When Can You Actually See a Doctor Online? A Specialty-by-Specialty Guide for Patients

You have a sore throat at 11PM. Your child woke up with a rash. You have been managing your blood pressure for years and just need a medication refill. In all of these situations, you might be wondering the same thing: do I really need to go in person for this?

The honest answer is: probably not. Telehealth has quietly become one of the most practical, underused tools in modern healthcare — but most patients still are not sure which conditions actually qualify for a virtual visit, and which ones genuinely require a physical exam.

This guide breaks it down specialty by specialty, so you can walk into your next online consultation knowing exactly what to expect.

Quick Answer

For Parents: How to Prepare for a Virtual Pediatric Visit
Have a thermometer ready so you can report the current temperature. Use good lighting to show the doctor any rash, wound, or swelling clearly. Write down symptom start date, severity, and anything you have already tried. Have your child’s current medications and allergy list to hand.

How Does an Online Doctor Consultation Actually Work?

An online doctor consultation — sometimes called a telehealth visit or telemedicine appointment — is a scheduled or on-demand video call with a licensed physician. Here is what the process looks like on video-md.com:

  1. You choose a specialty and book a slot, or connect on-demand for urgent concerns.
  2. You join a secure, HIPAA-compliant video call from your phone, tablet, or computer.
  3. The doctor reviews your symptoms, medical history, and any photos or documents you share.
  4. They make a clinical assessment, answer your questions, and (where appropriate) send a prescription directly to your pharmacy.
  5. You receive a written summary of the visit, any referrals needed, and follow-up instructions.

The whole visit typically takes 10–20 minutes — comparable to an in-person appointment, minus the waiting room, travel time, and scheduling delays that can stretch into weeks.

Primary Care & Urgent Conditions

Primary care is where telehealth really shines. Most of the everyday health concerns that bring people to a GP — infections, rashes, coughs, fevers, follow-ups — can be assessed and treated without stepping into a clinic.

Can treat online:

  • Upper respiratory infections (colds, flu, bronchitis)
  • Sinus infections and ear pain
  • Urinary tract infections (UTIs)
  • Rashes and minor skin concerns
  • Fever assessment and management
  • Prescription refills for stable, non-controlled medications
  • Same-day sick visits
  • Doctor’s notes for work or school

 

Still needs in-person:

  • Chest pain or signs of a heart attack (call 999/911)
  • Severe abdominal pain requiring examination
  • Deep wound assessment or stitches
  • Physical health checks requiring examination (e.g. hernias)

Did You Know?

A telehealth doctor can assess ear infections, throat infections, and UTIs with a high degree of clinical confidence based on symptom history and patient-provided photos. Studies show appropriate antibiotic prescribing rates via telehealth are comparable to in-person visits for common infections.

Mental Health & Therapy

Telehealth has transformed access to mental health care. The ability to speak to a therapist, psychiatrist, or counselor from a private, comfortable space removes some of the biggest barriers to seeking help: stigma, geography, and time.

Can treat online:

  • Anxiety and depression (assessment and ongoing management)
  • Medication management for stable conditions (antidepressants, mood stabilisers)
  • ADHD assessment and medication reviews for adults
  • Therapy and counselling sessions
  • Burnout, stress, and sleep disorder consultations
  • Referrals to in-person specialists when needed

Still needs in-person:

  • Active psychosis or severe dissociation requiring in-person safety assessment
  • First-time evaluation for severe bipolar disorder
  • Crisis intervention (please call a crisis line or visit your nearest A&E)
One important distinction: therapy (talk-based treatment) and psychiatry (medication management) are different services. Your video-md.com consultation will clarify which is most appropriate for your needs — or refer you to the right specialist if both are needed.

Pediatrics — Telehealth for Children

Sick children and anxious parents are perhaps the most natural fit for telehealth. Virtual pediatric visits spare families the stress of bundling a feverish toddler into a car, and let doctors assess common childhood illnesses quickly and accurately.

Can treat online:

  • Fever assessment and management guidance
  • Rashes, eczema, and minor skin conditions
  • Coughs, colds, and ear pain
  • Ear infection evaluation and antibiotic prescribing
  • ADHD monitoring and medication reviews for children and teens
  • School and sports medical certificates
  • Behavioural and developmental concerns (assessment and referral)

 

Still needs in-person:

  • Breathing difficulties or severe respiratory distress
  • Physical examination for newborns and developmental milestones
  • Injuries requiring imaging or physical assessment
  • Immunisations and injections
For Parents: How to Prepare for a Virtual Pediatric Visit Have a thermometer ready so you can report current temperature. Use good lighting to show the doctor any rash, wound, or swelling clearly. Write down symptom start date, severity, and anything you have already tried. Have your child’s current medications and allergy list to hand.

Women's Health

Women’s health covers a wide range of conditions that have historically required in-person visits but can often be managed with the same quality of care online—particularly when sensitive topics make privacy a priority.

Can treat online:

  • UTIs and recurring urinary infections
  • Yeast infections and bacterial vaginosis
  • Contraception prescriptions and reviews (pill, patch, ring)
  • Perimenopause and menopause symptom management
  • Postpartum anxiety and depression assessment
  • PCOS management and medication reviews
  • Sexual health concerns and STI guidance
  • Period irregularity—assessment and referral

Still needs in-person:

  • Physical pelvic examination or cervical smear (Pap smear)
  • Pregnancy complications requiring monitoring
  • Breast examination for new lumps
  • In-person procedures such as coil (IUD) fitting or removal

 

Women’s telehealth visits at video-md.com take place in a fully private, HIPAA-compliant environment. Your consultation details are never shared without your explicit consent.

Chronic Disease Management

For patients managing long-term conditions, telehealth removes one of the most burdensome aspects of chronic illness: the constant cycle of clinic visits, parking, waiting rooms, and time off work—just to get a prescription renewed or review your numbers.

Can treat online:

  • Blood pressure monitoring and medication titration
  • Type 2 diabetes management and medication reviews
  • Asthma and COPD check-ins and inhaler reviews
  • Thyroid condition monitoring
  • Cholesterol management and lifestyle counselling
  • Review of CGM (continuous glucose monitor) data
  • Prescription refills for established, stable conditions

Still needs in-person:

  • Newly diagnosed conditions requiring full physical work-up
  • Conditions requiring in-person testing (ECG, spirometry, blood draw)
  • Acute deterioration requiring urgent assessment or hospital referral

 

The key principle: if you are already diagnosed and your condition is stable, most of your ongoing management can happen online. Video-md.com doctors can review your recent test results, adjust your medications, and create updated care plans — all without a waiting room in sight.

When You Should Not Use Telehealth

Being honest about telehealth’s limitations is as important as highlighting what it can do. Some situations always require in-person care — and a responsible telehealth platform will tell you exactly when that is.

Go to A&E / Call 999 or 911 immediately for: Chest pain, pressure, or tightness (possible heart attack) Sudden difficulty breathing or shortness of breath Signs of stroke: face drooping, arm weakness, speech difficulty Severe allergic reaction (anaphylaxis)
  • Uncontrolled bleeding or major trauma
  • Loss of consciousness or seizure
  • Active suicidal crisis — call a crisis line or attend A&E

Other Situations That Require In-Person Care

SituationWhy It Needs In-Person Care
Physical examination requiredListening to the heart and lungs, palpating the abdomen, or assessing reflexes requires a clinician physically present
Diagnostic imaging neededX-rays, MRIs, ultrasounds, and CT scans cannot be performed remotely
Blood tests or lab workSamples cannot be collected or processed via video call
Procedures or injectionsImmunisations, wound closure, IV medications, joint injections
New unexplained symptomsUnexplained weight loss, new lumps, or neurological symptoms need full physical work-up
Controlled substance first prescriptionMost jurisdictions require in-person assessment before prescribing certain scheduled medications

Frequently Asked Questions

1:Can a telehealth doctor prescribe medication?

A: Yes. Licensed telehealth doctors can prescribe a wide range of medications — including antibiotics, blood pressure medications, antidepressants, contraceptives, and more — and send them directly to your preferred pharmacy. Prescribing rules for controlled substances vary by country and jurisdiction.

2. Is telehealth as good as seeing a doctor in person? A: For the majority of common conditions—infections, chronic disease management, mental health, and medication reviews—telehealth delivers equivalent quality of care with greater convenience. A 2023 study published in The Lancet Digital Health found patient satisfaction rates for telehealth visits were comparable to in-person care for appropriate conditions.
3. How does a doctor diagnose me without a physical exam? A: Doctors are trained to gather the majority of diagnostic information through patient history alone. Your symptoms, their timeline, your past medical history, current medications, and any photos or documents you share allow an experienced clinician to make accurate assessments for a wide range of conditions.
4. Is my online consultation private and secure?
A: Yes. video-md.com uses HIPAA-compliant, end-to-end encrypted video technology. Your consultation details, medical history, and prescriptions are stored securely and never shared without your explicit consent.
5. Can I use telehealth for my child? A: Yes. Pediatric virtual visits are available on video-md.com. Parents or guardians attend the video call with children under 18. Our doctors can assess fevers, ear infections, rashes, coughs, ADHD concerns, and more.
 
6. Does insurance cover online doctor visits? A: In most cases, yes. Following legislation enacted during and after the COVID-19 pandemic, most major insurers—including Medicare and Medicaid in the US — are required to provide telehealth parity coverage. Check with your insurer directly, or contact video-md.com to confirm coverage before your visit.
7. How quickly can I see an online doctor? A: On video-md.com, on-demand consultations can connect you with a doctor in under 10 minutes. Scheduled specialist appointments are typically available within 24–48 hours.

Ready to See a Doctor Online?

Telehealth is not a compromise — for the right conditions, it is the smarter, faster, and more convenient choice. Whether you need a same-day sick visit, a specialist consultation, or ongoing support for a long-term condition, video-md.com connects you with experienced, licensed doctors across every major specialty.

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