Verbatim response from ChatGPT
Short answer: Yes — in most cases a telehealth prescription will work with the Zepbound savings card, but there are a few conditions.
What matters
- The prescription must be a valid, state‑authorized prescription from a licensed prescriber (telehealth visits normally meet this).
- The pharmacy filling the prescription must accept the Zepbound savings card/manufacturer coupon. Large national pharmacies (CVS, Walgreens, Walmart, Kroger) typically accept manufacturer savings cards, but always confirm with the specific store.
- Most manufacturer copay/savings cards (including Zepbound’s) cannot be used if your prescription is paid under a government program (Medicare, Medicaid, TRICARE, VA) or where laws prohibit manufacturer copays. They usually apply only to commercially insured patients or sometimes to cash-pay patients depending on the program terms.
What to do
- Ask your telehealth clinician to e‑prescribe Zepbound to the pharmacy you plan to use.
- Call that pharmacy and confirm they can accept and apply the Zepbound savings card to your prescription.
- Check the Zepbound savings card terms or contact the Zepbound/Eli Lilly savings program (customer support listed on the savings card/webpage) to confirm your eligibility and get any enrollment steps.
If you want, tell me your insurance type and which pharmacy or telehealth service you plan to use and I can help you check the likely eligibility or find the appropriate phone numbers/webpages.