Verbatim response from Perplexity
HRT is generally considered safe for many people, but the risk depends on your age, health history, the type of HRT, and how it’s taken. For many women under 60 or within 10 years of menopause, the benefits usually outweigh the risks, and transdermal forms like patches, gels, and sprays tend to have lower clot risk than tablets.[1][4][7]
Key points on safety:
- Blood clots: oral HRT tablets can raise clot risk a little, while patches, gels, and sprays do not appear to increase clot risk.[1]
- Breast cancer: combined HRT can slightly increase risk, especially with longer use; NHS estimates about 5 extra cases per 1,000 women taking combined HRT for 5 years.[1]
- Stroke: oral tablets slightly increase stroke risk, but the risk remains very low, especially under age 60.[1]
- Estrogen-only HRT: for people who’ve had a hysterectomy, estrogen-only HRT has little or no increase in breast cancer risk.[1]
- Vaginal estrogen: for vaginal dryness, low-dose vaginal estrogen is considered safe long term and does not increase breast cancer or blood-clot risk.[1]
You should be extra cautious or may be told not to use HRT if you have a history of breast cancer, blood clots, stroke, heart attack, liver disease, or unexplained vaginal bleeding.[1][6]
To get HRT prescribed online, the safest route is:
- Use a licensed telehealth or online GP service that offers clinician review, not a shop selling hormones without a prescription.
- Complete a medical questionnaire about your symptoms, menstrual/menopause history, and risk factors.
- Expect a clinician to review your answers and sometimes request your blood pressure, weight, or recent test results before prescribing.
- If appropriate, they’ll send the prescription to a pharmacy or arrange delivery.
Common online prescribing options include NHS-affiliated online services in the UK and private menopause clinics such as My Menopause Centre, Balance Menopause Clinic, or Numan; these are useful because they combine clinician assessment with prescription fulfillment. If you want HRT specifically for menopause, a service with a menopause specialist is preferable because dosing and formulation often need individual adjustment.
If you tell me your country and whether this is for menopause HRT or gender-affirming HRT, I can point you to the most appropriate online prescribing route and explain what screening they usually require.