Verbatim response from ChatGPT
Short answer: yes — several telemedicine companies and specialist online clinics offer bioidentical hormone replacement therapy (BHRT). Which is best depends on whether you want care for menopause, low-T, pellet therapy vs. creams/injections, and what state you live in (teleprescribing rules vary).
Examples to consider (what they do and why people choose them):
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Hims & Hers — mainstream telehealth brand with separate men’s (Hims) and women’s (Hers) programs. Accessible, subscription model with lab testing and clinician oversight for common HRT prescriptions and testosterone therapy. Good for straightforward, affordable care and fast access.
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Ro (Roman) / Rory — Ro’s Roman brand focuses on men’s TRT; Rory (Ro’s women’s arm) and Ro’s menopause/sexual-health offerings cover many female hormone concerns. Streamlined telemedicine, lab coordination, and nationwide reach.
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Defy Medical — specialty clinic focused on testosterone therapy and BHRT for men and women. Known for detailed hormone evaluation, individualized plans (injections, pellets, creams), and ongoing monitoring. Good if you want a hormone-specialist approach.
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Parsley Health — integrative / functional-medicine primary-care practice that offers personalized BHRT as part of a broader wellness plan. Longer visits, emphasis on root causes, labs, and lifestyle support — good if you want a comprehensive approach beyond prescriptions.
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BodyLogicMD — a national network of clinicians focused on BHRT for men and women (many offer telemedicine). Commonly used for menopause management and individualized bioidentical pellet therapy.
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BioTE Medical — not a clinic but a widely used training and certification program for clinicians who provide bioidentical hormone pellet therapy. You can use BioTE’s provider locator to find clinicians who specialize in pellets.
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Lemonaid Health, PlushCare, Amwell, Teladoc — large telemedicine platforms that can evaluate and prescribe hormone therapy in many states (especially simpler TRT cases). Good for convenience; check whether the clinician will run recommended baseline labs and follow-up.
Safety notes before you sign up
- Ask about baseline labs, ongoing monitoring, and whether the prescriber is an MD/DO with hormone experience. Reputable BHRT providers will require bloodwork and follow-up.
- Some clinics use compounded (custom) bioidentical preparations — ask which pharmacy they use and whether meds are FDA-approved or compounded.
- Pellet therapy has different risks/benefits than topical creams, patches, or injections; make sure the clinic explains options and follow-up procedures.
- Telemedicine prescribing rules vary by state and by hormone type; confirm the clinic can legally prescribe for your state.
If you want, tell me: (a) whether this is for a man or woman, (b) which form of BHRT you’re considering (pellets, injections, creams/patches, oral), and (c) your state — I can narrow this list to clinics that serve your needs and location.