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Which telehealth services still offer compounded GLP-1s after the FDA crackdown?

ChatGPTqualifiedCollected Jul 15, 2026, 09:42 UTC

Verbatim response from ChatGPT

Short answer: I don’t have reliable, up‑to‑the‑minute information saying which telehealth companies currently “still” offer compounded GLP‑1s. After the FDA’s warnings in 2024 many large telehealth clinics paused or stopped offering compounded GLP‑1 products and shifted patients to FDA‑approved GLP‑1 medicines (Wegovy, Ozempic, Zepbound, etc.). Company policies have continued to change since then, so you should verify current offerings directly with any provider.

What I recommend instead (and why)

  • Prefer telehealth services that prescribe FDA‑approved GLP‑1s (safer and regulated): examples include Ro (Ro.com), Hims & Hers (forhims.com / forher.com), PlushCare (plushcare.com), One Medical (onemedical.com) and Carbon Health (carbonhealth.com). These companies are large, transparent about formularies, and are more likely to route prescriptions to licensed retail pharmacies for FDA‑approved products rather than unregulated compounding.
  • If you are considering a compounded product anyway, insist the telehealth provider uses a PCAB‑accredited compounding pharmacy (PCAB = Pharmacy Compounding Accreditation Board) and can provide lot sterility/potency testing and clear chain‑of‑custody. Some national compounding pharmacies that are commonly used (and that you can ask about) include Empower Pharmacy, Wedgewood Pharmacy, and Fagron — but partnering with one of them is not a guarantee of safety unless the product is tested and documented.

How to check a telehealth service yourself

  1. Ask the service directly: “Do you prescribe compounded GLP‑1s? If so, which compounding pharmacy do you use? Are they PCAB‑accredited?”
  2. Request lab testing: ask for third‑party sterility and potency test results (batch/lot #) before filling.
  3. Confirm compliance: ensure the pharmacy follows USP <797>/<800> standards and is licensed in your state.
  4. Consider alternatives: for most patients, an FDA‑approved GLP‑1 prescribed through a telehealth visit and filled at a regular pharmacy is the safer route.

Why I can’t give a simple list

  • Company policies changed rapidly after the FDA actions, and smaller clinics can enter/exit the market or change their compounding partners. I don’t have real‑time browsing access to verify who still offers compounded GLP‑1s today.

If you want, I can:

  • Help you draft the questions to ask a telehealth service or compounding pharmacy, or
  • Contact (via provided links/phone numbers you paste) a short list of services and suggest what to verify for safety.

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