Veronica Hayduk, ND in Baltimore: Botanical Medicine and Functional Nutrition
Veronica Hayduk runs a solo naturopathic practice in Canton, focusing on herbal medicine, nutritional assessment, and digestive health, with appointment availability typically within two to three weeks.
What the practice actually is
Second Nature Health is a naturopathic doctor practice limited to one provider. Hayduk holds a Doctor of Naturopathy degree and focuses on patients seeking alternatives to pharmaceutical management or complementary approaches alongside conventional care. The practice occupies a private office setting without walk-in availability, meaning patients must schedule ahead. The scope is narrow compared to larger integrative clinics: expect no acupuncture, no massage therapy, and no in-house lab testing for most bloodwork, though Hayduk can order tests through standard lab networks and interpret results through a naturopathic lens.
Services and pricing
Initial consultations run 90 minutes and cost $200. Follow-up visits typically last 45 to 60 minutes at $100 to $130. Hayduk specializes in botanical medicine (herbal remedies prescribed or compounded), nutritional counseling tailored to digestive disorders and food sensitivities, and functional assessment of systems rather than isolated symptoms. Supplement recommendations are part of the protocol; patients should expect to budget separately for herbal tinctures, capsules, or powders, which range from $15 to $60 per item depending on quality and source. Most insurance does not reimburse naturopathic visits, so the practice operates on a cash basis; ask whether your plan offers any out-of-network coverage before scheduling. Pricing has remained consistent for the past two years; confirm current rates when booking.
How Second Nature Health compares locally
Baltimore's naturopathic landscape includes multimodal clinics like Inner Peace Health Center (Canton) and single-practitioner offices like Hayduk's. Inner Peace offers acupuncture, massage, and naturopathy under one roof, which suits patients seeking integrated treatment in one location but typically costs more for coordinated care. Second Nature Health is the right choice if you prefer deep one-on-one time with a single practitioner who specializes in botanical and nutritional work without the broader overhead of a clinic. For patients seeking conventional medical oversight alongside naturopathic support, the University of Maryland Medical Center's integrative medicine program offers consultation but operates differently, with shorter visits and medical doctor involvement that may feel more familiar to skeptics of naturopathy.
Who this practice suits and who it does not
Choose Hayduk if you have chronic digestive complaints, food sensitivities, or a desire to reduce medication use through herbal and dietary intervention, and if you are willing to commit to two or more visits and follow nutritional protocols. The practice suits patients with some health literacy who read labels and are open to herbal remedies; it does not suit those seeking quick fixes or who expect naturopathy to replace emergency or surgical care. This is not the right practice if you need frequent adjustments, real-time lab monitoring, or a team approach; solo practitioners cannot offer same-day follow-up or coordinate directly with your MD during acute crises.
What the first visit involves
Expect a detailed health history lasting 30 to 45 minutes, including questions about digestion, energy, stress, family disease patterns, and previous treatments. Hayduk will perform basic physical assessment (blood pressure, abdominal palpation) and may recommend standard blood tests through LabCorp or Quest to assess nutrient levels, thyroid function, and metabolic markers. You will leave with a written protocol: typically a combination of dietary changes, specific herbal remedies, and sometimes a supplement list. Bring a list of current medications and supplements; naturopathic herbs can interact with some pharmaceuticals. The practice does not perform in-office procedures like cupping or bloodwork draws.
Hours, parking, and logistics
Second Nature Health operates by appointment Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., with occasional early morning or evening slots available by request. The Canton location is walkable from the Canton Waterfront Park area and has street parking; no dedicated lot. Public parking is available in the nearby Highlandtown Avenue garage ($2 per hour) if street spots are full. Hayduk does not offer telehealth; visits are in-person only. Book appointments through the practice phone line or website; lead times average two to three weeks, though cancellations sometimes open sooner. Allow 30 minutes to park and find the office if you are unfamiliar with the neighborhood.
Second Nature Health fills a gap for Baltimore patients who want sustained, herb-focused naturopathic care from a single practitioner without clinic overhead, making it the natural choice for digestive and nutritional work that demands time and botanical depth.

