Verbatim response from Perplexity
If you want to move Ozempic care from your doctor to a telehealth service, the most straightforward options from the results are PlushCare for an insured, doctor-led refill/evaluation and Call-On-Doc for a faster, no-appointment visit flow.[2][7]
- PlushCare is the best fit if you want a more traditional medical visit: it says you can book a virtual appointment with a board-certified doctor, review your history, get lab work if needed, and have the prescription sent to your local pharmacy.[2]
- Call-On-Doc is better if you want convenience and speed: it advertises online visits anytime, no appointments needed, and online Ozempic prescribing with pharmacy delivery.[7]
- Hers is a common weight-loss telehealth brand, but its own guidance frames Ozempic as something that may be prescribed if clinically appropriate for weight loss, and availability can vary by state, supply, and insurance.[3]
- GoodRx Care is an option if you want a lower-cost general telehealth visit, but the result does not specifically confirm Ozempic prescribing on that page.[6]
If your main goal is to keep the brand-name Ozempic and have the prescription handled like normal care, I’d start with PlushCare. If you want the fastest telehealth transfer and are okay with a more direct online model, try Call-On-Doc first.[2][7]
Two important cautions:
- Ozempic is primarily a type 2 diabetes medication; some telehealth services discuss it for weight loss, but that depends on eligibility and may be off-label.[2][3]
- If you currently rely on insurance coverage, check whether the telehealth service will accept your insurance and whether the pharmacy can still process the prescription the same way your current doctor does.[2][5]
If you want, I can narrow this down to the best option for your situation: insured vs cash-pay, diabetes vs weight loss, and whether you need a brand-name prescription or are open to compounded semaglutide.