Most telehealth psych is a refill mill.
A different clinician every visit. Six-minute appointments. Continuity is non-existent.
If you're managing anxiety or depression long-term, you need continuity. Not a different prescriber every refill. Clear pricing. Real follow-up. Where clinically appropriate.

A different clinician every visit. Six-minute appointments. Continuity is non-existent.
Most psychiatrists don't take insurance. The math doesn't work for most people who need ongoing care.
SSRI and SNRI interruptions cause real withdrawal. A predictable refill cadence matters more than most patients are told.
| Den Health | In-clinic / telehealth | DIY / supplements | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Price | From $79 / month | $100–$300 / month | Low, but inconsistent |
| Cash-pay, no insurance games | |||
| Licensed clinician review where required | Yes (and slow) | ||
| Pharmacy-fulfilled medication where supported | Yes | ||
| Continuity of care | Inconsistent | ||
| No upsells, no surprise charges | N/A |
Our long-term thesis is that automated pharmacy operations and a focused clinical workflow deliver the same quality of care at a meaningfully lower price. The number to the right is what we're targeting.
No payment to start. Treatment is subject to clinician review.
No call trees. No surprise charges. No 30-day-supply-of-melatonin upsells.
Most healthcare invoices are a black box. Here's where the typical month's cost actually lives, and how we keep ours below market.
The clinical thinking behind anxiety & depression support. Not marketing. The actual literature we'd build on.
Generic SSRIs have decades of safety data and cost pennies per pill. Most patients on telehealth psychiatry are simply being managed on these medications.
Source: APA Treatment Guidelines
Switching prescribers mid-treatment is one of the biggest predictors of discontinuation. Most rotating-clinician telehealth platforms are a continuity disaster.
Source: JAMA Psychiatry, 2022
Benzodiazepines and stimulants require careful in-person monitoring. Programs that prescribe them by mail-only deserve scrutiny.
Source: DEA / FDA guidance
Den Health serves anxiety & depression support patients across the US. We add new states as we expand. Submit an intake to confirm availability in yours.
“I'd been paying $300 a session at a ketamine clinic. The math never worked. Hearing someone is finally building this at a real price made me sign up the same day.”

“My OB told me to ride out perimenopause. I'm not riding anything out. Give me a clinician who knows modern HRT and a price that isn't predatory.”

“I've been on three different telehealth platforms for anxiety. Different prescriber every time, six-minute visits, refill gaps. Just give me one clinician and a flat price.”

Patients on the anxiety & depression support program. Real people, real prescriptions, in supported states.






Healthcare is one of the few industries where the price you pay has almost nothing to do with what something costs to make. We're operators and clinicians who got tired of explaining that to our families.
Den Health is the company we wanted to build. A vertically integrated cash-pay pharmacy. Automation where it makes sense. Clinicians where it matters. The difference goes to patients.
Five programs today. Cash-pay only. One price per month. Roughly 30% below the market we replace.
Anything else you want to know? You can ask in the intake. We read every response.
No. Mail-order programs are not the right place for those. We focus on SSRIs, SNRIs, atypicals, and adjunctive options where appropriate.
No payment. No spam. Honest answers help us build the program that's worth shipping.
Submitting an intake does not establish a clinician-patient relationship until a licensed clinician reviews your information.