What We Treat
Nausea treatment at home
Modern care that meets you where you are.
Baseline Medical provides mobile medical care for non-urgent illness visits that come to you. When nausea is making it harder to recover, our team evaluates your symptoms at home and provides clinician-led support, including IV therapy when appropriate.
Quick Clinical Overview
Nausea can happen with stomach illness, migraine, pregnancy, medication effects, or other medical issues. Treatment may be needed when symptoms persist, oral intake is reduced, or recovery slows.
Symptom Impact
When nausea starts affecting recovery
Nausea can become more disruptive when it interferes with hydration, oral intake, rest, or the ability to recover at home.
Intake disruption
Eating and drinking are becoming difficult, and symptoms are starting to affect hydration or energy.
Illness recovery
Stomach illness, migraine, pregnancy-related nausea, or another non-urgent issue is making recovery harder.
Home-care limits
Rest and simple home measures are no longer enough, and you need clinician-guided next steps without starting in the ER.
How Baseline Care Helps
Clinical care at home for nausea that needs more than a quick answer
Baseline Medical delivers Baseline Care for non-urgent nausea when symptoms need in-person assessment, treatment guidance, and a clearer recovery plan at home.
Baseline Care helps when
You need clinician-led nausea evaluation at home
Symptoms are persistent or disruptive enough that telemedicine alone may not be enough.
You may need symptom support, hydration support, or treatment guidance
Care starts with medical assessment first, then treatment decisions are made based on the full clinical picture.
You need a clearer recovery path without jumping straight to the ER
Baseline Care helps define what can be managed at home and when higher-acuity care is the safer next step.
Lower acuity than
The ER or hospital, where severe instability, emergency treatment, imaging, or hospital-level escalation may be needed.
More hands-on than
A telemedicine-only visit, because Baseline Medical brings an in-person RN assessment and structured mobile care workflow to you.
When Baseline Care is not appropriate
Some nausea symptoms need urgent in-person escalation. Seek urgent care or the emergency room for severe confusion, fainting, chest pain, trouble breathing, severe abdominal pain, suspected shock, worsening lethargy, or symptoms that feel rapidly unstable.
If you cannot keep down fluids at all, are showing signs of severe illness, or may need emergency testing, imaging, or hospital-level treatment, higher-acuity care is the safer next step.
Care Model
How care is delivered
Baseline Care uses a structured Single Coordinated Visit to deliver medical care directly to you, where life happens.
Baseline Care Medical Assessment
A Registered Nurse comes to your home, hotel, or office and performs the in-person assessment, extensive vitals, and clinical workflow that starts the visit.
NP Joins Visit Virtually
A Nurse Practitioner joins the visit on the provider device to advise on treatment planning, symptom support, and prescribing decisions during care.
RN Administered
The Registered Nurse carries out Nurse Practitioner orders during the visit to help you recover in the comfort of your home, hotel, office, or other location of your choosing.

When care is convenient, health becomes consistent.
Baseline Care
Treatment Approach
When you’re not feeling well, it’s natural to want relief for specific symptoms, but treatment should still be guided by what is medically appropriate. During the visit, the Nurse Practitioner works with you to identify what is safe, appropriate, and most likely to help based on your symptoms, health history, and overall clinical picture.
Hydration and IV support
IV fluids may be used when nausea, vomiting, or reduced oral intake is contributing to dehydration risk or slowing recovery.
Anti-nausea and symptom relief
When appropriate, the Nurse Practitioner may prescribe anti-nausea medication, pain-relief support, or other symptom-directed therapies based on the likely cause and severity of symptoms.
Vitamins and clinician-directed additives
Vitamins or other IV additives may be included when clinically appropriate, based on hydration needs, symptom pattern, and the treatment plan ordered during the visit.
Treatment is ordered by the Nurse Practitioner when appropriate and may be administered by the Registered Nurse during the visit. IV therapy is one possible modality within care, not the identity of the service.
Related Care And Information
Continue exploring the Baseline Care path
Baseline Medical delivers non-urgent care where life happens. Explore how care works, where nausea fits in the broader condition system, and where IV therapy belongs within clinician-led treatment decisions.
Care options
View all conditionsRelated conditions
FAQ
Common questions about nausea care
Clear answers about symptoms, escalation, treatment, and how a mobile illness visit works.
Book illness care for nausea support
Baseline Medical brings non-urgent illness care to you. If nausea is slowing recovery, our team can evaluate your symptoms at home and determine the most appropriate next step.