Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ozempic has been a miracle for me, but in terms of insurance coverage you just have to call your insurance company aand see if there’s anything you can do but Ozempic probably won’t be covered for you.
it's covered but has this preauthorization process which I don't understand. it looks like some condition needs to be met for the coverage, but nobody stated what the condition is.
Anonymous wrote:Go to a real doctor?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What, pray tell, is “marginally pre-diabetic?”
If you want to lose 50, eat less and move more and cut down on carbs. That will do a lot to help your glucose too. You don’t need Ozempic.
my A1c is outside the normal range, but only a little.
yes, I do need Ozempic. I have been on a diet for the past 40 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:thank you! I will look at the appeal process.
There is a protocol. You will need to try Metformin first for the diabetes. Ozempic is not indicated for weight loss so that’s not going to get the approval.
What, exactly, is “marginal pre-diabetes?”
Anonymous wrote:Ozempic has been a miracle for me, but in terms of insurance coverage you just have to call your insurance company aand see if there’s anything you can do but Ozempic probably won’t be covered for you.
Anonymous wrote:thank you! I will look at the appeal process.
Anonymous wrote:What, pray tell, is “marginally pre-diabetic?”
If you want to lose 50, eat less and move more and cut down on carbs. That will do a lot to help your glucose too. You don’t need Ozempic.