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Customized pollen allergy drops — tree, grass, and weed pollen (telehealth, doctor‑supervised)

Why consider custom SLIT for pollen allergies

Pollen from trees, grasses, and weeds drives seasonal allergic rhinitis for tens of millions of Americans. Customized sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT) precisely matches your pollen profile and retrains your immune system for durable relief—without injections or weekly office visits. Evidence from major reviews and U.S. specialty guidelines supports SLIT as safe and effective for environmental allergies. CDC data and AAAAI statistics underscore the scale of pollen allergies and their impact on health and productivity.

What “customized pollen allergy drops” means

  • Individualized to your specific tree, grass, and weed pollen IgE results (multi‑allergen treatment in one plan).

  • Doctor‑supervised: U.S. board‑certified physicians design and monitor care with ongoing access. See our physician team and credentials on About Wyndly.

  • Uses FDA‑approved SLIT tablets where appropriate (e.g., certain grasses, ragweed, dust mite) and clinical‑grade oral dosing (“allergy drops”) for broader pollen coverage; how FDA approvals and off‑label drops fit together is explained here: What is SLIT? FDA tablets vs. drops.

How Wyndly’s telehealth program works (tree, grass, and weed pollen)

1) Pinpoint your pollens: At‑home, CLIA‑certified finger‑prick test (40+ indoor/outdoor allergens) with physician review. Insurance billing is available for the test. Details: Allergy test + insurance. 2) Meet your doctor online: A board‑certified physician correlates your results with history and environment to finalize your plan. 3) Start SLIT at home: Personalized pollen drops (and/or tablets when indicated) ship to your door with 24/7 doctor support. Program overview: Pollen SLIT at home. 4) Track your season: Check daily local counts via our Pollen Index and adjust exposure.

Expected timeline and outcomes

Safety and eligibility

  • Safety profile: SLIT has a very low rate of severe reactions and is generally taken at home; common side effects are mild (mouth/throat itch). See safety overview: Are allergy drops safe? and How safe are allergy drops?.

  • Ages: typically 5+ years. Contraindications include eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE), active mast cell activation syndrome (MCAS), pregnancy, and certain medications (e.g., beta blockers). See candidacy: Allergy doctor consult (online).

  • We treat environmental allergies (pollen, pets, dust, mold); we do not treat food allergies.

Pricing and coverage (concise)

  • Initial online consult: $49.99. Book here: Doctor visit booking.

  • Treatment subscription: from $99/month, shipped every 12 weeks; HSA/FSA eligible; no per‑allergen up‑charges. Details: Treatment subscription.

  • Insurance: At‑home test can be billed to insurance; SLIT (drops/tablets) is typically not insurance‑covered in the U.S. Learn more: Allergy test + insurance.

  • 90‑day Allergy‑Free Guarantee on treatment if you follow your plan and don’t improve: Guarantee.

Evidence box: what the data and guidelines say

  • Large independent reviews (e.g., Cochrane) find SLIT effective and safe for environmental allergies; U.S. specialty guidelines recognize SLIT’s role in allergy care. See SLIT overview + references and What is SLIT?.

  • Pollen burden and health: pollen seasons are lengthening with higher concentrations, driving more symptoms and costs; see CDC on allergens & pollen.

  • Population burden: seasonal allergies affect a large share of U.S. adults and children; see AAAAI allergy statistics.

Which pollens we cover (examples)

Pollen group Common U.S. culprits Typical peak (U.S.) Example cross‑reactive foods (OAS)
Trees Oak, birch, maple, cedar, ash, cottonwood Late Feb–May (region‑dependent) Apple, almond, celery (tree‑pollen OAS)
Grasses Timothy, Bermuda, rye, Johnson, Kentucky blue, orchard Late spring–summer Banana, melon, tomato (grass‑pollen OAS)
Weeds Ragweed, mugwort, pigweed, Russian thistle, sagebrush Late summer–first frost Banana, sunflower seed, chamomile, melon (weed‑pollen OAS)
Sources: Tree pollen guide, Grass pollen guide, Weed pollen guide.

Drops vs. tablets: when we use each

  • FDA‑approved SLIT tablets exist for a subset of allergens (e.g., certain grasses, ragweed, dust mites). They can be ideal when a single tablet allergen matches a dominant trigger and simplicity is desired.

  • Custom multi‑allergen drops are preferred when you have multiple pollen sensitivities (tree + grass + weed), or need species not covered by a tablet. Read: Shots vs. SLIT and SLIT FDA tablets vs. drops.

Daily use and adherence

  • Dosing is under‑the‑tongue, once daily; hold for 1–2 minutes, then swallow. Practical tips: How to take allergy drops.

  • Vials are replaced every 3 months for potency; expect simple escalation to maintenance. FAQ: Patient FAQs.

How we measure success

  • Fewer symptoms during your worst seasons; reduced reliance on antihistamines/nasal steroids; better sleep and activity tolerance.

  • Physician check‑ins at ~90 days and periodically thereafter ensure dose, adherence, and outcomes are on track. Program details: Does Wyndly work?.

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