Private sexual health care

Straight answers for personal concerns.

Sexual health is part of whole-person health. Discuss desire, function, comfort, medication effects, and relationship context in a respectful, confidential clinical setting.

Connected evaluation

Look beyond one symptom.

Sexual concerns can involve physical health, hormones, medication effects, mental health, stress, pain, relationship factors, or several of these at once. The goal is not to judge frequency or performance—it is to understand what changed and whether it is causing distress.

Desire changes

Explore low or changed desire, including HSDD when relevant, without assuming every difference needs treatment.

Function & response

Discuss arousal, erection, orgasm, or medication-related changes and whether medical evaluation may help.

Comfort & confidence

Address dryness, discomfort, body changes, communication, or anxiety and connect to in-person care when needed.

How care is built

Clinical judgment, with follow-through.

Your history, preferences, medications, labs, and goals shape the plan. Prescriptions are never guaranteed and may not be the right next step.

Listen without judgment

The visit centers your concern, distress, goals, identity, anatomy, and relationship context.

Look for contributors

Health conditions, hormones, medications, pain, sleep, mood, and stress can all affect sexual wellbeing.

Discuss real options

Care may include education, medication review, treatment, therapy, pelvic-health support, or referral.

Protect privacy

Sensitive concerns are handled through private clinical workflows and discussed only as needed for your care.

Know before you begin

Not every concern has the same diagnosis—or treatment.

Low desire alone does not automatically mean HSDD, and sexual performance medications or supplements can carry important risks and interactions. Evaluation helps identify whether a condition, medication, pain concern, or other factor needs attention before treatment is considered.

Possible sexually transmitted infections, severe genital or pelvic pain, injury, new lumps or sores, or symptoms after an assault may require testing, examination, or urgent in-person support.

Urgent symptoms need urgent care. Telehealth is not a substitute for emergency services. Call 911 or go to the nearest emergency department for severe or rapidly worsening symptoms.

Your next step

Start with clarity, not a commitment.

Confirm your state and care needs, see the next available options, and decide whether Whole for Good fits.

Check eligibility & see times