Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just got Zepbound at Walgreens. FEHB covered it with a $25 copay. Crossing my fingers that it will help me.
Did you get a prior approval? What insurance do you have? When I search for it on the drug cost tool for FEPBlue, it shows that I will be paying $504.97 per month.
Yes on prior approval but it was approved within a day or two. United Healthcare is the insurance company.
I know health insurance plans are all about the deal they have with your employer, but can you say more about what the prior authorization involved? I know my plan doesn't cover Zepbound at all, but it does cover Mounjaro with a prior authorization. But I don't have Type 2 diabetes (yet).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just got Zepbound at Walgreens. FEHB covered it with a $25 copay. Crossing my fingers that it will help me.
Did you get a prior approval? What insurance do you have? When I search for it on the drug cost tool for FEPBlue, it shows that I will be paying $504.97 per month.
Yes on prior approval but it was approved within a day or two. United Healthcare is the insurance company.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just got Zepbound at Walgreens. FEHB covered it with a $25 copay. Crossing my fingers that it will help me.
Did you get a prior approval? What insurance do you have? When I search for it on the drug cost tool for FEPBlue, it shows that I will be paying $504.97 per month.
Anonymous wrote:I just got Zepbound at Walgreens. FEHB covered it with a $25 copay. Crossing my fingers that it will help me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The muscle loss on these drugs is brutal. That’s why the Ozempic face is so striking—weight loss plus muscle wasting.
Pure bull shite. Ignore this idjit.
It's not pure bull. The weight you are losing has to come from somewhere. If you're not getting enough protein and doing strength training you will lose muscle.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The muscle loss on these drugs is brutal. That’s why the Ozempic face is so striking—weight loss plus muscle wasting.
Pure bull shite. Ignore this idjit.
It's not pure bull. The weight you are losing has to come from somewhere. If you're not getting enough protein and doing strength training you will lose muscle.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The muscle loss on these drugs is brutal. That’s why the Ozempic face is so striking—weight loss plus muscle wasting.
Pure bull shite. Ignore this idjit.
It's not pure bull. The weight you are losing has to come from somewhere. If you're not getting enough protein and doing strength training you will lose muscle.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The muscle loss on these drugs is brutal. That’s why the Ozempic face is so striking—weight loss plus muscle wasting.
Pure bull shite. Ignore this idjit.
Anonymous wrote:The muscle loss on these drugs is brutal. That’s why the Ozempic face is so striking—weight loss plus muscle wasting.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone find Zepbound in DC?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Over $1,000.00 a month?? Yeah, my HMO is NOT covering that!
Okay but look at from another perspective. At $1K a month for Zepbound you're essentially exchanging out expensive, bad for you food habits like fast food, Door Dash, eating out, Starbucks lattes, and booze which easily add up to $1K a month if not more. Adding to that most people using it for weight loss will be on it for a relatively short period of time as compared to a life saving drug that someone may need to be on for their entire lives. So all in all you may spend $6K-$8K on the meds while saving a ton on foods you would ordinarily be buying - and if you take the time to learn good food habits while you're on the drug then you can successfully get off the drug and stay off, or cycle off and on. That part is up to you since you're in control of what you choose to eat.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone find Zepbound in DC?