wellrank.ai
University of Michigan logo

University of Michigan

First cited by AI Jun 21, 2026
umich.edu

Surfaced organically in AI answers about adhd telehealth. Not yet profiled.

University of Michigan is losing the AEO war.

Not cited in a single tracked AI answer since Jun 25, 2026, down from a peak of 2% visibility in adhd telehealth on Jun 25, 2026. This page stays public, and recovery shows here the day it happens.

AI Visibility

Visibility trend

ADHD telehealth, daily share of AI answers mentioning University of Michigan, through Jul 6, 2026.

0.0%

Last cited Jun 25, 2026 · peak 2% on Jun 25

By engine

Where University of Michigan is strong, and where it is invisible.

  • No engine data yet.

Mention sentiment

Tone of AI mentions across all tracked answers.

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

Recent AI answers mentioning University of Michigan

ChatGPTJun 21, 2026, 09:33 UTC
Which online ADHD clinics are legit and take insurance?

I can help — first: are you in the United States and do you have a particular insurance plan (Medicare, Medicaid, a commercial/private plan, or an employer plan)? That helps narrow which services will be in‑network for you. Below are well‑known, generally reputable telepsychiatry/mental‑health services that provide ADHD evaluations and treatment and that frequently bill insurance (note: insurance acceptance varies by state, employer plan, and time, so always verify before booking). National telepsychiatry networks that commonly bill insurance Talkiatry — a telepsychiatry group that connects patients with board‑certified psychiatrists for ADHD and other psychiatric conditions. They work with many commercial plans and often accept Medicare/Medicaid in participating states; they have established insurance‑billing processes. Brightside Health — focuses on psychiatric care for mood and attention disorders and partners with some insurers and employer plans; they provide psychiatry visits (including for ADHD) and can bill insurance where contracted. Teladoc Health (behavioral health) — major telehealth vendor used by many insurers and employers; when your plan includes Teladoc behavioral health, Teladoc can provide psychiatry visits including ADHD evaluation and can be in‑network. Amwell (Behavioral Health) — used by many health plans; offers psychiatry visits via board‑certified clinicians and can bill insurance when your plan covers Amwell. Doctor On Demand / Included Health — offers psychiatry and can bill employer plans and some commercial insurers for ADHD care when your plan covers them. University / health‑system telepsychiatry programs Large health systems (Massachusetts General Brigham, Cleveland Clinic, UCSF Health, University of Michigan, etc.) offer telepsychiatry and ADHD specialty clinics and routinely accept commercial insurance, Medicare, and often Medicaid. These clinics are good options if you want an academic/clinic setting rather than a DTC startup. Notes and tips to confirm legitimacy and insurance coverage Verify insurance directly: look for an “insurance” or “billing” page on the clinic’s website and a list of plans they accept, or call the clinic’s billing office and your insurer’s member services to confirm in‑network status and any copays. Ask who is providing care: confirm you’ll see a board‑certified psychiatrist (MD/DO) if you want medication management; many platforms also use psychiatric nurse practitioners (NPs) or physician assistants (PAs). Controlled substances (stimulants) policies: prescription of stimulant medications can be restricted by state laws and company policy. Ask the provider up front whether they will prescribe stimulants via telemedicine in your state and what documentation/visits are required. Watch out for DTC subscription clinics that are cash‑only: many direct‑to‑consumer ADHD startups are legitimate but do not bill insurance; if you want to use insurance, verify billing practices before signing up. If you prefer in‑network: call your insurer and ask “Which telepsychiatry providers are in‑network for ADHD/psychiatry visits in my area?” Insurers can provide an up‑to‑date list. If you tell me your state and what type of insurance you have (commercial, Medicare, Medicaid, employer plan), I can check which of these providers are likely to be in‑network for you and suggest the best next step.

Mentioned in position 10 of 10

Read full answer with sources →

Competitive Landscape

University of Michigan vs the brands AI recommends alongside it

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

BrandRankAI visibility
University of Michigan logo
University of MichiganThis brand
0.0%
Amwell logo
Amwell

1 shared answers

#6
26.7%
Brightside Health logo
Brightside Health

1 shared answers

#11
16.7%
Cleveland Clinic logo
Cleveland Clinic

1 shared answers

#56
1.7%
Doctor On Demand logo
Doctor On Demand

1 shared answers

#9
18.3%

Email me when overtakes University of Michigan

One email the day the ranks flip. Nothing else.

Sources cited around University of Michigan

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

    Track University of Michigan weekly

    One email a week: rank moves, new competitors, and the answers that changed. No noise.

    Work at University of Michigan? Get your AI Visibility Audit.

    See every buyer intent question your customers ask AI, which ones you are losing, who wins them instead, and the exact sources driving those answers. You will finally understand your buyer intent and what Propel would do to win it.