Let me explain with my current situation. I am 22 F and I currently weigh 305lbs.
I am obese. Morbidly obese.
Even though I have been trying for 5 years at this point to lose the weight on my own. Eat healthier, eat more fruits and veggies, cut out excess sugar, walk more, exercise more, the whole kit and caboodle.
But I still am not losing the weight. I am still very fat. And I am worried that it will cause very serious health problems.
So I talked with my doctor and she told me “We need to get you on a weight loss medication. Let’s try Ozempic”.
But my insurance told us that they don’t think I need the Ozempic so they won’t pay for it.
So we tried Wegovy and Mounjaro. But my insurance still rejected our requests.
They’re saying because I am young, and I am a diabetic with good numbers, I dont need the weight loss meds and I can just lose the weight naturally.
But ive been trying to and it hasn’t been working. So that’s why my doctor prescribed me the weight loss med.
Why is this allowed? Why is it that your insurance can deny you a medication, even if your doctor says you need it?


I’m sure you think the whole world revolves around you, but without giving your country, how can anyone answer this?
I’ll assume you’re in the UK, and suggest you use the NHS.
They have their weight in lbs and talk about health insurance and for some reason you think the UK?
The NHS will prescribe both. Germany too because they have diabetes. If they don’t have diabetes the latter won’t, even though the medications have been approved by STILO for weight loss (that is, if you have a gesetzliche Versicherung, private insurance will prescribe them).
It is indeed curious that a place called “no stupid questions” is rampant with US defaultism.
I do not “think that the whole world revolves around me”