

HealingMaps editorial wasn’t able to match the named clinical lead to a single NPI in the federal CMS NPPES registry — this can happen when the listing names a generic role (“clinical team”, “supervising physician”) rather than a specific person, or when name variants don’t return an exact match. Ask the clinic to share their physician’s full name and license number on the consult call.

Does Galen Healthcare & Aesthetics offer telehealth or virtual visits?

Galen Healthcare & Aesthetics doesn’t mention telehealth or virtual visits on its listing. Most peptide clinics require in-person evaluation for the initial consult; some offer virtual follow-ups once a patient is stable. If geography or travel matters to you, ask on the consult call whether they can prescribe and follow up virtually — and which states they’re licensed to do so in.

How does Galen Healthcare & Aesthetics compare to other South Carolina peptide clinics?

Among verified South Carolina peptide clinics in the HealingMaps directory, Galen Healthcare & Aesthetics ranks in the bottom half of South Carolina peptide clinics in the directory by compound depth. Compound depth is one signal among several — provider credentials, pharmacy sourcing transparency, and lab requirements also matter when comparing.

Where is Galen Healthcare & Aesthetics located?

Galen Healthcare & Aesthetics is located in Greer, South Carolina. The full street address, phone number, and hours are listed in the data card above.

What South Carolina Peptide Patients Are Likely Asking

Themes drawn from HealingMaps editorial analysis of verified South Carolina peptide clinics in our directory. Refreshed quarterly; percentages rounded to nearest 5%.

Which peptides do most South Carolina clinics actually offer?

Across South Carolina peptide clinics in our directory, BPC-157 appears in 90% of listings; TB-500 in 65%; PT-141 in 65%; Sermorelin in 50%. Compounds appearing in fewer than 20% of South Carolina listings — including MK-677, Selank — are less commonly disclosed; patients seeking those should specifically ask whether the clinic prescribes them.

How transparent are South Carolina clinics about their compounding pharmacy?

25% of South Carolina clinics in our directory openly state whether they use a 503A or 503B compounding pharmacy. The rest leave the class unstated. The distinction matters for patients — 503A pharmacies fill prescriptions individually after your provider writes them (typically a few-day wait, in-state shipping), while 503B outsourcing facilities pre-batch under direct FDA inspection (often supporting same-visit fulfillment and direct-to-home shipping). Worth asking specifically before you book.

Who’s actually prescribing peptides in South Carolina?

25% of verified South Carolina clinics name an MD or DO as clinical lead. The remainder are NP/PA-led or don’t publicly name a specific prescribing clinician. Any state-licensed physician, NP, or PA can legitimately prescribe compounded peptides — but knowing your prescriber’s training and tenure helps you assess fit for your specific protocol.

How deep are South Carolina peptide menus typically?

The median South Carolina clinic in our directory publishes 7 specific peptide compounds on its listing. The deepest disclosed menu names 11; every clinic names at least one compound. A wide menu means more options at one clinic; a narrow menu can reflect specialization (e.g. weight-loss-only programs) or limited public disclosure (the clinic prescribes more than it advertises).

Pharmacy sourcing: This clinic discloses partnerships with both 503A compounding pharmacies and 503B outsourcing facilities. As a patient, that usually gives you the most flexibility — pre-batched 503B doses for routine in-office or shipped fulfillment, plus 503A custom-compounded prescriptions when your protocol needs individual tailoring.

How we vetted this clinic

6 peptide compounds on the menu — BPC-157, TB-500, and Sermorelin among them at Galen Healthcare & Aesthetics. Two gaps in what’s publicly stated: an individual prescriber name we can verify in CMS NPPES, and which pharmacy class (503A vs 503B) the clinic uses. Reasonable to ask both before booking. See our full vetting rubric →

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Healing Maps Editorial Staff

Healing Maps Editorial Staff

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The Healing Maps Editorial Team has decades of experience across all facets of the psychedelic industry. From assessing studies and clinic research, to working with clinician's and clinics, we help provide data-backed information to psychedelic-curious individuals across the globe.

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