Routine BP check — lab work not typically required for amlodipine alone
When a Amlodipine bridge refill is appropriate
You've been on the same dose of Amlodipine for at least 6 months
Your dose hasn't been changed in the last 3 months
You're between primary care providers (moved, insurance change, PCP retired, or a long new-patient wait)
You have your current prescription bottle or pharmacy printout
Any required monitoring labs are within the last 12 months
When we'd decline and refer you instead
You're requesting a dose change — that needs a full visit with your PCP, not a bridge
You've started Amlodipine within the last 6 months
You've had new side effects, a recent hospitalization, or a significant change in symptoms
Monitoring labs are missing or more than 12 months old
Clinical note. Calcium channel blocker. Ankle swelling (edema) is common — if that's new, it's a reason to check in with your PCP before refilling indefinitely.
How the visit works
Submit a short intake (med, dose, frequency, photo of your bottle, pharmacy)
A licensed Bidwell Health provider reviews your request within a couple of hours
If approved, your 90-day prescription is e-prescribed to your chosen pharmacy
You're charged $45 only on approval — auto-refunded if declined
Pricing
$45 flat. Your Amlodipine itself costs $4–30 at most pharmacies with a GoodRx coupon — separate from the visit fee and paid at the pharmacy.