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Hot Flashes · Virginia, VA
It's hormonal. It's treatable. Treated by clinicians licensed in Virginia — visit online, medication shipped to your door.
Medically reviewed by Dr. Ana Lisa Carr, MD, MBA · Last reviewed 2026-05-10
Start your visit →A hot flash is a sudden sensation of intense heat that spreads across the upper body, face, and neck — often followed by sweating, flushing, and a rapid heartbeat. Episodes typically last 1 to 5 minutes and can occur many times a day.
The medical term is "vasomotor symptom" because the cause is in the brain's temperature regulator, the hypothalamus. As estrogen levels fall and fluctuate during perimenopause and menopause, the hypothalamus becomes hypersensitive — narrowing the body's "thermoneutral zone." A small rise in core body temperature that would never trigger anything before now triggers an aggressive cooling response: dilated blood vessels, sweating, and a flush of heat.
Kindr providers prescribe systemic hormone therapy — typically transdermal estradiol with micronized progesterone — as first-line treatment for moderate to severe hot flashes in patients without contraindications. This is the approach endorsed by NAMS, ACOG, and the Endocrine Society as the most effective treatment available.
For patients who cannot or prefer not to use estrogen, Kindr providers prescribe FDA-approved non-hormonal options including paroxetine (Brisdelle), other SSRIs and SNRIs, gabapentin, and fezolinetant (Veozah) — a newer NK3 receptor antagonist that targets the hypothalamic pathway directly.
Treatment is personalized: dose, delivery (patch, gel, cream), and adjunctive therapy depend on your symptom severity, medical history, and preferences.
What it looks like in Virginia: Mid-Atlantic humidity; D.C.-adjacent counties have access but the rest of the state is meaningfully underserved. Kindr providers are licensed across all of Virginia (VA) and prescribe to every ZIP code — from Virginia Beach, Norfolk, Chesapeake to rural communities.
Most patients on appropriately dosed estradiol notice a clear reduction in hot flash frequency and intensity within 2 to 4 weeks, with full effect by 8 to 12 weeks.
Hot flashes are extraordinarily common — they are the single most reported symptom of menopause — but common does not mean acceptable.
For decades women were told to "push through" or that hormone therapy was too risky. The 2022 NAMS Position Statement made the science clear: for healthy women under 60 or within 10 years of menopause onset, the benefits of hormone therapy outweigh the risks. You do not have to live with this.
10-minute online intake. Reviewed within 24 hours. Medication shipped free.
Start your visit →Medically reviewed by Dr. Ana Lisa Carr, MD, MBA
Board-Certified Family Medicine Physician · Lead Provider / Medical Reviewer
NPI 1689841744 · Last reviewed: May 10, 2026