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Care without a commute

Online care when getting to a clinic is hard

For focused adult concerns that may fit telehealth, QuickVisitMD lets patients start with a safety screen, clear pricing, and secure physician review from home.

What to know

Transportation should not be the only reason a simple concern waits

Some patients delay care because getting to an office is hard: no ride, limited time off, rural distance, caregiving responsibilities, or mobility limits. QuickVisitMD is not a replacement for emergency or in-person care, but it can be a practical starting point for common adult concerns that fit online review.

Have ready

  • The main symptom or concern and when it started
  • Medication allergies and current medications
  • Clear photos for visible skin, eye, scalp, or rash concerns
  • A pharmacy preference if medication is medically appropriate

May be a good fit

  • Adults 18 and older physically located in Virginia or West Virginia
  • Focused concerns listed on the site that can be reviewed with history, messaging, and photos when useful
  • Patients who want clear self-pay pricing before physician review begins
  • Situations where transportation or scheduling is a barrier but symptoms are not emergent

Not the right setting

  • Emergency symptoms such as chest pain, trouble breathing, confusion, severe weakness, or rapidly worsening symptoms
  • Problems that need a physical exam, testing, imaging, stitches, splinting, or IV treatment
  • Controlled medications, chronic pain care, routine refills, disability forms, or FMLA forms
  • Patients outside Virginia or West Virginia at the time of care

Can online care replace transportation to every medical visit?

No. Online care is only appropriate for selected common concerns. If symptoms suggest an emergency or need hands-on evaluation, QuickVisitMD redirects patients to another care setting.

Is this useful for rural patients?

It can be useful for adults in Virginia or West Virginia when the concern fits focused telehealth review. Rural distance does not change the safety limits, and some concerns still need in-person care.

Does a visit guarantee medication?

No. The physician decides whether medication, supportive care, or in-person evaluation is appropriate after reviewing the request.