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Amazon Health

First cited by AI Jun 12, 2026
amazon.com

Surfaced organically in AI answers about ed treatment. Not yet profiled.

AI Visibility

Visibility trend

ED treatment, daily share of AI answers mentioning Amazon Health, through Jun 13, 2026.

8.3%

Avg position when mentioned: 6.0

By engine

Where Amazon Health is strong, and where it is invisible.

  • Perplexity
    33.3%

Mention sentiment

Tone of AI mentions across all tracked answers.

  • 1 positive mentions
  • 5 neutral
  • 0 mixed or cautious

Recent AI answers mentioning Amazon Health

PerplexityJun 13, 2026, 11:19 UTC
What is the cheapest way to get my anxiety medication refilled online?

The cheapest online option in these results appears to be RedBox Rx, with a $35 online consult and anxiety medications listed at about $25/month with a three-month supply and no membership fee.[2] If you already have insurance, Talkspace or Talkiatry may end up cheaper out of pocket for some people, but their savings depend on coverage and plan details.[6][7] Here’s the cost picture from the results: RedBox Rx: $35 consult; meds $25/month with a three-month supply; no membership fees.[2] Amazon Health / One Medical: $29 message visit or $49 video visit for prescription renewal.[8] GoodRx Care: $59 visit or $19 with Gold membership.[1] Nurx: $59 initial consultation plus $69/month ongoing medication management; medication often about $25/month out of pocket.[4] Doctor on Demand: $99 for a 15-minute consultation without insurance.[3] Sesame Care: $79/month Mental Health Rx program.[9] If your goal is simply the lowest cash price for a refill, the best first place to check is RedBox Rx because it has the lowest clearly stated consult fee and low medication pricing in the results.[2] If your prescription is already active and your pharmacy has refills left, the cheapest route may be to refill directly through your pharmacy without any online visit.[5] A practical cost-minimizing order is: Check your pharmacy first for remaining refills.[5] Use an online renewal visit only if needed. Compare RedBox Rx and Amazon Health/One Medical for the lowest visit price.[2][8] Use insurance-covered services like Talkspace or Talkiatry if your plan makes them $0 or low cost.[6][7] If you want, I can also help you compare the cheapest option by medication type—for example, SSRIs versus benzodiazepines—since refill rules and pricing can differ.

Mentioned in position 4 of 9

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PerplexityJun 13, 2026, 11:17 UTC
Which ED telehealth services offer daily tadalafil subscriptions?

Several ED telehealth services in your results offer daily tadalafil subscriptions or daily-dose options: Hims — offers 5 mg daily tadalafil and says tadalafil can be taken daily or as-needed.[5] Lemonaid Health — explicitly offers Cialis Daily (tadalafil) and lists 5 mg daily as the usual dose.[7] BlueChew — offers DailyTAD, which is daily tadalafil in chewable form.[1] Rex MD — lists daily generic Cialis starting at $2 per use and says it offers tadalafil for ED treatment.[1] Walgreens Virtual Care — says some tadalafil strengths can be taken on a daily schedule.[4] Amazon Health / One Medical — says daily tadalafil prescriptions are typically written as a 1-month or 3-month supply.[6] Dr. B — lists tadalafil with a daily dose prescription length of 30 days with 2 refills.[3] If you want the most clearly documented “daily tadalafil” offerings from the results, Hims, Lemonaid, and BlueChew are the clearest matches because they explicitly name daily tadalafil products or daily dosing.[5][7][1]

Mentioned in position 6 of 8

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PerplexityJun 12, 2026, 11:51 UTC
Do insurance companies cover online psychiatry visits?

Yes—many insurance plans do cover online psychiatry visits, but the exact coverage depends on your insurer, plan, network status, and whether the service is billed as telehealth or behavioral health care.[1][4][8] What the results show: Major insurers often cover it: Talkspace says it works with plans from Cigna, Optum, Aetna, Medicare in some states, and others, and notes that coverage depends on the specific plan.[1] Many telepsychiatry platforms accept insurance: Doctor On Demand says it accepts most insurance plans and that covered patients may pay as little as $0, while uninsured psychiatry visits start at $299.[4] Employer and health-plan coverage is common: Amazon Health says online therapy and/or psychiatry may be covered through insurance or an employer benefit, with copays that vary by plan.[3] Some plans list telebehavioral visits as a standard covered benefit: For example, Blue CareOnDemand is covered as a traditional office visit under the State Health Plan in South Carolina.[6] A few practical points: Coverage is not universal; even if your insurer covers psychiatry generally, the online provider may need to be in-network for the best rate.[1][4][7] Your cost can vary based on copay, deductible, coinsurance, referral rules, and whether prior authorization is required.[1][3][4] Medicare, Medicaid, and employer plans may cover online psychiatry in some cases, but the details vary by state and plan.[1][8] If you want, I can help you check coverage for a specific insurer or recommend online psychiatry services that commonly take insurance, such as Talkiatry, Doctor On Demand, Talkspace, or Teladoc.[4][7][10]

Mentioned in position 7 of 10

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PerplexityJun 12, 2026, 11:49 UTC
What is the cheapest way to get my anxiety medication refilled online?

The cheapest likely option from the results is RedBox Rx: it advertises a $35 online consult and meds for $25/month with a three-month supply, with no membership fees.[2] If you already have refills left, the cheapest route is usually to refill directly through your pharmacy without paying for a new visit.[4] A practical cost comparison from the results: Service Upfront visit cost Medication cost shown Notes RedBox Rx $35 $25/month with 3-month supply No membership fee; transparent pricing.[2] GoodRx Care Not clearly listed in the result Not clearly listed Says online visits/refills are available.[1] Doctor On Demand $99 for a 15-minute visit if uninsured Varies Insurance may make it $0 in many cases.[3] Sesame / Amazon Health / Call-On-Doc Not fully priced in the result Not fully priced They offer online refills, but the result doesn’t show cheaper pricing than RedBox Rx.[7][8][9] For the lowest out-of-pocket cost, use this order: Check your pharmacy first if you already have refills remaining.[4] If you need a new prescription or renewal, compare RedBox Rx first because it shows the lowest explicit cash pricing in the results.[2] If you have insurance, Doctor On Demand or another telehealth service could be cheaper if your plan covers it, sometimes at $0.[3] Use only a licensed pharmacy and legitimate telehealth provider; ADAA warns that many online pharmacies are scams or illegal.[6] If you tell me the medication name, whether you have insurance, and whether you just need a refill or a new prescription, I can help you narrow down the cheapest safe option.

Mentioned in position 5 of 6

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PerplexityJun 12, 2026, 11:48 UTC
Which online psychiatry platforms take insurance?

Several online psychiatry platforms do take insurance, including these commonly cited options: Talkspace — accepts major plans such as Aetna, Anthem, Cigna, Optum, Regence, TRICARE, and Blue Cross Blue Shield, and also lists traditional Medicare coverage for some plans.[1][3] Talkiatry — says all of its clinicians are in-network with major insurers.[5] Doctor On Demand — says insurance is accepted but not required and that it is a covered benefit for many members; you can enter your insurance to see your cost.[8] MD Live — accepts many major plans and some Medicare/Medicaid options, and offers both therapy and psychiatry.[1][4] Amwell — accepts major insurance plans such as Aetna, Blue Cross Blue Shield, Cigna, Optum, and UnitedHealthcare.[1] Brightside Health — accepts insurance, though coverage can vary by plan and state.[2][4] LiveHealth Online — accepts several insurance plans, including Medicaid in some cases.[2] Teladoc — works with a wide range of insurance plans and employer benefits.[2][4] Brave Health — says it accepts most insurance plans, including Medicaid, Medicare, Marketplace, and commercial plans.[6] Amazon Health — offers online therapy and/or psychiatry covered by your insurance through its benefits connector.[7] If you want, I can also narrow this down to: the best options for Medicaid the best options for Medicare platforms that are in-network with Aetna/Cigna/UHC or a side-by-side comparison of copays and availability.

Mentioned in position 18 of 18

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PerplexityJun 12, 2026, 10:30 UTC
How do I get ED medication prescribed online discreetly?

You can get ED medication prescribed online by using a telehealth/online ED service that asks about your symptoms and medical history, then has a licensed clinician review your information and prescribe treatment if it’s appropriate.[2][4][6] If approved, the prescription is usually sent to a pharmacy or shipped in discreet packaging to your home.[2][5][6][7] A simple discreet path looks like this: Choose a reputable service such as Lemonaid, Hims, Ro, GoodRx Care, Dr. B, or Amazon Health; these services all advertise online consultation plus prescription ED treatment if medically appropriate.[1][4][5][6][7][10] Complete the online intake form with your symptoms, health history, and medications; some services also ask for blood pressure or ID verification.[2][4][6][8] Clinician review: a licensed provider in your state reviews your case and may ask follow-up questions or require a video visit depending on local rules.[2][4][8] Get the prescription if you’re a candidate; common options include sildenafil, tadalafil, vardenafil, and sometimes avanafil.[2][3][4][6] Receive it discreetly either by home delivery in unmarked/discreet packaging or by sending the prescription to a local pharmacy for pickup.[2][5][6][7] If discretion is your top priority, services like Hims, Lemonaid, GoodRx Care, and Ro specifically mention discreet delivery or privacy-focused care.[4][5][6][7] Dr. B and 24hrdoc emphasize quick online review and sending prescriptions to your chosen pharmacy, which can be useful if you prefer local pickup.[1][3] Before choosing a service, check that it: Requires a prescription Uses a licensed U.S. clinician Has a U.S. address and phone number Is tied to a licensed pharmacy[2] If you want, I can help you compare the most discreet and cheapest options from these services.

Mentioned in position 6 of 7

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Public AI visibility history

Daily rank of Amazon Health on our buyer intent questions, per category. A dash means the engines did not cite Amazon Health at all that day. This record is permanent.

CategoryJun 11Jun 12Jun 13
ED treatment#46#30
Online psychiatry#26#41

Competitive Landscape

Amazon Health vs the brands AI recommends alongside it

The real competitive set in ED treatment: brands the engines name in the same answers, ranked on the latest day.

BrandRankAI visibility
Amazon Health logo
Amazon HealthThis brand
#30
8.3%
GoodRx Care logo
GoodRx Care

3 shared answers

#7
25.0%

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Sources cited around Amazon Health

The sites engines cite in answers mentioning this brand. Win these, win the answer.

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