Telehealth is now a normal way to see a doctor, but the experience varies wildly. Some services are excellent. Some are pill mills with a friendly interface. This site is a small, opinionated reference: how to prepare, what to ask, where the rules trip patients up, and how to spot a service worth using.
Nothing here is medical advice or a directory of doctors. It is editorial guidance for patients and caregivers navigating remote care.
Practical guides
How to get useful care out of a remote visit, written for patients.
- Preparing for a telehealth visitWhat to write down, test, and have on hand before the call
- Photographing skin conditions for a remote dermatologistLighting, distance, and the angles a clinician actually needs
- Measuring your own vitals at homeBlood pressure, pulse, temperature, oxygen — how to do it accurately
- Home medical equipment worth buyingWhat is useful, what is a gimmick, and what insurance will cover
- Getting a second opinion remotelyHow to arrange one and what records to bring
- Transferring medical records between providersStep-by-step, with the forms and the legal rights you have
- When telehealth is not enoughSymptoms and situations that need an in-person exam
- Advocating for yourself in a remote visitHow to push back when you feel unheard on a 12-minute call
- Telehealth with elderly parentsSet-up, hearing accommodation, and the proxy and HIPAA logistics
- Telehealth for childrenWhat pediatric telehealth handles well and what it does not
Care by condition
What remote care actually looks like for specific conditions, including the regulatory quirks.
- ADHD remote treatmentStimulant prescribing rules and how to find a stable provider
- Mental health telehealthTherapy versus medication management, and what each does well remotely
- Dermatology remotelyWhat can be diagnosed from a photo and what genuinely cannot
- Menopause and perimenopause remote careHRT prescribing, lab work, and how to evaluate menopause-only services
- Chronic pain telehealthWhy most remote services will not prescribe, and what they will do
- Diabetes remote managementCGM data sharing, insulin titration, and remote endocrinology
- Hypertension and remote monitoringCuff selection, logging, and how doctors actually use the data
- GLP-1 weight loss telehealthHow these clinics work, what to ask, and the safety questions
Your rights and the rules
The law and regulations behind remote care, in plain language.
- Your patient rights in a telehealth visitConsent, recording, refusal, and what creates a doctor-patient relationship
- Cross-state licensing and where your doctor can see youWhy your provider may drop you when you travel, and the workarounds
- Insurance and telehealthParity laws, coverage gaps, and how to read your EOB
- Controlled substances and remote prescribingThe Ryan Haight Act, DEA telehealth rules, and where they stand now
- Accessing your medical recordsHIPAA right of access, response timelines, and fees
- Disputing a telehealth billSurprise billing protections, internal appeals, and external review
Choosing a remote care service
How to evaluate a service before you hand over a payment method.
- Choosing a primary care telehealth serviceContinuity, panel size, and whether you will see the same clinician twice
- Choosing a mental health platformTherapist matching, modality, insurance, and red flags
- Choosing a remote dermatology serviceAsynchronous versus live, biopsy logistics, and prescription handling
- Choosing pediatric telehealthAge range, after-hours coverage, and integration with your pediatrician
- Choosing remote specialty careWhat works remotely in cardiology, endocrinology, and neurology
- Choosing international telehealthCross-border care, prescription portability, and the licensing reality
- Red flags in any remote care serviceThe patterns that signal a pill mill, a sham, or a poorly run clinic
About
Not medical advice. This site provides general educational information about navigating remote healthcare. It does not diagnose, treat, or recommend treatment for any condition. For personal medical questions, talk to a licensed clinician.