ED Telehealth for Men Who've Never Talked to a Doctor About It
If you've never brought up ED with a doctor — in person or otherwise — you're not unusual, and that hesitation is understandable. Telehealth exists in part because a lot of men would rather answer questions honestly on a screen than say them out loud to someone across a desk. Here's what that first step actually looks like.
Why the in-person version feels harder than it needs to be
There's nothing wrong with feeling reluctant to bring this up face-to-face — it's a common enough reaction that telehealth's entire design accounts for it. You're not required to explain yourself out loud, make eye contact while doing it, or sit in a waiting room where the reason for your visit might be obvious to a stranger next to you.
What the questionnaire actually asks
Direct, factual questions about your symptoms, how long you've noticed them, and relevant medical history — the same clinical information a doctor would need in person, just typed instead of spoken. Nothing about the format requires you to elaborate beyond what's medically relevant.
Care Bare Rx Intake-First
A streamlined intake flow built for exactly this — answering questions on your own terms rather than in a conversation.
What happens after you submit
A licensed clinician reviews your answers, same as they would in person, and determines whether treatment is appropriate. If they need more information, most providers reach out by message rather than a phone call, keeping the entire interaction in writing if that's what's more comfortable for you.
The actual point
ED is a common, treatable medical condition — not something that requires justification or explanation beyond the clinical facts. The providers on this site exist specifically so that getting evaluated doesn't require a conversation you've been avoiding. That's not a lesser way to get care; it's a legitimate one.