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Genital Herpes Treatment in Illinois (HSV-2)

Illinois adult care by secure video visit, self pay option starting at $49, MD-only, insurance is not required.

Genital herpes is one of the most common sexually transmitted infections in the United States, with an estimated 1 in 6 adults aged 14 to 49 carrying HSV-2 and many more carrying genital HSV-1. Despite its prevalence, herpes remains widely misunderstood and stigmatized. The CDC STI Treatment Guidelines recommend three FDA-approved antivirals for genital herpes — acyclovir, valacyclovir, and famciclovir — which reduce outbreak severity, shorten healing time, and decrease transmission risk but do not eradicate the virus. Treatment approaches include first-episode therapy for initial outbreaks, episodic therapy started at the first sign of recurrence, and daily suppressive therapy to reduce recurrence frequency and transmission risk. TeleDirectMD provides confidential, judgment-free evaluation by a board-certified MD who can prescribe antiviral therapy when clinically appropriate. We screen for red flags including disseminated HSV, severe primary outbreaks with urinary retention, and signs of immunocompromise before determining whether treatment by video visit is appropriate. This page is for adults located in Illinois, including Chicago, Aurora, Naperville, Joliet, Rockford, Springfield, Elgin, Peoria, Champaign, Waukegan, and surrounding areas.

Quick navigation:

  • Self pay option starting at $49
  • MD-only care (no mid-levels)
  • Insurance is not required
  • Licensed telehealth care for patients located in Illinois at the time of the visit

Last reviewed on 2026-03-15 by Parth Bhavsar, MD

ICD-10 commonly used: A60.0, A60.9, or B00.9 (final coding depends on clinical details)

Online MD-Only Genital Herpes Care in Illinois

  • Confidential evaluation for genital herpes symptoms and recurrences
  • Red-flag screening for disseminated HSV and complications
  • First-episode, episodic, and suppressive antiviral therapy options
  • Clear follow-up steps, partner counseling, and escalation rules

Adults 18+ only. TeleDirectMD is not an emergency service. Go to the ER now for widespread skin lesions with fever in an immunocompromised patient, severe urinary retention, signs of herpes encephalitis (confusion, seizures, headache with fever), or disseminated HSV with systemic illness. TeleDirectMD does not prescribe controlled substances.

Genital Herpes Telehealth Eligibility Checklist for Illinois

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 Illinois at the time of the visit
  • You have symptoms consistent with genital herpes such as painful genital sores, blisters, or tingling, or you have a confirmed diagnosis and need antiviral treatment
  • You do not have widespread skin lesions with fever or systemic illness
  • You do not have severe urinary retention or inability to urinate
  • You are not significantly immunocompromised with disseminated symptoms
  • Your symptoms are consistent with uncomplicated genital herpes rather than a condition requiring in-person examination or biopsy
  • Insurance is not required. A self pay option is available.

✗ You Are Not Eligible If

  • You are under 18 years old
  • You have widespread vesicular lesions with fever and systemic illness suggesting disseminated HSV
  • You have severe urinary retention or inability to urinate
  • You have confusion, seizures, severe headache with fever, or neck stiffness suggesting herpes encephalitis or meningitis
  • You are significantly immunocompromised with worsening or atypical lesions
  • You are pregnant and experiencing a first episode of genital herpes (requires obstetric management)
  • You have eye involvement or periocular lesions suggesting ocular herpes

If you have red-flag symptoms suggesting disseminated HSV, herpes encephalitis, or severe complications, seek emergency care immediately. TeleDirectMD is not an emergency service.

How Online Genital Herpes Treatment Works in Illinois

1

Book your video visit

Insurance is not required. No referral needed. Many visits are available same day, depending on scheduling. Before your visit, note when symptoms started, whether this is a first episode or recurrence, any prior HSV diagnosis or testing, current medications, and partner notification status.

2

See a Illinois licensed MD by video

We review your symptom history, outbreak pattern, and red flags. The CDC STI Treatment Guidelines provide specific antiviral regimens for first episodes, episodic treatment, and suppressive therapy. We determine whether your presentation fits uncomplicated genital herpes appropriate for telehealth or requires in-person evaluation.

3

Get a treatment plan and, if appropriate, a prescription

If medication is clinically appropriate, we send an e-prescription to common Illinois pharmacies such as CVS Pharmacy, Walgreens, Walmart Pharmacy, Jewel-Osco Pharmacy, Mariano's Pharmacy. You receive clear guidance on antiviral use, outbreak management, transmission reduction, and partner counseling, plus when to seek in-person care if symptoms change.

Illinois Telehealth Regulations for Online Genital Herpes Care

The Illinois Telehealth Act (Public Act 102-0104) establishes a comprehensive framework for telehealth services, allowing providers to deliver care through real-time audio-video and other telecommunications technologies. Illinois law mandates insurance coverage parity for telehealth and permits the establishment of a provider-patient relationship without a prior in-person visit.

Location matters: you must be physically in Illinois during the visit. Insurance is not required. TeleDirectMD does not prescribe controlled substances.

TeleDirectMD vs Other Care Options for Genital Herpes in Illinois

Here is how TeleDirectMD compares to common settings for adult genital herpes care in Illinois:

Care optionTypical costWait timeProvider typeBest for
TeleDirectMDSelf pay option starting at $49Same day, often within hoursBoard-certified MD only (no mid-levels)Uncomplicated genital herpes treatment including first-episode, episodic, and suppressive antiviral therapy with confidential MD care
Urgent Care$150 to $300+ (before insurance)1 to 3 hours typicalMD, DO, PA, or NPWhen in-person examination is needed, first-episode diagnosis with culture or PCR testing, or uncertain lesion diagnosis
Emergency Room$500 to $3,000+ (before insurance)2 to 6 hours typicalEmergency medicine MD or DOSevere primary outbreak with urinary retention, disseminated HSV with systemic illness, suspected herpes encephalitis, or immunocompromised patients with complications
Primary Care$100 to $250+ (varies)3 to 14 days typicalFamily medicine or internal medicine MD or DOLong-term suppressive therapy management, comprehensive STI screening, and ongoing herpes counseling
Infectious Disease$200 to $500+ (varies)Days to weeks (varies)Infectious disease specialist MD or DOImmunocompromised patients with severe or treatment-resistant HSV, disseminated HSV, atypical presentations, or co-infection management with HIV

Bottom line: TeleDirectMD is a strong fit for uncomplicated genital herpes treatment with confidential, guideline-based antiviral prescribing and direct MD evaluation.

Should I Use TeleDirectMD for Genital Herpes in Illinois? Decision Guide

1

Do you have any emergency or red-flag symptoms?

  • Widespread vesicular lesions with fever and systemic illness
  • Severe urinary retention or inability to urinate
  • Confusion, seizures, severe headache with fever, or neck stiffness
  • Eye involvement or periocular vesicles
  • Immunocompromised with disseminated or rapidly worsening lesions

If yes, go to the ER now

If no, continue to Step 2

2

Are you 18+ and currently in Illinois?

If yes, continue to Step 3

If no, use in-person care as appropriate

3

Do your symptoms fit uncomplicated genital herpes?

  • Painful genital blisters, sores, or ulcers in the genital or perianal area
  • Tingling, itching, or burning before or during an outbreak
  • History of prior HSV diagnosis with recurrent outbreaks
  • No widespread lesions, no urinary retention, no confusion, no eye involvement

If yes, continue to Step 4

If no or symptoms are severe, seek in-person evaluation or ER

4

You are likely appropriate for a TeleDirectMD video visit

TeleDirectMD can evaluate your genital herpes symptoms, determine whether first-episode treatment, episodic therapy, or suppressive therapy is appropriate based on CDC guidelines, and prescribe antiviral medication when clinically indicated. If your symptoms suggest complications or an alternative diagnosis, we will direct you to the right level of in-person care.

What Does Genital Herpes Treatment Cost in Illinois?

Transparent options. Insurance is not required.

TeleDirectMD Video Visit

$49

Self pay option. Insurance is not required.

  • MD evaluation and red-flag screening
  • Assessment for first-episode, recurrent, or suppressive therapy needs
  • Guideline-based antiviral prescribing
  • Prescription sent if clinically appropriate
  • Partner counseling, transmission reduction guidance, and follow-up instructions

Typical Cost Comparison

Common ranges people see before insurance. Actual costs vary.

TeleDirectMD$49
Primary Care$100 to $250+
Urgent Care$150 to $300+
Emergency Room$500 to $3,000+

Prescription costs at your pharmacy 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 Genital Herpes?

Genital herpes is a common sexually transmitted infection caused by herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2) or, increasingly, herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1). The CDC estimates that approximately 1 in 6 Americans aged 14 to 49 has genital HSV-2 infection, and most people with genital herpes are unaware they carry the virus because many infections are asymptomatic or produce only mild symptoms.

The virus establishes lifelong latency in sensory nerve ganglia and can reactivate periodically, causing recurrent outbreaks of painful genital blisters or ulcers. While there is no cure for herpes, FDA-approved antiviral medications significantly reduce outbreak severity, shorten healing time, decrease recurrence frequency, and lower the risk of transmission to sexual partners.

TeleDirectMD provides confidential, judgment-free evaluation for genital herpes with guideline-based antiviral prescribing for first episodes, recurrent outbreaks, and suppressive therapy, with careful screening to direct complicated cases to in-person care.

Causes and Risk Factors

Genital herpes is caused by herpes simplex virus transmitted through direct skin-to-skin contact during vaginal, anal, or oral sex. The virus can be transmitted even when no visible sores are present through asymptomatic viral shedding. Understanding transmission and risk factors helps inform prevention strategies and treatment decisions.

  • HSV-2 infection: the primary cause of recurrent genital herpes, transmitted through sexual contact with an infected partner, often during asymptomatic shedding
  • HSV-1 genital infection: increasingly common, typically transmitted through oral-genital contact, tends to recur less frequently than HSV-2
  • Asymptomatic shedding: the virus can be present on genital skin without visible lesions, accounting for a significant proportion of HSV transmission
  • Multiple sexual partners: increases cumulative exposure risk, though transmission can occur from a single contact
  • Immunosuppression: HIV infection, organ transplant recipients, and other immunocompromised states increase recurrence frequency and severity
  • New sexual partnership: highest transmission risk occurs during the first year of a sexual relationship with an HSV-positive partner

Having genital herpes is extremely common and does not reflect personal hygiene or character. Daily suppressive antiviral therapy can reduce transmission risk to uninfected partners, and open communication with partners is an important part of managing the condition.

Symptoms and Red Flags for Genital Herpes in Illinois

Use this table to understand which symptoms fit uncomplicated genital herpes and which patterns suggest a need for urgent in-person or emergency evaluation.

Symptom or situationWhat it suggestsTelehealth appropriate?Red flag requiring urgent in-person care
Painful genital blisters or ulcers with tingling or burningTypical genital herpes outbreakOften yesIf first episode with severe pain and systemic symptoms
Recurrent outbreaks in the same genital area with prodromal tinglingRecurrent HSV, well-suited for episodic or suppressive therapyOften yesIf atypical or significantly worsening pattern
Mild flu-like symptoms (low-grade fever, body aches) with first outbreakCommon with first episode of genital herpesOften yesIf high fever with extensive lesions or systemic illness
Painful urination due to lesions near the urethraCommon complication of genital herpes outbreaksOften yesIf unable to urinate or severe urinary retention develops
Genital lesions in an immunocompromised patientHigher risk of severe or disseminated HSVSometimesIf widespread, necrotic, or not responding to treatment
Widespread vesicular lesions with high fever and systemic illnessPossible disseminated HSVNoEmergency evaluation now
Confusion, seizures, severe headache with fever, neck stiffnessPossible herpes encephalitis or meningitisNoEmergency evaluation now
Eye pain, visual changes, or periocular vesiclesPossible ocular herpes requiring ophthalmologic evaluationNoUrgent ophthalmology or ER evaluation now

Differential Diagnosis: Genital Herpes vs Other Conditions

Several conditions can cause genital sores, blisters, or ulcers that may resemble genital herpes. TeleDirectMD evaluates symptom patterns, outbreak history, and prior testing to distinguish uncomplicated genital herpes from conditions requiring different treatment or in-person evaluation.

Sometimes Appropriate for Telehealth

  • Recurrent genital herpes with typical prodromal symptoms and known HSV diagnosis
  • First episode of genital herpes with mild to moderate symptoms and no red flags
  • Suppressive therapy initiation or renewal for frequent recurrences
  • Partner counseling and transmission reduction discussion
  • Genital irritation or minor lesions without red-flag features

Often Requires In-Person Evaluation

  • Disseminated HSV with widespread lesions and systemic illness
  • Herpes encephalitis or meningitis with neurological symptoms
  • Atypical genital ulcers requiring biopsy to distinguish from syphilis, chancroid, or malignancy
  • Severe primary outbreak with urinary retention requiring catheterization
  • Genital herpes in pregnancy requiring delivery planning and obstetric coordination

Genital Herpes vs Syphilis

Genital herpes typically causes multiple painful vesicles or ulcers, while the primary chancre of syphilis is usually a single painless ulcer with indurated borders. However, atypical presentations overlap, and co-infection is possible. If syphilis is suspected, in-person evaluation with serologic testing is needed.

Genital Herpes vs Contact Dermatitis or Yeast Infection

Contact dermatitis causes diffuse irritation, redness, and itching without discrete vesicles or ulcers. Yeast infections cause itching and discharge without ulceration. Genital herpes produces grouped vesicles on an erythematous base that evolve to shallow ulcers with a characteristic pattern.

If your symptoms do not match uncomplicated genital herpes or any red flags are present, TeleDirectMD will direct you to urgent in-person care or the ER.

When Is a Video Visit Appropriate?

When a Video Visit Is Appropriate

  • Typical genital herpes symptoms: painful blisters, ulcers, or prodromal tingling in the genital area
  • Known HSV diagnosis with recurrent outbreaks needing episodic or suppressive therapy
  • First episode with mild to moderate symptoms and no urinary retention or systemic illness
  • No widespread lesions, no confusion, no eye involvement
  • Not significantly immunocompromised with atypical or severe presentation
  • Located in Illinois at time of visit

Red Flags Requiring In-Person or ER Care

  • Widespread vesicular lesions with fever and systemic illness
  • Severe urinary retention or inability to urinate
  • Confusion, seizures, severe headache with fever, or neck stiffness
  • Eye pain, visual changes, or periocular vesicles
  • Immunocompromised with disseminated or rapidly worsening lesions
  • Pregnant with first episode of genital herpes near delivery (neonatal herpes risk requires obstetric management)

If any red-flag symptoms are present, seek emergency care immediately. TeleDirectMD is not an emergency service.

Treatment Options

The CDC STI Treatment Guidelines recommend three FDA-approved antivirals for genital herpes: acyclovir, valacyclovir, and famciclovir. Treatment approach depends on whether this is a first episode, episodic treatment for recurrences, or daily suppressive therapy. Antivirals reduce outbreak severity, shorten healing time, and decrease transmission risk but do not eradicate the virus.

First-episode treatment

First episodes of genital herpes are often the most severe and benefit most from antiviral treatment. The CDC recommends starting antivirals as soon as possible. Standard regimens include acyclovir 400mg three times daily, valacyclovir 1g twice daily, or famciclovir 250mg three times daily, all for 7 to 10 days. Treatment may be extended if healing is incomplete after 10 days.

Episodic therapy for recurrences

Episodic therapy is most effective when started at the first sign of prodromal symptoms (tingling, itching, burning) or within 24 hours of lesion appearance. Options include acyclovir 800mg twice daily for 5 days, valacyclovir 500mg twice daily for 3 days, valacyclovir 1g daily for 5 days, or famciclovir 1g twice daily for 1 day. Patients should have medication on hand to start promptly.

Suppressive therapy

Daily suppressive therapy is recommended for patients with frequent recurrences (6 or more per year) or to reduce transmission risk to uninfected partners. Options include acyclovir 400mg twice daily, valacyclovir 500mg daily (or 1g daily for patients with 10 or more recurrences per year), or famciclovir 250mg twice daily. Valacyclovir 500mg daily has been shown to reduce HSV-2 transmission in discordant couples.

When telehealth care is not enough

If symptoms suggest disseminated HSV, herpes encephalitis, severe primary outbreak with urinary retention, or atypical lesions requiring biopsy, in-person evaluation is needed. Pregnant patients with a first episode require obstetric management for delivery planning. Immunocompromised patients with severe or treatment-resistant outbreaks may need higher doses and specialist care.

What TeleDirectMD Does Not Manage

  • Disseminated HSV with systemic illness in immunocompromised patients
  • Herpes encephalitis or meningitis
  • Neonatal herpes
  • Genital herpes in pregnancy requiring delivery planning (suppressive therapy starting at 36 weeks requires obstetric coordination)
  • Atypical genital ulcers requiring biopsy or in-person dermatologic evaluation

Common Medication Options

These are common options for adult genital herpes. The actual medication, dose, and duration are determined by the MD after reviewing your symptoms, outbreak history, recurrence frequency, and medical history. Treatment approach varies based on whether this is a first episode, episodic treatment, or suppressive therapy.

MedicationTypical doseDurationKey considerations
Valacyclovir (first episode)1 g by mouth twice daily7 to 10 daysCDC-recommended first-line for first episode. Prodrug of acyclovir with better oral bioavailability and simpler dosing. May extend if healing incomplete.
Valacyclovir (episodic)500 mg by mouth twice daily OR 1 g daily3 days (500mg BID) or 5 days (1g daily)Start at first sign of prodromal symptoms or within 24 hours of lesion onset for best efficacy. Keep medication on hand.
Valacyclovir (suppressive)500 mg by mouth daily OR 1 g dailyOngoing daily use500mg daily for fewer than 10 recurrences per year. 1g daily for 10 or more recurrences per year. Reduces transmission risk to uninfected partners.
Acyclovir (first episode)400 mg by mouth three times daily7 to 10 daysOriginal FDA-approved antiviral for genital herpes. Effective and well-tolerated. May extend if healing incomplete.
Acyclovir (episodic)800 mg by mouth twice daily5 daysAlternative episodic regimen. Start at first sign of recurrence.
Acyclovir (suppressive)400 mg by mouth twice dailyOngoing daily useWell-established suppressive regimen with long safety track record. Requires twice-daily dosing.
Famciclovir (first episode)250 mg by mouth three times daily7 to 10 daysCDC-recommended alternative for first episode. Prodrug of penciclovir.
Famciclovir (episodic)1 g by mouth twice daily1 daySingle-day episodic regimen. Start at first sign of recurrence for best efficacy.
Famciclovir (suppressive)250 mg by mouth twice dailyOngoing daily useAlternative daily suppressive option. Requires twice-daily dosing.

Important: Example regimens only. The actual medication, dosing, and duration are determined by the MD after reviewing your symptoms, outbreak history, recurrence frequency, and medical history. Antiviral medications reduce but do not eliminate viral shedding and transmission risk. TeleDirectMD does not prescribe controlled substances.

Home Care, Recovery Timeline, Prevention, and Follow-up

Recovery Timeline and What to Do Now

  • First-episode outbreaks typically last 2 to 4 weeks; antiviral treatment shortens healing time
  • Recurrent outbreaks are usually milder and last 3 to 7 days, especially with early episodic treatment
  • Keep affected area clean and dry; wear loose, breathable cotton underwear
  • Avoid touching lesions and wash hands immediately if contact occurs
  • Over-the-counter pain relievers such as ibuprofen or acetaminophen can help manage discomfort

What to Watch For Over the Next 24 to 72 Hours

  • Worsening symptoms or new widespread lesions despite starting antiviral treatment
  • Difficulty urinating or urinary retention developing during an outbreak
  • High fever, severe headache, confusion, or neck stiffness
  • Eye pain, visual changes, or vesicles near the eyes
  • Lesions that appear significantly different from prior outbreaks

Prevention and Follow-up

  • If symptoms worsen or do not improve within 48 to 72 hours of starting antivirals, contact your provider or seek in-person care
  • Discuss suppressive therapy if you experience 6 or more recurrences per year or want to reduce partner transmission risk
  • Use condoms consistently, which reduce but do not eliminate HSV transmission (virus can be shed from areas not covered by condoms)
  • Inform sexual partners about your HSV status so they can make informed decisions about risk
  • If any red-flag symptoms develop at any time, seek emergency care immediately

When Not to Use TeleDirectMD for Genital Herpes in Illinois

TeleDirectMD is designed for uncomplicated genital herpes symptoms. We are direct about when telehealth is not appropriate.

You Should Not Use TeleDirectMD If

  • You are under 18 years old
  • You have widespread vesicular lesions with fever and systemic illness
  • You have severe urinary retention or inability to urinate
  • You have confusion, seizures, severe headache with fever, or neck stiffness
  • You have eye involvement or periocular vesicles
  • You are significantly immunocompromised with severe or atypical lesions
  • You are pregnant with a first episode of genital herpes (requires obstetric management)
  • You are not physically in Illinois at the time of visit

Alternative Care Options

  • Emergency room: disseminated HSV with systemic illness, severe urinary retention, suspected herpes encephalitis or meningitis, or widespread lesions in immunocompromised patients
  • Urgent care: first episode requiring in-person examination and testing, uncertain genital ulcer diagnosis, or moderate symptoms not responding to treatment
  • OB/GYN: genital herpes in pregnancy requiring delivery planning, suppressive therapy coordination starting at 36 weeks, or recurring outbreaks during pregnancy
  • Infectious disease specialist: immunocompromised patients with severe or treatment-resistant HSV, disseminated HSV, co-infection management with HIV, or atypical presentations requiring specialist coordination

Genital Herpes Treatment FAQs for Illinois

Can I get treatment for genital herpes online in Illinois?

Yes, if you are an adult 18+ located in Illinois and your symptoms fit uncomplicated genital herpes without red flags. TeleDirectMD can evaluate your symptoms, determine whether first-episode treatment, episodic therapy, or suppressive therapy is appropriate based on CDC guidelines, and prescribe antiviral medication when clinically indicated.

How much does online genital herpes treatment cost in Illinois?

TeleDirectMD offers a transparent self pay option starting at $49 for an adult video visit in Illinois. Insurance is not required. Prescription costs at your pharmacy are separate and vary by medication and pharmacy.

Is genital herpes curable?

There is currently no cure for genital herpes. The virus establishes lifelong latency in nerve ganglia and can reactivate periodically. However, FDA-approved antiviral medications significantly reduce outbreak frequency and severity, shorten healing time, and decrease the risk of transmitting the virus to sexual partners. Many people with genital herpes live normal, healthy lives with appropriate management.

What is the difference between episodic therapy and suppressive therapy?

Episodic therapy means taking antiviral medication only when you feel an outbreak starting, ideally at the first sign of prodromal symptoms such as tingling or burning. Suppressive therapy means taking antiviral medication daily to reduce recurrence frequency and transmission risk. Your doctor can help determine which approach is best based on your recurrence frequency, partner status, and preferences.

How common is genital herpes?

Genital herpes is extremely common. The CDC estimates that approximately 1 in 6 Americans aged 14 to 49 has genital HSV-2 infection, and an increasing number have genital HSV-1 infection. Most people with genital herpes are unaware they carry the virus because infections are often asymptomatic or produce only mild, unrecognized symptoms.

Can I transmit genital herpes even when I do not have visible sores?

Yes. Genital herpes can be transmitted through asymptomatic viral shedding, when the virus is present on the skin without visible lesions. Daily suppressive antiviral therapy with valacyclovir has been shown to reduce transmission risk, and consistent condom use further lowers risk, but neither eliminates transmission entirely.

When should I go to the ER for genital herpes?

Seek emergency care for widespread vesicular lesions with fever and systemic illness, severe urinary retention or inability to urinate, confusion, seizures, severe headache with fever or neck stiffness suggesting herpes encephalitis or meningitis, or eye involvement. These complications are uncommon but require immediate medical evaluation.

Does Illinois allow telemedicine for genital herpes treatment?

Yes. Illinois allows licensed professionals to provide telemedicine within their scope when appropriate and according to accepted standards of care. You must be physically located in Illinois at the time of the visit.

Do I need to tell my partner I have genital herpes?

Open communication with sexual partners is strongly recommended and, in some jurisdictions, may be legally required. Informing partners allows them to make informed decisions about risk, get tested if desired, and recognize symptoms early. TeleDirectMD can provide guidance on partner notification and counseling during your visit.

Can TeleDirectMD diagnose genital herpes or order HSV testing?

TeleDirectMD can evaluate your symptoms and prescribe antiviral treatment based on clinical presentation and history. For definitive diagnosis of a first episode, viral culture or PCR testing of an active lesion is most accurate and typically requires in-person evaluation. If you have a known HSV diagnosis and typical recurrences, clinical evaluation by video is usually sufficient for prescribing treatment.

Need help today?

Insurance is not required. Adult-only video visits. MD-only care. Confidential evaluation, guideline-based treatment decisions, and prescriptions only when appropriate.

TeleDirectMD Telehealth Disclaimer

TeleDirectMD provides MD-only virtual urgent care for adults (18+) in Illinois using secure video visits to evaluate genital herpes symptoms, provide evidence-based guidance, and prescribe antiviral treatment when clinically appropriate. Insurance is not required. You must be physically located in Illinois 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 emergency care during suspected disseminated HSV, herpes encephalitis, or severe complications. This service is intended for uncomplicated genital herpes and is not a substitute for in-person evaluation when definitive diagnosis by viral culture or PCR is needed, or when obstetric management is required during pregnancy.

Online genital herpes treatment in Illinois. HSV treatment online. Genital herpes care by video visit.

Get Genital Herpes Treatment in Other States

TeleDirectMD treats genital herpes via telehealth in 39 states. If you are traveling, relocating, or helping a family member in another state, select below to find this treatment near them.

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