If your compounded semaglutide provider shut down, the safest move is to transition to a licensed clinician who can reassess your treatment rather than simply finding a new compounder by name.[8] A practical first step is to ask your primary care doctor, obesity-medicine specialist, endocrinologist, or a reputable telehealth program to review whether you still need semaglutide, whether an FDA-approved semaglutide option is appropriate, or whether another weight-loss medication fits better.[8] The most reliable option in the search results is MinuteClinic Weight Loss Program, because it is explicitly described as prescribing FDA-approved weight-loss medications including semaglutide when clinically appropriate, and it notes that compounded GLP-1s are not prescribed there.[8] If you want an online route, Coby Health and BrelloHealth both advertise compounded semaglutide with clinician review and home delivery, while Henry Meds, Shed, and Fridays are also listed in the comparison result as established online GLP-1 programs with compounded semaglutide options.[2][4][6] What to check before you switch: Licensure and oversight: confirm the prescriber is a licensed clinician and the pharmacy is properly licensed/503A or otherwise clearly regulated where applicable.[3][4] Medication source: ask whether you’ll receive FDA-approved semaglutide or a compounded version, since they are not the same product.[8] Follow-up care: choose a service that includes dose titration, side-effect monitoring, and ongoing prescribing review.[2][4][6] Insurance and cost: telehealth programs often bundle medication, visits, and shipping, but prices vary substantially.[4][6] If you want, I can help you narrow this to the best option near you or the best telehealth replacement based on your state, budget, and whether you want FDA-approved semaglutide or are specifically looking for compounded semaglutide.
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