247,000
virtual visits completed.
Zero waiting rooms. Zero parking lots.Zero exposed siblings.
4.2 min
98.6%
24/7
4.2
minutes from symptom description to pediatrician on screen.

No appointment booking. No insurance pre-authorization. No "next available is Thursday." Just describe what's happening — we handle the rest.

01

Describe the symptom

Type what you're seeing — rash, fever, labored breathing. Upload a photo if helpful. Our intake form takes under 90 seconds.

02

Match with a pediatrician

We route your case to the first available board-certified pediatrician. Median wait: 4.2 minutes. No scheduling, no phone trees.

03

Video or chat consult

Meet your doctor face-to-face via secure video, or text-only if your child is sleeping. Prescriptions sent to your pharmacy in minutes.

04

Follow-up care plan

Receive a written visit summary, a personalized care checklist, and a direct callback window if symptoms change overnight.

Doctor reviewing medical notes on a tablet during a telehealth consultation
Secure video
Parent holding a young child while looking at a smartphone screen
Any device
Prescription medication being prepared at a pharmacy counter
Rx in minutes
Download Telehealth Readiness GuideAge-by-age checklist · Free PDF
11 PM
to 6 AM is when 40% of our consultations happen.

Children don't schedule their fevers for business hours. We don't either. Every scenario below has been handled by a Consult pediatrician — at 2 AM, on a Sunday, in a rural county with one urgent care clinic.

Thermometer showing high temperature reading against a soft background
FeverUrgent
2:17 AM

Fever that won't break

103.4°F at 2 AM. Your toddler is restless. The ER means a 2-hour wait and $400 copay. We mean a pediatrician in 4 minutes.

Get symptom guide
Close-up of a healthcare professional examining a patient with a medical light
Rash
11:40 AM

Mystery rash, school call incoming

Red spots appeared this morning. The school nurse wants a doctor's note. Upload a photo — we'll tell you if it's hand-foot-mouth or just heat rash.

Get symptom guide
Doctor using an otoscope to examine a child's ear during a medical visit
Ear infection
6:55 AM

Ear pain before the flight

Your 5-year-old woke up screaming with ear pain. Flight boards in 3 hours. We prescribe amoxicillin to the nearest airport pharmacy.

Get symptom guide
Young child sitting in bed with a blanket, looking unwell with a tired expression
RespiratoryUrgent
3:30 PM

Croup cough, rural family

90 minutes to the nearest pediatric urgent care. The barky cough is classic croup. We assess severity and prescribe dexamethasone if indicated — no drive necessary.

Get symptom guide
Fever Decision Tree
Download Free PDF
98.6%
of parents rate their Consult visit as "excellent" or "very good."

Every Consult physician is board-certified by the American Board of Pediatrics. Not a nurse practitioner, not an AI triage tool — a pediatrician who completed residency, passed boards, and sees children every day.

Female doctor in white coat smiling confidently in a clinical setting

Dr. Margaret Osei-Bonsu

Pediatric Hospitalist

FAAP
Fever, RespiratoryMD · FAAP · 14 yrs
Male doctor in scrubs with a stethoscope looking at the camera with a friendly expression

Dr. Carlos Reyes-Morales

General Pediatrics

FAAP
Newborns, RashMD · FAAP · 9 yrs
Female South Asian doctor in professional attire smiling warmly in an office

Dr. Priya Subramaniam

Developmental Pediatrics

FAAP
Behavioral, SleepMD · PhD · FAAP · 11 yrs

"My son had a 104° fever at midnight on Christmas Eve. The Consult doctor was on screen in 3 minutes, prescribed antibiotics, and walked me through exactly what to watch for. We didn't spend Christmas in the ER."

Portrait of Nadia Kowalski, a Consult parent reviewer

Nadia Kowalski

"I live 75 miles from the nearest pediatric urgent care. Consult is the reason I didn't drive that road at 1 AM with a sick infant in a car seat. I cannot overstate what that means."

Portrait of Travis Hensley, a Consult parent reviewer

Travis Hensley

"I'm a working mom. I was in back-to-back calls when the school called about my daughter's rash. I opened Consult between meetings, uploaded a photo, and had a diagnosis — hand-foot-mouth, not scarlet fever — before my next call started."

Portrait of Yuki Tanaka-Morrison, a Consult parent reviewer

Yuki Tanaka-Morrison

HIPAA Compliant
Board-Certified Only
Insurance Accepted
24 / 7 / 365
38,400
downloads of the Midnight Symptom Guide last month alone.

These aren't marketing brochures. They're the actual decision frameworks our pediatricians use to triage cases — formatted for parents reading by phone flashlight at 2 AM.

Primary Resource

The Midnight
Symptom Guide

32 symptoms. For each: what it looks like, what it means, when to call Consult, when to go to the ER, what to do right now. Written for the parent who is scared and alone at 2 AM.

32 symptoms covered16-page PDFPrintableTranslated to Spanish

No spam. One email with your PDF. Unsubscribe anytime.

Most Downloaded

Fever Decision Tree

A printable flowchart: when to call Consult, when to go to the ER, when to give Tylenol and wait. Written for parents, reviewed by pediatricians.

New

Symptom Photo-Upload Tutorial

How to photograph a rash, a swollen lymph node, or a throat — so your Consult doctor sees what you see. Lighting tips, angles, and what to include.

Complete Guide

Age-by-Age Telehealth Readiness

Newborn to teenager: what symptoms can be safely evaluated virtually, what always requires in-person care, and what signs mean call 911 immediately.

Ready to skip the waiting room entirely?

Start a Consultation Now

12 pediatricians online · Avg. wait 4.2 min · Insurance accepted