Updated: January 22, 2026
How to Find a Doctor Who Can Prescribe Pylera Near You [2026 Guide]
Author
Peter Daggett

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Pylera requires a prescription. This guide explains which doctors can prescribe it, how to get tested for H. pylori, and how telehealth can speed up the process.
Pylera is a prescription-only medication. Before you can get it filled at a pharmacy, you need a licensed prescriber to diagnose your H. pylori infection and write you a script. If you've been having stomach pain, nausea, or symptoms of a peptic ulcer, this guide will help you understand who can help — and how quickly you can get treatment.
What Kind of Doctor Prescribes Pylera?
Pylera is not a controlled substance, so any licensed prescriber with prescribing authority can write a prescription for it. In practice, the providers most likely to diagnose H. pylori and prescribe Pylera include:
Gastroenterologists: The specialists most experienced in H. pylori management. They're the most likely providers to order confirmatory testing and prescribe guideline-based therapy. Ideal for complex cases, recurrent infections, or patients with established GI conditions.
Internal medicine physicians: Commonly manage H. pylori, peptic ulcers, and GI complaints in adult patients.
Primary care physicians (PCPs) / Family medicine doctors: Often the first point of contact for patients with stomach symptoms. Many PCPs are comfortable diagnosing and treating H. pylori with bismuth quadruple therapy.
Nurse practitioners (NPs) and physician assistants (PAs): In most states, NPs and PAs have full prescribing authority and can diagnose and prescribe Pylera independently.
Do You Need to See a Specialist?
For most patients with an uncomplicated first-time H. pylori infection, a primary care physician or NP/PA can handle diagnosis and treatment without a specialist referral. A gastroenterologist referral is more important in these situations:
Your symptoms include bleeding (black or tarry stools, vomiting blood)
You've had a previous H. pylori treatment that didn't work (treatment failure)
You have other significant GI conditions (Crohn's disease, stomach cancer risk factors)
You need an endoscopy to evaluate the stomach directly
How Is H. pylori Diagnosed?
Before prescribing Pylera, a provider needs to confirm you actually have H. pylori. The most common diagnostic tests are:
Urea breath test (UBT): Non-invasive, highly accurate. You swallow a capsule or liquid containing urea; if H. pylori is present, it breaks down the urea and produces detectable carbon dioxide in your breath.
Stool antigen test: A stool sample is analyzed for H. pylori antigens. Convenient and can be done at home with a kit.
Endoscopic biopsy: A small tissue sample is taken from the stomach lining during an upper endoscopy. Most accurate and provides additional diagnostic information, but invasive.
Serology (blood antibody test): Less commonly used for current infection diagnosis because antibodies remain positive for months after eradication.
Can I Get a Pylera Prescription Through Telehealth?
In many cases, yes. Because Pylera is not a controlled substance, telehealth providers can prescribe it without needing to see you in person (once the DEA's telehealth prescribing rules are followed for your state). However, H. pylori diagnosis typically requires a lab test — so you'd need to:
Order or complete a stool antigen test or urea breath test (some telehealth companies can arrange lab orders)
Share the positive test result with your telehealth provider
Get your prescription sent to a pharmacy near you
GI-focused telehealth services and general telehealth platforms (like Teladoc, MDLive, or Amazon Clinic) may be able to assist with H. pylori management, depending on your state and the specific provider.
How to Find a Doctor Near You for H. pylori Treatment
If you don't already have a provider:
Start with your PCP: If you have a primary care physician, call their office and describe your symptoms. They can order testing and refer you to a gastroenterologist if needed.
Use your insurance directory: Log in to your insurance member portal and search for gastroenterologists or internal medicine physicians near you.
Use Zocdoc or Healthgrades: Search for gastroenterologists or internal medicine specialists in your area.
Urgent care centers: For stomach pain or symptoms of an active ulcer, an urgent care visit can get you an evaluation quickly, and the provider can order H. pylori testing.
Once you have your Pylera prescription, remember that finding a pharmacy that has it in stock is a separate challenge. Use medfinder to find pharmacies near you that can fill your prescription — so you can get started on treatment as quickly as possible.
Frequently Asked Questions
Any licensed prescriber with prescribing authority can prescribe Pylera — it is not a controlled substance. In practice, gastroenterologists, internal medicine physicians, primary care physicians, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants all commonly prescribe Pylera for H. pylori infections.
Not necessarily. For uncomplicated, first-time H. pylori infections, a primary care physician or NP/PA can diagnose and prescribe treatment without a specialist referral. You should see a gastroenterologist if you have alarm symptoms (GI bleeding), a previous failed treatment, or need an endoscopy.
Yes, in most states. Since Pylera is not a controlled substance, telehealth providers can prescribe it without an in-person visit. You'll typically need a positive H. pylori test result (urea breath test or stool antigen test) first. Some telehealth platforms can coordinate lab testing as part of the visit.
The most common methods are the urea breath test (UBT), stool antigen test, or endoscopic biopsy. The urea breath test and stool antigen test are non-invasive and highly accurate. Blood serology tests are less commonly used for current infection because antibodies remain positive for months after eradication.
Common symptoms of H. pylori infection and peptic ulcers include burning or gnawing stomach pain (especially when your stomach is empty or at night), nausea, frequent burping, bloating, loss of appetite, and dark or tarry stools. If you have these symptoms, see a healthcare provider for evaluation — dark or tarry stools may indicate a bleeding ulcer requiring urgent attention.
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