If you've read our guides on natural GLP-1 support, you already understand the hormone and the lifestyle strategies studied around it. But many readers ask a fair follow-up question: what about the medical side?
You've likely heard about prescription GLP-1 medications — names like semaglutide and tirzepatide come up constantly in the news. This page won't hype them or make claims about how well they work. Instead, it explains how the medical pathway is typically accessed, who a licensed provider may consider a candidate, and what to think through before you start that conversation.
How GLP-1 telehealth consultations work
Telehealth has made it easier to speak with a licensed provider without an in-person visit. The general process usually looks like this:
- Intake questionnaire. You share health history, current medications, and your goals.
- Provider review. A licensed clinician reviews your information to assess whether a medical option is appropriate for you.
- Consultation. If suitable, you discuss options, expectations, and any questions directly with the provider.
- Ongoing support. Many programs include health coaching and check-ins as part of the plan.
Crucially, a prescription is never guaranteed. Whether any medication is appropriate is a decision made by the licensed provider based on medical criteria — not something a website can promise.
Who may be a candidate?
Eligibility is determined individually by a clinician, but medical weight-management programs generally consider factors such as:
- Body mass index (BMI) within ranges a provider considers clinically relevant
- Overall health history and current medications
- Previous weight-management efforts
- The absence of conditions that would make a given option unsuitable
If you don't meet medical criteria, a responsible provider will say so — and that's a sign of a legitimate service, not a setback.
Natural support vs. medical options: a balanced view
These aren't competing teams — they're different paths that suit different people, and they can even be complementary under professional guidance.
Natural support may suit you if…
- You prefer to start with diet, lifestyle, and supplements
- You're not looking for (or don't qualify for) a prescription
- You want a lower-cost, non-prescription starting point
- You're complementing other healthy habits
A medical consultation may suit you if…
- You're exploring clinically supervised options
- Your situation may meet a provider's medical criteria
- You want professional evaluation and coaching
- You'd value ongoing clinician support
For the non-prescription path, see our reviewed supplement options. For the medical path, the section below explains how to begin.
Exploring a telehealth consultation
If you'd like to find out whether a medically supervised option is appropriate for you, a telehealth consultation is usually the first step. One service in this space is ShedRX, which connects individuals with licensed providers for personalized weight-management evaluations, and includes health coaching and support as part of its programs.
See if a medical option may be right for you
Start with a free consultation. A licensed provider reviews your information and discusses whether a personalized plan is appropriate — no obligation, results vary, eligibility required.
Start a Free Consultation →For those who qualify. Prescriptions, if any, are determined solely by a licensed provider.
Questions to ask any telehealth provider
Whichever service you consider, being an informed patient matters. Good questions include:
- What are the potential side effects and risks for someone like me?
- What's included in the program — and what's the total ongoing cost?
- How is the medication sourced, and is it from a licensed pharmacy?
- What support and monitoring are provided over time?
- What happens if I want to stop, or if it isn't working for me?
References & further reading
- National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK) — prescription medications for weight management overview.
- U.S. Food & Drug Administration — consumer information on weight-management drugs.
- Müller TD, et al. "Glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1)." Molecular Metabolism, 2019.