Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I asked about Ozempic today.
Diabetic and obese.
Nope, I'm not a candidate.
Why not?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This country is so screwed up with absolutely no priority placed on prevention. OP, good for you to trying to get a handle on your health. Whether you want the Ozempic actually for the pre-diabetes or for excess weight, both are sound reasons. For all the shrews trying to make OP feel bad for wanting to lose weight with Ozempic - get a life. This stupid country and these predatory insurance companies would rather people get diabetes and need medication than avoid it in the first place. It's nuts. Overweight/obesity is a massive public health crisis and should be addressed as aggressively as any other dangerous health condition.
Ok, but OP just had her first postpartum visit. So that makes her what..1-2 months after just having a baby and having GD? No Dr is going to write for ozempic this soon after having a baby bc you are “pre-diabetic” You aren’t diabetic, so treatment isn’t dire. This can be controlled with diet, exercise, and time. If some more time elapses and it cannot, then the Dr will be willing to explore pharmaceuticals. But give your body some time. You already have moved from diabetic to pre diabetic so you are headed in right direction.
Give your body some time and work on it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I asked about Ozempic today.
Diabetic and obese.
Nope, I'm not a candidate.
Why not?
OP might have type 1.
Or as I said before they will start on metformin and see if that works before prescribing a semiglutide
Anonymous wrote:This country is so screwed up with absolutely no priority placed on prevention. OP, good for you to trying to get a handle on your health. Whether you want the Ozempic actually for the pre-diabetes or for excess weight, both are sound reasons. For all the shrews trying to make OP feel bad for wanting to lose weight with Ozempic - get a life. This stupid country and these predatory insurance companies would rather people get diabetes and need medication than avoid it in the first place. It's nuts. Overweight/obesity is a massive public health crisis and should be addressed as aggressively as any other dangerous health condition.
Anonymous wrote:I asked about Ozempic today.
Diabetic and obese.
Nope, I'm not a candidate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I asked about Ozempic today.
Diabetic and obese.
Nope, I'm not a candidate.
Why not?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pp’s talking about how they had prediabetes and going ozempic in 2021 are not relevant today in 2023. There is a shortage and doctors aren’t just writing prescriptions Willy Nilly anymore. First you’ll struggle getting the script, then getting insurance to pay, then finding a pharmacy who will actually fill it for you. Lots of pharmacies are gatekeeping ozempic and unless your prescription has a TD2 code, they know you’re not diabetic and you won’t be a priority.
NP. That hasn't been my experience in spring 2023. I'm prediabetic, BMI=36, and was given a prescription and insurance coverage without issue. I've lost negligible weight but my A1C has improved. All of my weight gain was in the past 2 years. I don't know if that matters.
Anonymous wrote:I asked about Ozempic today.
Diabetic and obese.
Nope, I'm not a candidate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My post-partum blood work came back and my A1C is still firmly in pre-diabetes range (had gestational diabetes with both kids). My PCP is booking out for annual visits until next summer. Can I book a sick visit to ask for Ozempic?
You don't ASK for a med, you get what you need prescribed if you need it. Sounds like this is an excuse to use it to lose weight.
Ozempic/Wegovy are used for managing prediabetics, dummy.
No kidding but you dont ASK for a specific medicine. You ask to be seen if you are not well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My post-partum blood work came back and my A1C is still firmly in pre-diabetes range (had gestational diabetes with both kids). My PCP is booking out for annual visits until next summer. Can I book a sick visit to ask for Ozempic?
You don't ASK for a med, you get what you need prescribed if you need it. Sounds like this is an excuse to use it to lose weight.
Ozempic/Wegovy are used for managing prediabetics, dummy.
Anonymous wrote:Lmaooooo sounds like someone wants ozempic to lose the baby weight! Good luck. Insurance companies have started cracking down and as of July and august, they are requiring prior authorizations unless you are diabetic. Also, if you have pre diabetes, the first medication is metformin. If you manage to get a prescription, good luck getting insurance to cover anything other than a 1 month courtesy fill, before asking for a prior authorization. Next month you’ll full pay and it will be over $1000. Leave the diabetes medication for diabetics. If you are soooooooo concerned about your prediabetes, ask for metformin, but I’m sure you’re mostly only concerned about the baby weight.
Anonymous wrote:Pp’s talking about how they had prediabetes and going ozempic in 2021 are not relevant today in 2023. There is a shortage and doctors aren’t just writing prescriptions Willy Nilly anymore. First you’ll struggle getting the script, then getting insurance to pay, then finding a pharmacy who will actually fill it for you. Lots of pharmacies are gatekeeping ozempic and unless your prescription has a TD2 code, they know you’re not diabetic and you won’t be a priority.