Are telehealth GLP-1 programs legitimate?
Telehealth weight management is mainstream medicine now: state medical boards license the clinicians, state pharmacy boards license the pharmacies, and asynchronous or video prescribing of non-controlled substances like GLP-1s is lawful everywhere (states vary on whether a synchronous visit is required)..com/?utm_source=glponehub&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=glp1-education&utm_content=is-glp1-telehealth-legit) or. The model isn’t the question — the execution is. What separates a legitimate program from a checkout page: 1. Real screening before prescribing. Health history, contraindication checks (the absolute ones), eating-disorder and psychiatric screens, vitals, ID verification. The intake should feel slightly tedious; that’s the safety happening. 2. A licensed clinician making an individual decision — with their role visible and the ability to decline you. Programs that approve 100% of applicants are vending machines. 3. Named, licensed pharmacy — asked and answered without friction, including 503A/503B status for compounded products (why it matters). 4. Honest product labeling. Compounded sold as compounded; sublingual ladders explained as non-equivalent to injections; no “FDA-approved” sleight of hand on non-approved forms. 5. Post-sale clinical reality: a path to a human for side-effect questions (phone support is the differentiator worth actively checking — most programs are chat-only), dose-adjustment protocols, and follow-up cadence. 6. Clean billing: clear monthly pricing, cancelable, no hostage-taking memberships. Run any candidate through the full checklist, and pressure-test with the five questions that expose weak programs. The category is legitimate; your job is distinguishing members from impostors — which takes about ten minutes of asking the right things.
This is general information, not medical advice. GLP-1 medications are prescription drugs. Talk with a licensed clinician about your own health before starting, changing, or stopping treatment.