Symptoms need a timeline
Cycle history, menopause status, symptoms, medications, and labs when appropriate can all change whether progesterone makes sense.

Progesterone + hormone health
Progesterone is a prescription hormone option considered around cycle changes, perimenopause, menopause, timing, symptoms, and medical history.
Progesterone Capsules is prescription-only. A licensed provider has to confirm fit before treatment can move forward. Individual results vary.
This option is not taking intake yet. Check back soon for availability.
No guaranteed prescription, no mystery-source protocol, no treatment without a real intake.
Why this path
Cycle history, menopause status, symptoms, medications, and labs when appropriate can all change whether progesterone makes sense.
Evening use, dose, format, tolerance, and follow-up matter because progesterone is a hormone.
Sleep changes, mood changes, cycle shifts, hot flashes, libido changes, and medication history should be looked at together.
Before anything ships
Step 1Answer focused questions about appetite, recovery, energy, symptoms, history, medications, and treatment fit.
Step 2A licensed provider reviews whether the product path makes sense for your history and goals.
Step 3If prescribed, fulfillment follows the care plan and follow-up questions stay connected.
Quality you can inspect
You deserve more than trust-me packaging. If treatment is prescribed, fulfillment happens through pharmacy partners using objective release checks for the medication and route.
Confirms the active ingredient concentration matches the intended prescription details.
Within pharmacy release specifications
For sterile preparations, controls and testing are designed around the route and facility standards.
Route-specific requirements
Checks route-specific preparation details so the dispensed medication matches the pharmacy's formulation specifications.
Matches dosage-form specs
For sterile products, bacterial endotoxin testing screens for pyrogenic contamination.
Sterile preparations
Side effects vary by medication, route, and personal history. Common issues can include stomach upset, headache, fatigue, dizziness, injection-site irritation, or medication-specific reactions. Rare but serious risks are reviewed during intake when relevant.
Compounded medications are not FDA-approved. Compound Health does not manufacture compounded medications, and actual packaging or labeling may differ from website imagery.