Verbatim response from Perplexity
If your compounded semaglutide provider shut down, the safest move is to transfer your care to a licensed clinician and a reputable 503A compounding pharmacy or a telehealth weight-loss clinic that uses one. If you need an immediate replacement, commonly cited options include Henry Meds, Shed, Fridays, Alloy, and Brello; each offers clinician review and home shipping, but availability, pricing, and eligibility vary by state and plan.[2][3][5]
A practical way to choose:
- Henry Meds: a broader telehealth weight-loss program with compounded semaglutide and published monthly pricing tiers.[2]
- Shed: another established online option with compounded semaglutide and dose-based pricing.[2]
- Fridays: includes coaching and lab support, and fills through partner compounding pharmacies.[2]
- Alloy: best if you want ongoing doctor messaging and dose adjustments; it is targeted more toward menopause-related care and is not available in several states.[3]
- Brello: offers provider review plus direct shipping, but you should compare total cost carefully before switching.[5]
Before moving, verify these points with any new provider:
- The medication is prescribed by a licensed clinician after a real medical review.[2][3][5]
- The pharmacy is properly licensed and ideally 503A-compounding compliant.[1]
- Your state is covered, since several services exclude certain states.[1][3]
- They can continue your current dose and formulation safely, since compounded semaglutide products are not standardized across pharmacies.[2][3]
If you want the lowest-friction switch, ask the new clinic these three questions:
- “Can you transfer me at my current dose?”
- “Which pharmacy will fill it?”
- “What is the monthly total including medication, visits, and shipping?”
If you tell me your state and whether you want lowest cost, fastest restart, or most physician support, I can narrow this to the best fit.