How can I get acid reflux medication refills online in Delaware?
Delaware residents seeking same-day treatment for common illnesses can book a video visit with Parth Bhavsar, MD — board-certified Family Medicine — without leaving home. TeleDirectMD holds an active Delaware medical license (C1-0029257) issued by the Delaware Board of Medical Licensure and Discipline, verifiable through DELPROS at delpros.delaware.gov. Delaware's compact size — one of the most densely populated states in the country — still leaves many Delaware residents facing long waits at urgent care clinics in Wilmington, Dover, and Newark. A same-day Delaware telehealth visit costs $79 flat self-pay, with no insurance complexity, no prior auth, and no surprise billing. HSA and FSA cards are accepted. Adults 18 and older located anywhere in Delaware are eligible.
Acid Reflux (GERD) Medication Refills via telehealth in Delaware:
TeleDirectMD offers same-day video visits with a board-certified MD for acid reflux medication refills in Delaware, starting at $79. A physician evaluates your symptoms, confirms the diagnosis, and sends a prescription to your local pharmacy — no waiting room required.
Acid Reflux (GERD) Medication Refills in Delaware
Delaware adult care by secure video visit, self pay option starting at $79, MD-only, insurance is not required.
Adults often search for online acid reflux refills when they are running low on a proton pump inhibitor (PPI), H2 blocker, or both, but not every refill request is straightforward. The ACG Clinical Guideline for GERD recommends using the lowest effective PPI dose for maintenance therapy, and for patients with LA grade C or D erosive esophagitis, indefinite PPI maintenance is generally advised. TeleDirectMD uses a safety-first telemedicine approach by reviewing your current GERD medication, symptom frequency, duration of therapy, whether you have had alarm symptoms such as difficulty swallowing or GI bleeding, and whether this sounds like a stable bridge refill request or a situation needing gastroenterology referral. If the history supports a lower-risk bridge refill request, treatment may be reasonable by video, while adults with alarm symptoms, refractory GERD, or suspected complications are directed to in-person gastroenterology care. PPIs should be taken 30 to 60 minutes before a meal for maximum effectiveness. This page is for adults located in Delaware, including Wilmington, Dover, Newark, Middletown, Bear, Glasgow, Brookside, Hockessin, Smyrna, Milford, and surrounding areas.
Quick navigation:
- Self pay option starting at $79
- MD-only care (no mid-levels)
- Insurance is not required
- Licensed telehealth care for patients located in Delaware at the time of the visit
Last reviewed on 2026-06-13 by Parth Bhavsar, MD
ICD-10 commonly used: K21.0, K21.9 (final coding depends on clinical details)
Online MD-Only Acid Reflux Refill Care in Delaware
- GERD medication refill review for PPIs and H2 blockers
- Evidence-based safety screening for alarm symptoms and refractory GERD
- Short bridge refills when clinically appropriate
- Clear rules for when gastroenterology referral or in-person care is needed
Adults 18+ only. TeleDirectMD is not an emergency service. Seek urgent in-person care now for vomiting blood, black tarry stools, severe difficulty swallowing, chest pain that could be cardiac, persistent vomiting, or rapidly worsening symptoms. TeleDirectMD does not prescribe controlled substances.
Acid Reflux Refill Telehealth Eligibility Checklist for Delaware
You are likely eligible for a TeleDirectMD video visit if ALL of these are true:
✓ You Are Eligible If
- You are 18 years old or older
- You are physically located in Delaware at the time of the visit
- You are requesting a refill of a GERD medication you are already taking (PPI or H2 blocker)
- Your acid reflux symptoms are currently stable or well controlled on your current regimen
- You do not have difficulty swallowing, painful swallowing, or unexplained weight loss
- You do not have signs of GI bleeding such as vomiting blood or black tarry stools
- You can name or show your current medication, dose, and how long you have been taking it
- You want evidence-based refill guidance and clear escalation rules
- Insurance is not required. A self pay option is available.
✗ You Are Not Eligible If
- You are under 18 years old
- You have new or worsening difficulty swallowing (dysphagia) or painful swallowing (odynophagia)
- You are vomiting blood, have black tarry stools, or notice blood in your stool
- You have chest pain that has not been evaluated to rule out a cardiac cause
- You have unexplained weight loss along with GERD symptoms
- You are having persistent vomiting that is not controlled
- Your symptoms have not improved after 8 weeks of adequate PPI therapy
- You are requesting a new GERD diagnosis or need initial workup rather than a bridge refill
If you have red-flag symptoms, seek urgent in-person care or emergency care immediately. TeleDirectMD is not an emergency service.
How Online Acid Reflux Refills Work in Delaware
Book your visit and prepare key details
Before your video visit, gather your current GERD medication name, dose, and how long you have been taking it. Note whether you take your PPI 30 to 60 minutes before a meal as recommended, whether your symptoms are well controlled, and whether you have had any alarm symptoms such as difficulty swallowing, vomiting blood, or unexplained weight loss.
See a Delaware licensed MD by video
We review your current regimen, symptom control, duration of therapy, and whether this looks like a stable refill request or a situation needing gastroenterology evaluation. The ACG recommends using the lowest effective PPI dose for maintenance, and for patients with erosive esophagitis (LA grade C or D), indefinite PPI therapy is generally appropriate.
Get a short bridge plan and refills when appropriate
If refill treatment is clinically appropriate, we send an e-prescription to common Delaware pharmacies such as CVS Pharmacy, Walgreens, Walmart Pharmacy, Rite Aid, Acme Pharmacy. You also receive clear instructions about when your symptoms suggest a need for endoscopy, gastroenterology referral, or in-person evaluation.
Delaware Telehealth Regulations for Online Acid Reflux Refill Care
Delaware Title 24 Chapter 60 and Section 1769D of the Medical Practice Act govern telemedicine services, permitting licensed physicians to provide telehealth care using audio-video telecommunications. Physicians must establish a proper physician-patient relationship, verify patient location and identity, obtain informed consent regarding telehealth delivery, and maintain complete medical records. Treatment recommendations and prescriptions issued via telehealth are held to the same standards of appropriate practice as in-person encounters.
Location matters: you must be physically in Delaware during the visit. Insurance is not required. TeleDirectMD does not prescribe controlled substances.
TeleDirectMD vs Other Care Options for Acid Reflux Refills in Delaware
Here is how TeleDirectMD compares to common settings for adult acid reflux refill care in Delaware:
| Care option | Typical cost | Wait time | Provider type | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TeleDirectMD | Self pay option starting at $79 | Same day, often within hours | Board-certified MD only (no mid-levels) | Stable GERD medication refill requests, PPI or H2 blocker refill review, and short bridge care when appropriate |
| Urgent Care | $150 to $300+ (before insurance) | 1 to 3 hours typical | MD, DO, PA, or NP | Same-day in-person evaluation when symptoms are worsening or new alarm symptoms develop |
| Emergency Room | $500 to $3,000+ (before insurance) | 2 to 6 hours typical | Emergency medicine MD or DO | Vomiting blood, black tarry stools, chest pain concerning for cardiac cause, severe dehydration from persistent vomiting, or signs of upper GI hemorrhage |
| Primary Care or Gastroenterology | $100 to $350+ (varies) | Days to weeks | MD or DO | Long-term GERD management, PPI step-down planning, endoscopy, Barrett's esophagus surveillance, and refractory GERD evaluation |
Bottom line: TeleDirectMD is a strong fit for selected adult acid reflux refill requests when the patient is stable on their current PPI or H2 blocker and the visit is clearly a bridge refill rather than an evaluation for alarm symptoms or refractory GERD.
Should I Use TeleDirectMD for Acid Reflux Refills in Delaware? Decision Guide
Do you have emergency warning signs?
- Vomiting blood or coffee-ground emesis
- Black tarry stools or blood in your stool
- Chest pain that has not been evaluated for a cardiac cause
- Severe difficulty swallowing or inability to swallow liquids
- Persistent vomiting with signs of dehydration or significant weight loss
If yes, go to urgent care or the ER now depending on severity
If no, continue to Step 2
Are you 18+ and currently in Delaware?
If yes, continue to Step 3
If no, use in-person care as appropriate
Does this sound like a stable refill request?
- You are requesting medication you already take for acid reflux or GERD
- Your symptoms are well controlled or at your usual baseline on your current regimen
- You do not have new difficulty swallowing, painful swallowing, or unexplained weight loss
- You can describe your current medication, dose, and how you take it
If yes, continue to Step 4
If no, in-person evaluation is often preferred
You may be appropriate for a TeleDirectMD video visit
You can receive short bridge refills when clinically appropriate and clear follow-up instructions. If your symptoms suggest refractory GERD, alarm symptoms, or a need for endoscopy, in-person gastroenterology evaluation may be safer than a routine refill visit.
What Do Online Acid Reflux Refills Cost in Delaware?
Transparent options. Insurance is not required.
TeleDirectMD Video Visit
$79
Self pay option. Insurance is not required.
- MD evaluation and red-flag screening
- GERD control and medication refill review
- Short bridge PPI or H2 blocker refills when appropriate
- Clear follow-up and escalation instructions
Typical Cost Comparison
Common ranges people see before insurance. Actual costs vary.
Prescription costs are separate and vary by medication and pharmacy.
No hidden fees. If medication is not clinically appropriate, you still receive a complete evaluation, guidance, and clear instructions on what level of care you need next.
What Is Acid Reflux Refill Care?
Acid reflux refill care means reviewing whether it is safe and appropriate to continue a patient's current GERD medications, especially proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) and H2 receptor antagonists (H2 blockers), when they are running low or need a prescription renewal. GERD affects approximately 20 percent of US adults and often requires long-term maintenance therapy.
The ACG Clinical Guideline for GERD recommends using the lowest effective PPI dose for maintenance. For patients with non-erosive reflux disease (NERD), attempting PPI discontinuation or on-demand therapy is reasonable. For patients with more severe erosive esophagitis (LA grade C or D), indefinite PPI maintenance is generally recommended because of high relapse rates when therapy is stopped.
A safe telehealth refill plan depends on whether the patient is stable on their current regimen and has no alarm symptoms. Refill care is not the same thing as working up new dysphagia, evaluating refractory GERD, or managing Barrett's esophagus surveillance.
Causes and Risk Factors
Adults request acid reflux medication refills for many reasons, but some refill requests actually reflect worsening disease, new alarm symptoms, or refractory GERD rather than simple medication logistics.
- Running out of PPI or H2 blocker: common reason for urgent refill requests, especially when patients have a gap in insurance or prescriber access
- Obesity and overweight: increased intra-abdominal pressure worsens reflux and is a major modifiable risk factor
- Hiatal hernia: structural contributor to reflux that can worsen symptoms and reduce effectiveness of lifestyle changes alone
- Dietary triggers: fatty foods, spicy foods, chocolate, caffeine, alcohol, and citrus can worsen reflux episodes
- Eating close to bedtime: the ACG recommends avoiding meals 2 to 3 hours before bedtime to reduce nighttime reflux
- Smoking: reduces lower esophageal sphincter pressure and worsens reflux
- Medication-related reflux: certain medications including NSAIDs, calcium channel blockers, and bisphosphonates can worsen GERD symptoms
Not every refill request is a routine refill. Some are actually signals that GERD management needs reassessment, endoscopy, or gastroenterology referral rather than simple continuation.
Symptoms and Red Flags for Acid Reflux Refills in Delaware
Use this table to understand which refill scenarios may fit short bridge telehealth care and which patterns suggest urgent in-person or gastroenterology evaluation.
| Symptom or situation | What it suggests | Telehealth appropriate? | Red flag requiring urgent in-person care |
|---|---|---|---|
| Needs refill of usual PPI or H2 blocker and symptoms are well controlled | Routine bridge refill request | Often yes | Symptom breakthrough despite adequate PPI dosing |
| Occasional mild heartburn controlled by current medication | Stable GERD on maintenance therapy | Often yes | Increasing frequency despite adherent PPI use |
| Wants to discuss stepping down PPI dose | Potential for on-demand or lower-dose therapy in NERD | Sometimes | Severe erosive esophagitis (LA grade C/D) should not stop PPI without gastroenterology guidance |
| Difficulty swallowing food or sensation of food getting stuck | Possible esophageal stricture, eosinophilic esophagitis, or malignancy | No | Needs endoscopy and in-person gastroenterology evaluation |
| Vomiting blood or black tarry stools | Possible upper GI bleeding | No | Emergency evaluation now |
| Unexplained weight loss with GERD symptoms | Possible esophageal or gastric malignancy concern | No | Urgent in-person evaluation and endoscopy |
| Chest pain not previously evaluated | Must rule out cardiac etiology before attributing to GERD | No | Cardiac evaluation before GERD refill management |
Differential Diagnosis and Complications
Upper GI symptoms are not always simple stable GERD. Refill visits must separate lower-risk bridge refill requests from alarm symptoms, refractory disease, and from other causes of chest pain or dysphagia.
Sometimes Appropriate for Telehealth Bridge Guidance
- Stable GERD needing PPI or H2 blocker refill continuation
- Short bridge refill of a current established acid reflux medication
- Questions about PPI timing, dose optimization, or lifestyle modifications
- Review of recent symptom control to judge refill safety
- Basic refill planning before follow-up with primary care or gastroenterology
Often Requires In-Person Evaluation
- New or worsening dysphagia or odynophagia
- Suspected upper GI bleeding (hematemesis, melena)
- Chest pain not yet evaluated to exclude cardiac cause
- Refractory GERD not responding to 8 weeks of adequate PPI therapy
- Barrett's esophagus surveillance or suspected esophageal complications
- Unexplained weight loss, iron deficiency anemia, or persistent vomiting
Stable GERD Refill vs Refractory GERD
A stable refill request means symptoms are well controlled on the current PPI or H2 blocker and the goal is continuing current therapy. Refractory GERD is more likely when symptoms persist or worsen despite 8 weeks of adequate once-daily or twice-daily PPI therapy and requires gastroenterology evaluation and often endoscopy.
Non-Erosive Reflux Disease (NERD) vs Erosive Esophagitis
NERD patients may be candidates for PPI step-down or on-demand therapy. Patients with LA grade C or D erosive esophagitis generally require indefinite PPI maintenance because of high relapse rates when therapy is discontinued.
GERD Chest Pain vs Cardiac Chest Pain
Chest pain attributed to GERD should only be managed as reflux after cardiac causes have been excluded. Chest pain that is new, exertional, or accompanied by shortness of breath, diaphoresis, or radiation requires cardiac evaluation before attributing symptoms to acid reflux.
If your symptoms do not match a lower-risk bridge refill scenario or any alarm symptoms are present, TeleDirectMD will direct you to urgent in-person care or gastroenterology referral.
When Is a Video Visit Appropriate?
When a Video Visit Is Appropriate
- You are requesting a refill of a GERD medication you already take
- Your acid reflux symptoms are well controlled or at your usual baseline
- You do not have difficulty swallowing, painful swallowing, or unexplained weight loss
- You are not experiencing GI bleeding (vomiting blood or black tarry stools)
- You understand this may be bridge refill care, not full GERD workup or endoscopy
- Located in Delaware at time of visit
Red Flags Requiring In-Person or ER Care
- Difficulty swallowing (dysphagia) or painful swallowing (odynophagia)
- Vomiting blood or coffee-ground emesis
- Black tarry stools or blood in stool
- Chest pain not previously evaluated for cardiac cause
- Unexplained weight loss with GI symptoms
- Persistent vomiting or signs of dehydration
- Symptoms not responding to adequate PPI therapy after 8 weeks
If any red-flag symptoms are present, seek urgent in-person or emergency care. TeleDirectMD is not an emergency service.
Treatment Options
Evidence-based GERD care focuses on acid suppression with proton pump inhibitors as the cornerstone of therapy, along with lifestyle modifications. The ACG Clinical Guideline recommends using the lowest effective PPI dose for maintenance and advises taking PPIs 30 to 60 minutes before a meal for maximum effectiveness.
Bridge PPI refills for stable GERD
For stable adults who are running low on an established PPI, a short bridge refill may be reasonable if there are no alarm symptoms such as dysphagia, GI bleeding, or unexplained weight loss. The ACG recommends using the lowest effective PPI dose, and for patients with non-erosive reflux disease, on-demand therapy or step-down may be appropriate.
Bridge H2 blocker refills
For adults already using famotidine or another H2 receptor antagonist as their primary GERD therapy or as adjunct nighttime dosing, refill continuity may be reasonable if symptoms are stable and no alarm features are present.
Lifestyle modifications as adjunct therapy
The ACG recommends weight loss for overweight or obese patients, avoiding meals 2 to 3 hours before bedtime, elevating the head of the bed for nighttime symptoms, avoiding known dietary triggers, and smoking cessation. Lifestyle changes complement but do not replace pharmacologic therapy in most patients with established GERD.
When refill care is not enough
If alarm symptoms such as dysphagia, odynophagia, GI bleeding, unexplained weight loss, or persistent vomiting are present, or if symptoms have not responded to 8 weeks of adequate PPI therapy, a refill-only visit may be insufficient and gastroenterology evaluation with endoscopy is usually more appropriate.
What TeleDirectMD Does Not Manage
- Upper endoscopy or Barrett's esophagus surveillance
- Refractory GERD requiring specialist-level dose escalation or combination therapy
- Esophageal motility testing or pH monitoring
- Surgical evaluation for fundoplication or LINX device
- Complex new diagnosis workups for unexplained dysphagia or GI bleeding
Common Medication Options
These are common categories discussed for adult acid reflux refill care. Medication choice depends on the patient's established regimen, current symptom control, severity of erosive disease, and whether the request is truly a stable refill request.
| Option | Examples | Used for | Key considerations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Proton pump inhibitor (standard dose) | Omeprazole 20 mg, pantoprazole 40 mg, esomeprazole 20 mg, lansoprazole 15 mg | First-line maintenance therapy for GERD | Take 30 to 60 minutes before a meal; use lowest effective dose for maintenance per ACG guidelines |
| Proton pump inhibitor (higher dose) | Omeprazole 40 mg, esomeprazole 40 mg, lansoprazole 30 mg, dexlansoprazole 60 mg | Erosive esophagitis or symptoms not controlled on standard dose | LA grade C/D esophagitis generally requires indefinite PPI maintenance |
| H2 receptor antagonist | Famotidine 20 to 40 mg | Mild GERD, nighttime acid breakthrough, or PPI-intolerant patients | Less effective than PPIs but fewer long-term concerns; often used as bedtime add-on |
| Dual-release PPI | Dexlansoprazole 30 to 60 mg (Dexilant) | GERD maintenance with dual delayed-release pharmacology | Can be taken without regard to meals due to dual-release design |
| PPI (additional options) | Rabeprazole 20 mg | Established GERD patients on this specific PPI | All PPIs have similar efficacy; choice often depends on patient's established regimen and insurance |
| Antacids and alginates (OTC adjuncts) | Calcium carbonate, magnesium hydroxide, sodium alginate | Occasional breakthrough symptom relief | Not a substitute for PPI or H2 blocker therapy in established GERD; adjunct use only |
Important: Medication selection and dosing are individualized. TeleDirectMD does not prescribe controlled substances, and none of these acid reflux medications are controlled substances. Refill treatment online is intended as bridge care when clinically appropriate, not as a substitute for gastroenterology evaluation when alarm symptoms or refractory GERD are present.
Home Care, Prevention, and Follow-up
What to Do Now
- Take your PPI 30 to 60 minutes before a meal for best effectiveness
- Continue your acid reflux medication as prescribed and do not stop abruptly without guidance
- Avoid eating 2 to 3 hours before bedtime to reduce nighttime reflux
- Elevate the head of your bed 6 to 8 inches if you experience nighttime symptoms
- Maintain a healthy weight and avoid known dietary triggers
What to Watch For Over the Next 24 to 72 Hours
- New difficulty swallowing or sensation of food getting stuck
- Vomiting blood, coffee-ground vomit, or black tarry stools
- Persistent vomiting or inability to keep fluids down
- Chest pain that is new, worsening, or could be cardiac
- Unexplained weight loss accompanying your reflux symptoms
Follow-up Timing
- If symptoms are worsening on your current regimen, schedule follow-up sooner rather than relying on repeated bridge refills
- If you have been on a PPI for more than 8 weeks without improvement, formal gastroenterology evaluation is important
- If you have erosive esophagitis, discuss long-term PPI management with your primary care or gastroenterology provider
- If emergency warning signs develop, go to urgent care or the ER immediately
When Not to Use TeleDirectMD for Acid Reflux Refills in Delaware
TeleDirectMD is designed for selected short bridge refill care only. We are direct about when telehealth is not the right fit.
You Should Not Use TeleDirectMD If
- You have new or worsening difficulty swallowing (dysphagia) or painful swallowing (odynophagia)
- You are vomiting blood, have coffee-ground emesis, or notice black tarry stools
- You have chest pain that has not been evaluated to rule out a cardiac cause
- You have unexplained weight loss along with your GERD symptoms
- Your symptoms have not improved after 8 weeks of adequate PPI therapy
- You need Barrett's esophagus surveillance or endoscopy
- You are under 18 years old
- You are not physically in Delaware at the time of visit
Alternative Care Options
- Emergency room: vomiting blood, black tarry stools, signs of upper GI hemorrhage, or chest pain concerning for cardiac cause
- Urgent care: worsening GERD symptoms, persistent vomiting, or dehydration that is not clearly ER level but is not stable
- Primary care or gastroenterology: long-term GERD management, PPI step-down planning, endoscopy, Barrett's esophagus surveillance, and refractory GERD evaluation
Practicing in Delaware
Parth Bhavsar, MD — board-certified Family Medicine — holds an active Delaware medical license (C1-0029257) issued February 17, 2026, by the Delaware Board of Medical Licensure and Discipline (DSBMLD), operating under the Delaware Division of Professional Regulation. The DSBMLD's statutory authority derives from Delaware Code Title 24, Chapter 17, and telehealth practice in Delaware is currently governed by Delaware Code Title 24, Chapter 60 (§§ 6001–6010), the Provisions Applicable to Telehealth and Telemedicine, effective July 1, 2021. Delaware patients may independently verify Dr. Bhavsar's Delaware license through the DELPROS online portal. The license expires March 31, 2027. NPI: 1104323203.
TeleDirectMD serves adults located anywhere in Delaware across all three counties. New Castle County — Delaware's most populous — includes Wilmington (Delaware's largest city), Newark (home to the University of Delaware), Bear, Hockessin, Pike Creek, and Middletown. Kent County's county seat is Dover, Delaware's capital, which anchors the central part of the state; Smyrna, Milford, and Harrington are also served. Sussex County, the southernmost and largest county by area, includes Georgetown (the county seat), Seaford, Laurel, Milford, and the Atlantic coastal resort communities of Rehoboth Beach and Lewes. Delaware has no frontier counties; all regions have established broadband infrastructure and pharmacy access for e-prescription fulfillment.
Delaware is classified by the CDC as a high-incidence Lyme disease jurisdiction, with 298 confirmed cases reported in 2022 (down from a 2017–2019 average of 590 annually per MMWR Vol. 73 No. 6, Feb. 2024). The black-legged tick (Ixodes scapularis) is established throughout Delaware's wooded areas, particularly in New Castle and Sussex counties. Delaware's mid-Atlantic position and humid summers drive moderate-to-high seasonal allergy burden: ragweed peaks August through October statewide, with tree pollen (oak, maple, birch) peaking March through May in northern Delaware. Sussex County's Atlantic coastal beaches — including Rehoboth Beach, Bethany Beach, and Dewey Beach — create elevated UV exposure risk for southern Delaware residents and seasonal visitors. Delaware's Division of Public Health (DPH), within the Delaware Department of Health and Social Services (DHSS), maintains statewide surveillance for reportable communicable diseases including influenza, Lyme disease, and sexually transmitted infections under Delaware's Communicable Disease regulations (16 Del. C. Chapter 5).
TeleDirectMD operates self-pay only in Delaware — no commercial insurance, no Medicaid, no Medicare. Every Delaware visit is $79 flat self-pay, paid at booking. There are no hidden fees, facility charges, or follow-up bills. HSA and FSA debit cards are accepted. Delaware patients with commercial insurance may still book TeleDirectMD telehealth at the $79 flat rate; the visit is paid out-of-pocket and may be submitted to the patient's plan for out-of-network reimbursement at the patient's discretion, though TeleDirectMD does not guarantee reimbursement and does not file insurance claims on behalf of Delaware patients. Delaware Medicaid beneficiaries — including those enrolled with Highmark Health Options, AmeriHealth Caritas Delaware, or Delaware First Health — should contact their MCO to locate in-network telehealth options.
Acid Reflux Refill FAQs for Delaware
Can I get acid reflux medication refills online in Delaware?
Yes, selected adults in Delaware may be appropriate for a short bridge telehealth visit for acid reflux medication refills after red-flag screening. TeleDirectMD can help with triage and refill care when clinically appropriate.
How much does an online acid reflux refill visit cost in Delaware?
TeleDirectMD offers a transparent self pay option starting at $79 for an adult video visit in Delaware. Insurance is not required. Prescription costs are separate and vary by medication and pharmacy.
Can I refill my PPI (omeprazole, pantoprazole, esomeprazole) online?
Often, yes. If you are stable on your current PPI and requesting a bridge refill without alarm symptoms such as difficulty swallowing, GI bleeding, or unexplained weight loss, a short bridge refill may be reasonable by video visit.
Can I refill famotidine (Pepcid) online?
Yes, if you are already taking famotidine for established GERD and your symptoms are stable. Famotidine is also available over the counter at lower doses, but prescription-strength refills can be provided when appropriate.
When should I take my PPI for best results?
The ACG recommends taking PPIs 30 to 60 minutes before a meal for maximum acid suppression. Most patients take their PPI before breakfast. If you are on twice-daily dosing, take the second dose before dinner.
Can I stop my PPI if my symptoms are better?
It depends on your diagnosis. For non-erosive reflux disease (NERD), the ACG notes that on-demand PPI therapy or step-down may be appropriate. However, for patients with LA grade C or D erosive esophagitis, indefinite PPI maintenance is generally recommended because of high relapse rates. Do not stop your PPI without discussing it with your provider.
Are PPIs safe to take long-term?
For most patients with a clear indication, the benefits of long-term PPI therapy outweigh the risks. Potential long-term concerns include C. difficile infection risk, vitamin B12 deficiency, magnesium deficiency, and bone density effects, but these risks are generally considered low when a PPI is truly indicated. The ACG recommends using the lowest effective dose.
What are the alarm symptoms that require in-person evaluation?
Alarm symptoms include difficulty swallowing (dysphagia), painful swallowing (odynophagia), vomiting blood, black tarry stools, unexplained weight loss, persistent vomiting, unexplained iron deficiency anemia, and chest pain that has not been evaluated for a cardiac cause. These symptoms require in-person evaluation and often endoscopy.
What lifestyle changes help with acid reflux?
The ACG recommends weight loss if overweight or obese, avoiding meals 2 to 3 hours before bedtime, elevating the head of the bed for nighttime symptoms, avoiding dietary triggers, and smoking cessation. These complement medication therapy but usually do not replace it in established GERD.
When should I go to the ER for acid reflux symptoms?
Seek emergency care for vomiting blood or coffee-ground emesis, black tarry stools, chest pain that could be cardiac (especially if new, exertional, or with shortness of breath), severe difficulty swallowing liquids, or signs of significant dehydration from persistent vomiting.
Does Delaware allow telemedicine for this kind of visit?
Yes. Delaware allows licensed professionals to provide telemedicine within their scope when appropriate and according to accepted standards of care.
Can TeleDirectMD provide acid reflux refill care in other states?
Yes. TeleDirectMD offers adult evaluations via video visits across multiple states. You must be physically located in the state where you are requesting care at the time of the visit.
Do you accept Delaware Medicaid — including Highmark Health Options, AmeriHealth Caritas Delaware, or Delaware First Health?
TeleDirectMD does not currently accept Delaware Medicaid managed care plans. Delaware Medicaid is administered through three managed care organizations: Highmark Health Options, AmeriHealth Caritas Delaware, and Delaware First Health. None of these MCOs are currently in TeleDirectMD's Delaware network. Delaware Medicaid beneficiaries may visit dhss.delaware.gov or contact their MCO directly to find covered telehealth providers. The $79 flat self-pay rate is available to all Delaware patients regardless of Medicaid status.
Is telehealth legal for treating conditions like sinus infections, UTIs, and allergies in Delaware?
Yes. Delaware Code Title 24, Chapter 60 (effective July 1, 2021) authorizes Delaware-licensed physicians to deliver clinical health-care services via real-time audio-visual telehealth without a prior in-person visit, provided the physician establishes a proper provider-patient relationship through audio-visual evaluation meeting the standard of care. Common conditions — including acute bacterial sinusitis, uncomplicated UTI, seasonal allergies, pink eye, and skin conditions — are routinely appropriate for telehealth evaluation in Delaware. Dr. Bhavsar holds an active Delaware medical license (C1-0029257) from the Delaware Board of Medical Licensure and Discipline (DSBMLD).
Which Delaware pharmacies will receive my prescription?
TeleDirectMD transmits prescriptions electronically under Delaware's mandatory e-prescribing law (24 Del. C. § 1764A). You choose any Delaware pharmacy at booking: CVS locations throughout Wilmington, Newark, Dover, and Sussex County; Walgreens (including former Happy Harry's Delaware locations); Walmart Pharmacy in Bear, Dover, Middletown, and Seaford; Acme Markets pharmacy in northern Delaware; and Rite Aid in select Delaware communities. Your prescription is routed directly to your chosen Delaware pharmacy, typically ready within one to two hours.
Are TeleDirectMD physicians licensed in Delaware? How do I verify?
Yes. Parth Bhavsar, MD — board-certified Family Medicine — holds Delaware medical license C1-0029257, issued February 17, 2026, by the Delaware Board of Medical Licensure and Discipline (DSBMLD) under the Delaware Division of Professional Regulation. You can independently verify this license at any time through the DELPROS portal at delpros.delaware.gov. The license is active and expires March 31, 2027. TeleDirectMD complies with all Delaware telehealth practice requirements under 24 Del. C. Chapter 60.
Where in Delaware do you serve patients — is TeleDirectMD available in all three counties?
TeleDirectMD serves adults 18+ located anywhere in Delaware during the visit — in all three counties. New Castle County: Wilmington, Newark, Bear, Hockessin, Pike Creek, and Middletown. Kent County: Dover (Delaware's capital), Smyrna, Harrington, and Milford. Sussex County: Georgetown, Seaford, Laurel, Rehoboth Beach, Lewes, and surrounding communities. Delaware has no frontier or access-restricted areas. All visits require the patient to be physically in Delaware at the time of the telehealth encounter per 24 Del. C. § 6004.
What if I'm in Delaware and need a controlled-substance medication — can TeleDirectMD prescribe it?
No. Per the federal Ryan Haight Online Pharmacy Consumer Protection Act and Delaware prescribing standards, TeleDirectMD does not prescribe DEA-controlled substances (Schedules II–V) — including opioids, benzodiazepines, stimulants (ADHD medications), or sleep medications — via telehealth without a prior in-person physician-patient relationship. Delaware Code Title 24, Chapter 60 permits telehealth prescribing subject to Board limitations. Delaware's Prescription Monitoring Program (PMP), authorized under 16 Del. C. § 4798 and administered by the Office of Controlled Substances, tracks all controlled substance prescriptions in the state. For controlled substances, patients should contact their in-person Delaware primary care physician or a Delaware urgent care facility.
Need help today?
Insurance is not required. Adult-only video visits. MD-only care. Safety-first triage, short bridge refills when appropriate, and clear next steps.
TeleDirectMD Telehealth Disclaimer
TeleDirectMD provides MD-only virtual urgent care for adults (18+) in Delaware using secure video visits to evaluate acid reflux and GERD medication refill concerns, provide evidence-based guidance, and prescribe short bridge refill treatment when clinically appropriate. Insurance is not required. You must be physically located in Delaware at the time of your video visit. TeleDirectMD does not prescribe controlled substances.
TeleDirectMD is not an emergency service and is not a replacement for urgent in-person care during a GI emergency such as upper GI bleeding. This service is intended for selected stable refill requests and is not a substitute for comprehensive gastroenterology management, endoscopy, or Barrett's esophagus surveillance when indicated.
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Get Acid Reflux Medication Refills Treatment in Other States
TeleDirectMD treats acid reflux medication refills via telehealth in 40+ states. If you are traveling, relocating, or helping a family member in another state, select below to find this treatment near them.
What does an online doctor visit in Delaware cost?
TeleDirectMD's $79 flat rate is up to 3× cheaper than an in-person urgent care visit and ~11× cheaper than an uninsured ER visit. See verified 2026 cash-pay prices across every care setting.
Compare TeleDirectMD to other telehealth services
How much does an online doctor visit cost? · TeleDirectMD vs. Doctor on Demand · All platform comparisons
Common Symptoms Patients Ask About
If you reached this page from a symptom search rather than a diagnosis, these symptom guides cover the common patient questions that route to acid reflux medication refills:
