Sexual health · evaluated online

Chlamydia

Chlamydia is treatable with a single dose or short course of antibiotics. Many infections have no symptoms — testing matters.

Licensed clinicians · Available in all 50 states
Chlamydia
Common Rx
Doxycycline, azithromycin
Time to feel better
Days
Contagious
Yes — STI
Telehealth fit
Yes — testing + Rx

What is chlamydia?

Chlamydia trachomatis is the most common bacterial STI in the US — about 1.6 million cases reported annually (likely undercount). Most infections are asymptomatic, making routine screening important.

Untreated, can cause pelvic inflammatory disease, infertility, ectopic pregnancy in women, and epididymitis in men. Treatment is simple — antibiotics for the patient and partners.

Do I have chlamydia? Common signs

If most of these describe what you're experiencing, telehealth may be a good next step:

Often no symptoms Abnormal vaginal or penile discharge Burning with urination Pelvic pain (women) Testicular pain (men) Rectal pain or discharge if anal exposure Sore throat if oral exposure
Here's how it actually works
01
Tell us what's going on5-minute online intake covers your symptoms, history, and any photos.
02
A clinician reviewsLicensed in your state. Reviews your case and asks anything needed.
03
Rx to your pharmacyIf treatment is appropriate, the prescription goes to the pharmacy you choose.

What causes it

Sexually transmitted bacterial infection. Spread through vaginal, anal, oral sex.

Is it contagious?

Yes — STI.

Most people with chlamydia have no idea they have it — which is why routine screening matters for sexually active people under 25.

Can it be treated online?

Chlamydia screening, treatment, and partner notification are well-suited to telehealth. Severe symptoms suggesting PID or epididymitis, pregnancy, recurrent infections benefit from in-person care.

How chlamydia is treated

Doxycycline 100mg twice daily for 7 days is first-line. Azithromycin 1g single dose alternative. Treat sexual partners. Re-test in 3 months. Avoid sex for 7 days after treatment.

Self-care while you wait

When to skip telehealth and seek emergency care Severe pelvic pain with fever, severe testicular pain with fever, signs of disseminated infection — need urgent in-person care.

How long does it last?

Treated cases resolve in days. Without treatment, can persist for months and cause long-term reproductive damage.

Frequently asked questions

Will my partner know they need treatment?

You should tell recent partners. Many states allow expedited partner therapy where clinicians prescribe for partners without seeing them.

How long was I infected before symptoms?

Often weeks to months without symptoms. Treatment is the same regardless.

Can I get reinfected?

Yes — immunity doesn't develop. Re-testing 3 months after treatment is recommended.

Will it affect fertility?

Treated promptly, no. Untreated can cause PID and tubal damage.

Can I get chlamydia from oral sex?

Yes — oral chlamydia is possible. Treatment is the same.

This page is for general information only — not a substitute for individual medical advice. A licensed clinician reviews every intake submitted through PrescriberNow before any prescription is issued. If you're experiencing a medical emergency, call 911 or go to the nearest emergency room.

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