General
Breast cancer screening
Virtual visit

Breast cancer screening

Get expert care for your breast cancer screening by completing a brief questionnaire and video consult with our medical team.

Licensed providers in all 50 states

Expert-guided, evidence-based treatments

Skip the trip to the doctor's office

Visit options

We'll check any insurance and show you your options before you book.

Video Visit

$25

Est. or $100 w/o insurance

Chat Visit

$30

w/o insurance

Most insurance accepted

Board-certified

No hidden fees

Available nationwide

What to expect from a Breast Cancer Screening visit

1

Share your health story

Answer a few questions about your goals and concerns. And, we'll gather your full health history from past providers.

2

Meet your clinician

Pick a time that works for you to speak with a licensed clinician. They'll review your health story beforehand, so your visit can be used to listen and dig deeper.

3

Get your care plan

Leave with clear next steps and a personalized care plan. If you need medication, labs, or to see a specialist, your clinician will take care of the details for you.

4

Own your health

Track your progress, schedule follow-ups, and adjust care as your needs evolve. Your care team and General AI is only a few taps away.

Virtual visit with clinician

Ongoing support, always available.

You’ll be supported by experienced clinicians who care for a wide range of health needs, from everyday concerns to more complex conditions.

Our clinicians track your progress over time and adjust your care as needed. If medication is prescribed, we’ll manage dosing and monitor for side effects. If lab testing is recommended, we review results and refine your plan accordingly. You’re never left to navigate care on your own.

All your care in one place. That’s the General Medicine difference.

We help you understand your options, connect you to the right clinicians, manage prescriptions, coordinate any needed evaluations, and keep an eye on your overall health along the way. It’s comprehensive care that looks at the full picture — your goals, your history, your lifestyle — and makes it simple to move forward with confidence.

Your care plan
Clinician

Reasons to book your breast cancer screening visit

Mammogram timing and frequency aren't one-size-fits-all. This visit helps you understand your personal risk and make sure you're on the right screening schedule.

You're 40 or older and want to discuss when to start mammogram screening

You have a family history of breast cancer and want to know your risk

You're due for a mammogram and want help getting it ordered and covered

You have dense breast tissue and want to know if supplemental screening is recommended

You received abnormal mammogram results and want to understand next steps

You've never discussed your breast cancer risk in the context of your full health history

What our customers have to say

I feel like I’m finally on the right path to improving my health with the right support now! It’s so refreshing and reassuring.

Emerald

My experience with General Medicine was amazing. The understanding and care that was taken to figure out what is exactly going on with me. I feel like a weight has been lifted off of me.

Kaylee

I couldn’t be happier with my experience with General Medicine! They are fast, responsive, kind and knowledgeable. It is much easier, more affordable and faster.

Nika

Get the care you need, without the wait.

Frequently Asked Questions

When should I start getting mammograms?

Guidelines vary by organization. The American Cancer Society recommends annual mammograms starting at 45, with the option to start at 40. The USPSTF now recommends starting at 40 with biennial screening. Women at high risk — due to genetics, family history, or prior radiation — may need earlier or more frequent screening, including MRI.

Is a mammogram the only breast cancer screening tool?

Mammography is the standard screening modality. Breast MRI is recommended alongside mammography for high-risk women — those with BRCA mutations, strong family history, or prior chest radiation. Ultrasound is used as a supplemental tool, particularly in women with dense breast tissue.

What does it mean if I'm told I have dense breast tissue?

Dense breast tissue is common — present in about 40% of women — and is a normal finding. It makes mammograms harder to read and is itself a modest risk factor for breast cancer. Women with dense breasts may be offered supplemental screening. Your clinician will discuss what this means for your screening plan.

How accurate is mammography at detecting breast cancer?

Mammography detects approximately 80–85% of breast cancers in average-risk women. Sensitivity is lower in dense tissue. False positives — callbacks for additional imaging that turns out to be benign — occur in about 10% of screening mammograms, which is an important part of the informed consent discussion.

Are there risks associated with breast cancer screening?

Mammography involves very low-dose radiation — the risk from screening is considered negligible. The main harms are false positives (leading to anxiety and additional procedures) and overdiagnosis — detection of slow-growing cancers that may never have caused harm. These are weighed against the mortality benefit of early detection. Breast Cancer Screening visit What to expect from a Breast Cancer Screening visit
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