Verbatim response from Perplexity
Several menopause clinics do take insurance, but coverage varies by clinic, state, and your specific plan. Based on the results, these are the clearest options:
- Stella — advertises in-network menopause care with “hundreds of insurance plans” and says most states support insurance-covered virtual visits.[1]
- Midi — says its virtual menopause clinic is covered by insurance, is accepted by major insurance plans, and is offered in all 50 states.[3]
- MyMenopauseRx — states it works with health insurance, with patients paying only copay/coinsurance/deductible when covered.[2]
- CVS MinuteClinic — says most insurance [is] accepted for menopause services.[4]
A few local clinics also appear to offer menopause care where insurance may be accepted, but the search results do not clearly confirm in-network status for every plan:
- OU Health Menopause care in Oklahoma City and Edmond.[6]
- Women’s Clinic of Johnson County (WCJC) in Kansas City; its page says “most insurances cover many” menopause-management services.[7]
- Women First of Louisville has certified menopause practitioners, but the result shown does not clearly state insurance acceptance.[5]
If you want the safest shortlist for insurance coverage, Stella, Midi, MyMenopauseRx, and CVS MinuteClinic are the strongest matches from the results.[1][2][3][4]
If you want, I can next help you find:
- in-network menopause clinics near your ZIP code, or
- clinics that accept your specific insurance plan.