What Is Urgent Care Telehealth?
Urgent care telehealth is a video-based medical visit for conditions that need prompt attention but do not require an emergency room. At Innocre Telehealth, you connect directly with our board-certified provider — a doctoral-prepared, board-certified Family Nurse Practitioner with full prescribing authority in Delaware, Maryland, and Washington.
Telehealth urgent care is clinically equivalent to an in-person urgent care center for a wide range of conditions. A thorough history, symptom review, and visual examination via video allow your provider to make an accurate diagnosis, order labs or imaging if needed, and send prescriptions directly to your preferred pharmacy — all within hours of booking.
At $68 for self-pay patients, Innocre Telehealth costs a fraction of a typical urgent care center visit, with no surprise facility fees and no waiting room exposure to other sick patients.
Conditions We Treat
The following conditions are routinely evaluated and treated via telehealth urgent care. This is not an exhaustive list — if you are unsure whether your condition is appropriate, book a visit and your provider will advise.
How Your Visit Works
Book Online
Choose a same-day slot through our secure Charm EMR booking portal. New and returning patients welcome.
Video Visit (15–30 min)
Connect via secure HIPAA-compliant video. Your provider takes a thorough history and conducts a visual examination.
Prescription Sent
If clinically appropriate, your prescription is electronically sent to your preferred pharmacy — often within hours of your visit.
All visits are conducted by our board-certified provider — a doctoral-trained, nationally board-certified Family Nurse Practitioner with full independent prescribing authority in Delaware, Maryland, and Washington. Visits are documented in a secure electronic medical record, and visit summaries are available in your patient portal.
Go to the ER or Call 911 For:
- • Chest pain, pressure, or tightness — especially with sweating or arm/jaw pain
- • Difficulty breathing, shortness of breath at rest, or cyanosis (bluish lips/fingertips)
- • Stroke symptoms: sudden facial drooping, arm weakness, slurred speech, vision loss
- • Severe trauma, deep lacerations, suspected fractures, or head injuries
- • Altered consciousness, unresponsiveness, or severe confusion
- • Anaphylaxis: throat swelling, difficulty swallowing, rapid heart rate with hives
- • Severe abdominal pain, suspected appendicitis, or signs of internal bleeding