🏥 GLP-1 Coverage Hub: Fighting Denials & Prior Auths

Coverage denied? Don't accept the first "No." Download our tactical guides on Prior Authorizations, writing appeal letters that work, and navigating the "Step Therapy" traps in your formulary.

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Stop Asking for Ozempic (Ask for Wegovy)

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Common Questions

How do I get a Prior Authorization for Wegovy approved?
A successful prior authorization for Wegovy is rarely about the drug itself; it is about the "Resume of Failure." Insurance algorithms are designed to reject applications that do not show a history of cheaper attempts. To get approved, you must document:

BMI Criteria: Typically >30, or >27 with at least one weight-related comorbidity.
Step Therapy Failure: This is the key. You must show proof that you tried and failed cheaper plans (Weight Watchers, Noom) or generic medications (Phentermine, Qsymia, Contrave) for at least 3-6 months.
How do I write an appeal letter for an insurance denial?
To appeal insurance denial letter, you must avoid emotional pleas. The reviewer is a clinician or a nurse following a strict rubric. Structure your letter as a legal argument:

State the Denial Reason: "Claim denied due to lack of medical necessity."
Refute with Evidence: "Patient has a BMI of 35 AND has failed Metformin and lifestyle intervention for 6 months."
Cite Clinical Trials: Reference the SELECT trial (semaglutide) or SURMOUNT trials (tirzepatide) to prove that the medication reduces cardiovascular risk.
What is "Step Therapy" and how do I bypass it?
Step therapy (often called "fail first") is an insurance protocol requiring you to try cheaper drugs before they pay for expensive GLP-1s. It is a cost-containment measure. To bypass or satisfy it, you have two options:

Try and Fail: Actually take the cheaper drug (e.g., Phentermine) for the required period and document that it didn't work.
Contraindication: Have your doctor document reasons why you cannot take the cheaper drug. For example, if you have uncontrolled hypertension, Phentermine (a stimulant) is contraindicated.
My insurance covers Ozempic but not Wegovy. Can I get it?
This is a classic "Diagnosis Mismatch." Ozempic is FDA-approved for Type 2 Diabetes (T2D). If you do not have T2D, requesting Ozempic often results in automatic denial because the diagnosis code (ICD-10) on the prescription doesn't match the approved indication.

Wegovy is the exact same drug (semaglutide) but approved for obesity. You must check your formulary to see if anti-obesity medications (AOMs) are a covered benefit. If AOMs are a "plan exclusion," appeals are rarely successful.
What do I do if my Prior Authorization is denied twice?
Most plans allow for a Level 1 Internal Appeal, a Level 2 Internal Appeal, and then an External Review. Do not give up after the first denial; rejection is the default setting.

The "External Review" is the game-changer. It is conducted by an independent third party, not the insurance company. Statistics show that persistence pays off—many claims are approved at the external review stage when the patient provides comprehensive documentation of GLP-1 medical necessity.
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