Obstetrics and Gynecology Telehealth and Women's Health Care
This browse page supports online Obstetrics and Gynecology care for common needs.
It is built for patients and caregivers comparing visit options.
Browse clinician profiles that cover prenatal care, contraception counseling, and menopause management.
Some concerns fit telehealth well, while others need in-person exams.
Many listings support cash-pay care, often without insurance, too, here.
Obstetrics and Gynecology What You’ll Find
This category page groups clinicians who offer OB-GYN care through telehealth visits. It helps compare focus areas, appointment formats, and common paperwork needs. It also highlights which topics may still require an in-person exam.
Profiles often note experience with pregnancy care, postpartum care, and gynecologic services. Some also mention family planning, infertility evaluation, or adolescent gynecology. Use these details to narrow options before scheduling.
- Common visit topics, such as menstrual disorders, pelvic pain evaluation, and menopause symptoms
- Pregnancy-related follow-ups, including prenatal check-ins and postpartum questions
- Contraception counseling and family planning discussions
- Care coordination notes, when in-person testing or imaging is needed
- General visit logistics, like forms, documentation, and follow-up expectations
Medispress telehealth visits connect patients with licensed U.S. clinicians online.
How to Choose
Choosing a clinician is often about fit, scope, and clear communication. A good match also depends on whether care needs are time sensitive. For Obstetrics and Gynecology, some concerns can start online, then move in person.
Match the visit type to the goal
- Look for pregnancy care support if someone is pregnant or trying to conceive
- Look for contraception counseling if options and side effects need discussion
- Look for menopause management if symptoms affect sleep, mood, or comfort
- Look for menstrual disorders support for heavy, irregular, or painful periods
- Look for endometriosis care or fibroid treatment experience for chronic symptoms
- Consider urogynecology if pelvic floor disorders or leakage is a main concern
Plan for what must happen in person
- A well woman exam is a physical exam done in a clinic
- Pap smear screening needs a sample collected during an office visit
- Some imaging, like a gynecologic ultrasound, happens at a facility
- Some STI testing for women requires lab collection, depending on the test
- High-risk pregnancy care often involves frequent in-person monitoring
Quick tip: Keep dates, medication lists, and prior procedures in one place.
Using This Directory
This directory is designed for quick comparisons across clinicians and services. Filters can help narrow by visit focus, such as prenatal care or pelvic pain evaluation. Notes in profiles can also clarify what happens during telehealth versus in clinic.
Some needs are not a good fit for virtual-only care. Heavy bleeding, severe pain, or pregnancy emergencies require urgent in-person evaluation. For pregnancy health information, see CDC pregnancy resources from the CDC.
| Profile detail | What it usually means |
|---|---|
| Visit focus | Common reasons the clinician sees patients, like contraception or menopause |
| Visit format | Whether the visit is video, phone, or a mix |
| Documentation | What history, records, or prior results may be helpful |
| Follow-up planning | How next steps are arranged, including referrals for in-person exams |
Many Medispress visits use a simple flat fee, before medication costs.
Access and Prescription Requirements
Some visits are information-only, while others may involve prescriptions. When medication is clinically appropriate, a valid prescription is still required. Pharmacy rules can also vary by medication and state requirements.
For services like cervical cancer screening, in-person collection is necessary. Screening intervals depend on age and history, and guidance is available from the USPSTF. Telehealth can still support planning, results review, and follow-up discussions.
- Expect a medical intake, including history, allergies, and current medications
- Some cases need records, like prior Pap results or ultrasound reports
- Prescriptions, when used, require verification before dispensing
- Some care is cash-pay, often without insurance, depending on services
- Some topics may need referral for labs, imaging, or in-person exams
Why it matters: Clear documentation helps clinicians coordinate safe follow-up care.
When appropriate, clinicians can coordinate prescriptions through partner pharmacies for dispensing.
Related Resources
Some people want extra context before choosing a visit type. Others want help understanding how telehealth fits into prenatal or postpartum routines. These resources are meant to support planning and better questions.
For a practical overview of remote pregnancy check-ins, read Virtual Prenatal Care Telehealth. It explains what can be handled virtually and what still needs a clinic visit. It also covers common visit goals across pregnancy stages.
- Questions to bring to a prenatal care visit
- What postpartum care follow-ups often include
- How contraception counseling discussions are usually structured
- When pelvic pain evaluation needs imaging or a physical exam
This content is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice.

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Frequently Asked Questions
What can an OB-GYN telehealth visit help with?
OB-GYN telehealth visits often focus on history, symptoms, and planning next steps. Common topics include contraception counseling, menstrual cycle concerns, menopause symptoms, and pregnancy questions. Visits can also support preconception counseling and postpartum check-ins. Some care still requires an in-person exam, such as Pap smear collection or pelvic exams. Telehealth can still help clarify what is needed and how to prepare for in-person care.
How do I know whether I need prenatal care or a gynecology visit?
Prenatal care visits usually focus on pregnancy stages, common symptoms, and follow-up planning. Gynecology visits usually focus on periods, contraception, pelvic pain, infections, or menopause. Some topics overlap, especially right after delivery or during family planning. When browsing profiles, look at visit focus areas and any listed experience. If the goal is unclear, start with a general women’s health visit type.
Can telehealth replace a well woman exam or Pap smear screening?
Telehealth does not replace a physical well woman exam. Pap smear screening requires an in-person pelvic exam to collect a sample. Telehealth can still be useful for planning, discussing screening history, and reviewing results. It can also help coordinate the right in-person setting, depending on risk factors and prior findings. For screening recommendations, it helps to reference established guidance and discuss options with a clinician.
What information should I have ready before an OB-GYN visit?
Having key details ready can make a visit smoother and more accurate. Common items include the first day of the last menstrual period, prior pregnancies and deliveries, and past gynecologic procedures. A current medication list and known allergies are also important. If available, bring prior Pap results or imaging reports. Writing down the main questions ahead of time can also help keep the visit focused.
How are prescriptions handled for OB-GYN-related care?
Prescriptions depend on the visit topic, clinical appropriateness, and applicable pharmacy rules. A clinician may recommend options, but any medication requires a valid prescription. Dispensing is handled by licensed pharmacies that follow verification requirements. Some services may be cash-pay, often without insurance, depending on the situation. If a medication is not appropriate for telehealth or needs monitoring, the clinician may recommend in-person evaluation.

