Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't do Calibrate because I have federal insurance. I am from the US but live overseas and can likely buy the meds myself for much less than in the US. Same for bloodwork.
Any suggestions for something similar?
According to the website it's $135/month or $1600/year. Can you pay for it out-of-pocket?
I would but they will not let you. I find it odd.
Same. I don’t understand how my insurance can deny me something I never ask them to pay for.
Calibrate charges your insurance for you to get that rate. It’s not the actual cost
I offered to pay out of pocket the full rate. I don’t understand why my insurance is involved. My obgyn doesn’t take insurance. I pay out of pocket. Why can I do that?
If you’re paying OOP just get it from Walgreens for $1500/month. No reason to bother with Calibrate.
But I still need a prescription from someone and my doctor won’t do it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't do Calibrate because I have federal insurance. I am from the US but live overseas and can likely buy the meds myself for much less than in the US. Same for bloodwork.
Any suggestions for something similar?
According to the website it's $135/month or $1600/year. Can you pay for it out-of-pocket?
I would but they will not let you. I find it odd.
Same. I don’t understand how my insurance can deny me something I never ask them to pay for.
Calibrate charges your insurance for you to get that rate. It’s not the actual cost
I offered to pay out of pocket the full rate. I don’t understand why my insurance is involved. My obgyn doesn’t take insurance. I pay out of pocket. Why can I do that?
If you’re paying OOP just get it from Walgreens for $1500/month. No reason to bother with Calibrate.
But I still need a prescription from someone and my doctor won’t do it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't do Calibrate because I have federal insurance. I am from the US but live overseas and can likely buy the meds myself for much less than in the US. Same for bloodwork.
Any suggestions for something similar?
According to the website it's $135/month or $1600/year. Can you pay for it out-of-pocket?
I would but they will not let you. I find it odd.
Same. I don’t understand how my insurance can deny me something I never ask them to pay for.
Calibrate charges your insurance for you to get that rate. It’s not the actual cost
I offered to pay out of pocket the full rate. I don’t understand why my insurance is involved. My obgyn doesn’t take insurance. I pay out of pocket. Why can I do that?
If you’re paying OOP just get it from Walgreens for $1500/month. No reason to bother with Calibrate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't do Calibrate because I have federal insurance. I am from the US but live overseas and can likely buy the meds myself for much less than in the US. Same for bloodwork.
Any suggestions for something similar?
According to the website it's $135/month or $1600/year. Can you pay for it out-of-pocket?
I would but they will not let you. I find it odd.
Same. I don’t understand how my insurance can deny me something I never ask them to pay for.
Calibrate charges your insurance for you to get that rate. It’s not the actual cost
I offered to pay out of pocket the full rate. I don’t understand why my insurance is involved. My obgyn doesn’t take insurance. I pay out of pocket. Why can I do that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I already hear non obese people talking about getting it to lose extra pounds or maintain a normal weight…which seems like a bad idea. What are the LONG term effects not just side effects?
+1
If i am a non-obese but slightly overweight person with 20 lbs to lose, is this something I can ask my doctor for and take for just a few months?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't do Calibrate because I have federal insurance. I am from the US but live overseas and can likely buy the meds myself for much less than in the US. Same for bloodwork.
Any suggestions for something similar?
According to the website it's $135/month or $1600/year. Can you pay for it out-of-pocket?
I would but they will not let you. I find it odd.
Same. I don’t understand how my insurance can deny me something I never ask them to pay for.
Calibrate charges your insurance for you to get that rate. It’s not the actual cost
I offered to pay out of pocket the full rate. I don’t understand why my insurance is involved. My obgyn doesn’t take insurance. I pay out of pocket. Why can I do that?
Look into buying it from Canada - specifically Mark's Marine Pharmacy. It's about $300 OOP per month. You need a paper script to give them from your DR so they can then ship to you. They only ship Ozempic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't do Calibrate because I have federal insurance. I am from the US but live overseas and can likely buy the meds myself for much less than in the US. Same for bloodwork.
Any suggestions for something similar?
According to the website it's $135/month or $1600/year. Can you pay for it out-of-pocket?
I would but they will not let you. I find it odd.
Same. I don’t understand how my insurance can deny me something I never ask them to pay for.
Calibrate charges your insurance for you to get that rate. It’s not the actual cost
I offered to pay out of pocket the full rate. I don’t understand why my insurance is involved. My obgyn doesn’t take insurance. I pay out of pocket. Why can I do that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't do Calibrate because I have federal insurance. I am from the US but live overseas and can likely buy the meds myself for much less than in the US. Same for bloodwork.
Any suggestions for something similar?
According to the website it's $135/month or $1600/year. Can you pay for it out-of-pocket?
I would but they will not let you. I find it odd.
Same. I don’t understand how my insurance can deny me something I never ask them to pay for.
Calibrate charges your insurance for you to get that rate. It’s not the actual cost
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't do Calibrate because I have federal insurance. I am from the US but live overseas and can likely buy the meds myself for much less than in the US. Same for bloodwork.
Any suggestions for something similar?
According to the website it's $135/month or $1600/year. Can you pay for it out-of-pocket?
I would but they will not let you. I find it odd.
Same. I don’t understand how my insurance can deny me something I never ask them to pay for.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I already hear non obese people talking about getting it to lose extra pounds or maintain a normal weight…which seems like a bad idea. What are the LONG term effects not just side effects?
+1
If i am a non-obese but slightly overweight person with 20 lbs to lose, is this something I can ask my doctor for and take for just a few months?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't do Calibrate because I have federal insurance. I am from the US but live overseas and can likely buy the meds myself for much less than in the US. Same for bloodwork.
Any suggestions for something similar?
According to the website it's $135/month or $1600/year. Can you pay for it out-of-pocket?
I would but they will not let you. I find it odd.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I already hear non obese people talking about getting it to lose extra pounds or maintain a normal weight…which seems like a bad idea. What are the LONG term effects not just side effects?
It's not a bad idea. The metabolic syndrome is a silent killer and being non-obese is also bad. We need to be normal weight as a nation. We can't normalize being overweight and ignore its heath dangers. Having an elevated BMI but not being obese still increases the risk of chronic diseases. This is not about vanity, this is about the billions of $ spent for type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, high triglycerides, fatty liver etc.
Anonymous wrote:I already hear non obese people talking about getting it to lose extra pounds or maintain a normal weight…which seems like a bad idea. What are the LONG term effects not just side effects?
Anonymous wrote:I already hear non obese people talking about getting it to lose extra pounds or maintain a normal weight…which seems like a bad idea. What are the LONG term effects not just side effects?