Virtual Menopause Care Throughout New Mexico
Women throughout New Mexico deserve access to thoughtful, evidence-based menopause care—regardless of where they live. Through secure telemedicine visits, I provide personalized menopause and hormone therapy care for women experiencing perimenopause and menopause from the comfort of their own homes.
Specialized Menopause Care Without the Long Drive
Finding a provider with specialized menopause training can be challenging, especially for women living outside larger cities. Telemedicine makes it possible to receive expert menopause care while still completing labs, imaging, and prescriptions locally.
Whether you live in Albuquerque, Santa Fe, Rio Rancho, Las Cruces, Farmington, Roswell, Alamogordo, Carlsbad, Los Alamos, Taos, or one of New Mexico’s many smaller communities, virtual care can provide access to personalized support without the burden of frequent travel.
What to Expect With Virtual Menopause Care
Starting menopause care virtually is simple, secure, and designed to make accessing specialized care easier.
A Comprehensive First Consultation
Your visit takes place through a secure, HIPAA-compliant telemedicine platform. Once your appointment is scheduled, you will receive a link with clear instructions on how to connect for your consultation from the comfort of your own home.
Before your appointment, you will complete a detailed health history and intake questionnaire, along with the necessary clinic forms, including telemedicine consent, privacy information, and information about how my practice works. This allows us to make the most of our time together and ensures I have a complete understanding of your health history, symptoms, and goals.
Creating a Personalized Care Plan
During your consultation, we will discuss your symptoms, health history, concerns, and goals. Together, we will determine what approach makes the most sense for you.
Depending on your individual situation, next steps may include:
Starting hormone therapy if appropriate
Continuing or adjusting an existing hormone therapy plan
Discussing non-hormonal options
Ordering laboratory testing or other evaluations when needed
Addressing preventive health goals such as bone, sexual, or urinary health
Hormone therapy is not automatically the answer for every woman. The goal is to understand what is happening in your body and create a treatment plan that fits your individual needs.
Follow-Up and Ongoing Support
After the initial evaluation, follow-up visits allow us to review any testing, discuss how your treatment plan is working, make adjustments if needed, and continue supporting your health goals.
Menopause care is a process—not a one-time prescription. My goal is to partner with you throughout your menopause transition and help you feel informed and confident in your care decisions.
Hot Flashes
Night Sweats
Difficulties Sleeping
Joint Pains
Low Libido
Vaginal Dryness
Anxiety/Depression
SYMPTOMS ASSOCIATED WITH
PERIMENOPAUSE/MENOPAUSE
Frequent UTIs
Weight Gain
Fatigue
Blood Pressure Changes
Insulin Resistance
Difficulty with focus
Thinning Hair
Are you an existing patient looking to schedule an appointment?
Head over to the Patient Portal to book an appointment.
Patient Love
“I have known and worked with Marissa for over 10 years. As a clinician, I value quality care as one of the most essential pieces to a client-provider relationship. I chose Marissa as my PCP because she is knowledgeable, thorough, and caring. Ms. Cortes values the importance of trust between a client and their provider and strives to achieve this goal.”
– Rachel M.
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I work with women ages 35 and above who are seeking primary care and/or perimenopause/menopause hormone services.
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This is for women who are frustrated with the lack of access in their area and are wanting to have a partner in health who is knowledgeable in menopausal and common hormone issues in women. This is for you if you want a healthcare relationship where you feel heard, prioritized, and accompanied through your own unique journey.
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Hormone therapy is not the right choice for every woman, and my goal is always to provide care that is safe, evidence-based, and personalized to your individual health history and goals.
Some women may not be good candidates for hormone therapy because of certain medical conditions, health risks, or other factors that require a different approach. During your consultation, we will carefully review your medical history, symptoms, and risk factors to determine whether hormone therapy is appropriate for you.
This practice may also not be the best fit for women who are looking for a quick prescription without a thorough evaluation, prefer in-person-only visits, or need a level of care that requires ongoing management by a local healthcare team or specialist.
Menopause care is about more than prescribing hormones. Sometimes the best plan includes hormone therapy, while other times it may include non-hormonal options, additional evaluation, lifestyle recommendations, or coordination with your existing healthcare providers.
If you are unsure whether this type of care is right for you, I encourage you to schedule a consultation so we can discuss your individual situation and determine the best next step.
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We will have virtual visits at a frequency that makes sense for each woman. Generally this means once every 3-6 months, but some women need closer monitoring. Between visits, patients can reach me via the HIPAA-compliant patient portal for questions or concerns.
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My practice is a direct-pay (cash-pay) menopause care clinic, which means I do not bill insurance for visits. This allows me to provide longer, more personalized appointments focused on your individual concerns, symptoms, health history, and goals without the limitations of traditional insurance-based visit structures.
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Hormone therapy is one of the most effective treatments available for bothersome hot flashes and night sweats. If hot flashes and night sweats are disrupting your daily activities and sleep, HT may improve sleep and fatigue, mood, ability to concentrate, and overall quality of life. Treatment of bothersome hot flashes and night sweats is the principal reason women use HT. Hormone therapy also treats vaginal dryness and painful sex associated with menopause. Hormone therapy keeps your bones strong by preserving bone density and decreasing your risk of osteoporosis and fractures. If preserving bone density is your only concern, and you do not have bothersome hot flashes, other treatments may be recommended instead of HT.
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Hormone replacement therapy has a bad reputation. In 2002 it was widely reported a study called the Women's Health Initiative found a link between hormone therapy and an increased risk of blood clots, heart disease, stroke, and breast cancer. Naturally, doctors mostly stopped prescribing HRT. However, newer studies have since been completed that have found that HRT is much safer than initially reported when used within certain parameters. We know that every drug, hormone, or medical intervention has both benefits and risks associated with it. I will discuss the pros and cons of any proposed treatment and we will decide together what is the best approach for you.
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Yes. There are different options to help ease symptoms. These include conventional medicines and supplements.
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This can vary for each woman and can range from a few weeks to 3 months. Dosages can be adjusted as needed to maximize their effect and help ease symptoms, improve mood, energy, and sleep.
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For most women, yes. In my experience, approximately 90 to 95% of menopause and perimenopause concerns can be safely and effectively managed through telehealth. Menopause care is primarily based on understanding your symptoms, menstrual history, health history, risk factors, and treatment goals. Most of this information comes from a detailed conversation rather than a physical exam. When needed, I can order labs, mammograms, bone density scans, or other testing locally.
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Every patient completes a comprehensive intake questionnaire covering medical, surgical and family history, medications, symptoms, lifestyle factors, and health screenings. I evaluate cardiovascular risk, breast cancer risk, blood clot risk, osteoporosis risk, and any potential contraindications to hormone therapy. Depending on your situation, I may recommend laboratory testing, mammograms, bone density scans, pelvic ultrasounds, or additional evaluations before starting treatment. My goal is to always provide thoughtful, individualised, evidence based care.
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Mammogram is the absolute must screening before we can start any HRT. Depending on risk factors and personal history, some women would also benefit from a pelvic ultrasound. We will discuss this during our initial consultation.
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Yes. This work is meant to complement the work you are doing with your PCP, midwife, women’s health provider, or gynecologist. Often different providers are interested in different aspects of care or do not have the time, training, or interest to dedicate to working in this area.
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Yes, as much as possible. These hormones are processed from plants (soy, wild yams), and are available in both FDA-approved prescriptions made by pharmaceutical companies, as well as compounding pharmacies. Either way, the base or active ingredients/hormones are essentially the same.
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For clinical questions or concerns, you can always reach out to me via your patient portal messaging system in order to ensure messages are kept private and confidential as per HIPAA regulations. For non-clinical questions or concerns not related to your medical care, I can be reached at info@marissacortesmendez.com, or via phone at 505-226-0011.
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As with all medications, HT is associated with some potential risks. For healthy women with bothersome hot flashes aged younger than 60 years or within 10 years of menopause, the benefits of HT generally outweigh the risks. Hormone therapy might slightly increase your risk of stroke or blood clots in the legs or lungs (especially if taken in pill form). If started in women aged older than 65 years, HT might increase the risk of dementia. If you have a uterus and take estrogen with progesterone, there is no increased risk of cancer of the uterus. Hormone therapy (combined estrogen and progestogen) might slightly increase your risk of breast cancer if used for more than 4 to 5 years. Using estrogen alone (for women without a uterus) does not increase breast cancer risk at 7 years but may increase risk if used for a longer time. Some studies suggest that HT might be good for your heart if you start before age 60 or within 10 years of menopause. However, if you start HT further from menopause or after age 60, HT might slightly increase your risk of heart disease. Although there are risks associated with taking HT, they are not common, and most go away after you stop treatment.