TeleHealth

Browse TeleHealth educational pages and request a secure online consultation. All products link to Dr. Prakash Katbamna.

Patient-first education Medication safety screening Evidence-based care planning Doctor consultation link
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TeleHealth product list

Each page contains a unique long-form educational text (3,000+ characters), unique FAQ, and consultation CTAs.

Start with a consultation

Medication selection should be individualized. Use a consultation to review your history, interactions, and safer alternatives.

How to use this TeleHealth hub

TeleHealth pages work best when they do three things at once: they educate, they screen for risk, and they guide you to the right next step. This hub is the entry point to our medication information pages. Each product page is written to be consultation-first, meaning it explains what a clinician evaluates before recommending a therapy. That approach is safer for patients and creates clearer expectations for follow-up.

When you click a product, you will see three repeating elements—an overview, safety checkpoints, and practical use guidance—plus a unique FAQ. Even though the design is consistent, the content is intentionally different for every medication class: men’s health pages focus on vascular and interaction screening, infectious disease pages focus on diagnostics and stewardship, and metabolic pages focus on administration technique and tolerability. The goal is to reduce avoidable side effects by aligning the medication with the right diagnosis and the right patient profile.

Before requesting an online evaluation, prepare a short “clinical snapshot” for yourself. Include your current medication list (prescriptions, over‑the‑counter items, and supplements), relevant medical history (allergies, kidney or liver issues, cardiac history, seizure history, pregnancy status when applicable), and the timeline of your symptoms. Telehealth decisions are higher quality when the timeline is clear: when symptoms started, what makes them better or worse, and what you have already tried. If you have recent vitals or lab results, keep them available—this can speed up safe decision-making.

TeleHealth is not designed for emergencies. If you have severe chest pain, difficulty breathing, signs of stroke, rapidly spreading rash, suicidal thoughts, or any other urgent red‑flag symptom, seek in‑person emergency care right away. For non-urgent concerns, TeleHealth can be an efficient way to discuss options, clarify whether testing is needed, and build a plan that includes “stop rules” (what symptoms mean you should pause a medication and contact a clinician).

Finally, use TeleHealth as a starting point for prevention and long-term stability. Medication can be helpful, but it works best when paired with realistic lifestyle steps: sleep hygiene, hydration, nutrition, activity, trigger management, and adherence routines. If a product page suggests follow-up, take that seriously—follow-up is not a sales step, it is a safety step. It allows dose adjustments, side-effect review, and alternative planning if the first option is not the best fit.

FAQ

Do these TeleHealth pages guarantee a prescription?

No. The pages are educational. A prescription is provided only when medically appropriate and when it fits clinical standards and applicable rules.

Why do you emphasize “screening” so much?

Because screening prevents avoidable harm: interactions, contraindications, and misdiagnosis are the most common reasons medications become unsafe or ineffective.

Can I request a specific medication I saw on a product page?

You can request a discussion, but the clinician may recommend a different option after reviewing your history, symptoms, and risk profile.

What information should I bring to my telehealth visit?

A complete medication/supplement list, allergies, key diagnoses, symptom timeline, and any recent vitals or relevant labs.

What if my symptoms are getting worse?

For severe or rapidly worsening symptoms, seek urgent in‑person care. For non‑urgent changes, schedule a follow-up telehealth visit to adjust the plan.

How do I book an appointment?

Use our Book Appointment page to choose a time and provide your intake details. If you already know the service you need, you can also book directly through the appointment link in the menu.