Meghan Lena was devastated when she lost coverage for her obesity medication.
Meghan Lena was devastated when she lost coverage for her obesity medication. (Jodi Hilton for NPR)

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For Meghan Lena, a special ed teacher in Massachusetts, the letter she got last spring from the company that manages her drug benefits really hurt.

CVS Caremark said it was dropping Eli Lilly’s blockbuster obesity drug Zepbound from its coverage in July.

“I was devastated,” she says.

She’d been able to get Zepbound for a $30 monthly copay and had lost 50 pounds in a year. The drug helped her focus on being a new mom and gaining strength at the gym, she says, not just counting calories burned. She feared that if she stopped taking it, all her progress would vanish.

Lena wound up switching to Novo Nordisk’s Wegovy, CVS Caremark’s preferred obesity drug, and was relieved that it worked for her. But just a few months later, in October, her employer’s health plan dropped Wegovy, too.

“It felt like a double punch,” she said. “And that’s kind of the point where I was like, ‘I guess I can’t make it work.’ “

She felt defeated.

Making matters worse, her monthly health insurance premium went up 20% the same month. The school district’s insurance trust sent a letter saying it was because of expensive GLP-1s, the class of drugs that includes Wegovy and Zepbound — the same ones that were no longer covered for her.

At first, she felt shame and guilt, but then that feeling changed.

“That was the first moment that I was like, holy cow, these insurance companies, they’re now making medical decisions for me,” she says. “And that really, really made me mad.”

Insurance coverage gets spottier 

Lena is one of many people who have lost coverage for these medicines. That’s according to research by GoodRx, a website that helps patients find discounts on prescription drugs.

It found that from 2025 to 2026, 12 million people lost coverage for Zepbound and 12 million lost it for Wegovy.

Meghan Lena has switched obesity medicines in response to changes in her coverage. She is now using a compounded medication prescribed by her doctor.
Meghan Lena has switched obesity medicines in response to changes in her coverage. She is now using a compounded medication prescribed by her doctor. (Jodi Hilton for NPR)

Amanda Nguyen, senior health economist at GoodRx, says without adequate insurance coverage, the drugs cost people hundreds of dollars a month out of pocket. “For many Americans, they can’t afford that,” she says. “That’s the difference between for many people taking the medication that their doctor wants them to take and having to forgo it.”

The GoodRx study relied on formulary data from health care analytics firm MMIT. Formularies are the menu of drugs that a health plan covers, and the MMIT data used by GoodRx reflects drug coverage for more than 190 million people.

The same GoodRx research also showed that for people who do have coverage for their GLP-1 drugs, 88% of them face some kind of restriction.

Restrictions typically include a prior authorization before covering a prescription or that the patient has a body mass index, or BMI, of 40. That’s well above the BMI of 30 that clinically defines obesity.

Some people who do have coverage still have to pay hundreds of dollars a month because their plans only pay for a small percentage of the drug’s price.

“There are the lucky ones that have some form of coverage that is also affordable, but they are few and far between.” says Tracy Zvenyach, vice president of advocacy and research at the nonprofit Obesity Action Coalition, which receives financial support from drugmakers, including Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk.

“Essentially every insurance carrier is just making it up, making up the policy, the limitation, the restriction on eligibility in the way that they want to, in a way that will kind of reduce the eligible population,” Zvenyach says.

To be sure, at least some employer surveys found obesity drug coverage improvement in 2025.

For example, the International Foundation of Employee Benefit Plans conducted a survey that showed employers who said they covered GLP-1 drugs for weight loss and Type 2 diabetes grew from 34% in 2024 to 36% in 2025.

But the KFF Employer Health Benefits Survey shows that even though employers who said they offered obesity drug coverage grew from 18% in 2024 to 19% in 2025, those that said they didn’t offer it also increased from 52% to 57% over the same period. What shrunk was the portion of survey respondents who said they didn’t know.

Dr. Catherine Varney, obesity medicine director for UVA Health in Charlottesville, Va., says she has about 1,000 patients on obesity drugs. Around 60% of them pay out of pocket, and insurance coverage barriers are growing.

“I feel like more of a financial planner these days than a physician, because we’re crunching the numbers,” Varney says, adding that often it’s cheaper for some of her patients to pay out of pocket than to meet their deductible and then still have to pay $200 a month.

The Pharmaceutical Care Management Association says employers and their pharmaceutical benefit managers have made “huge progress” despite significant cost challenges. “The GLP-1 market is very dynamic, but it’s clear employers are working to expand coverage for their employees,” says PCMA spokesperson Greg Lopes.

Asked about dropping Zepbound in favor of Wegovy, CVS Caremark says its formulary strategy uses competition to drive down costs while maintaining “clinically appropriate coverage” and enabling greater access to these drugs.

“The egregiously high list prices set by drug manufacturers of GLP-1s for weight loss are the single biggest barrier to patient access,” says Phillip Blando, a spokesman for CVS Caremark. “By drawing upon our decades of expertise we are confident that our formulary move means lower costs and better outcomes for consumers and our customers.”

Finding a solution — for now

As for Meghan Lena in Massachusetts, her doctor works with a compounding pharmacy he trusts, and helped her switch to a medication she can afford.

Compounded drugs aren’t generics, nor do they go through the Food and Drug Administration’s approval process. They’re made with the same active ingredient as the brand-name versions, but by a specialized pharmacy, not a drug company. Brand-name drugmakers are trying to end widespread obesity drug compounding.

Meghan Lena, her husband, Eric Schimelpfenig, and their daughter at home in Bernardston, Mass.
Meghan Lena, her husband, Eric Schimelpfenig, and their daughter at home in Bernardston, Mass. (Jodi Hilton for NPR)

“There’s so much uncertainty around these medications,” Lena says. “Am I going to be able to get it? Can I afford it? Is it going to change? Is it ever going to be affordable?”

Lena pays about $300 a month for compounded medicine, compared to Eli Lilly’s $450 cash price for her dose of name-brand Zepbound. It’s expensive, she says, but adds it’s her best option for now.

Transcript:

MARY LOUISE KELLY, HOST:

Obesity medicines Wegovy and Zepbound have gone mainstream. They work well for people looking to lose weight. Doctors are comfortable prescribing them. But NPR pharmaceuticals correspondent Sydney Lupkin reports insurance coverage has not kept pace.

SYDNEY LUPKIN, BYLINE: For Megan Lena (ph), a special ed teacher in Massachusetts, the letter she got last spring from the company that manages her drug benefits really hurt. CVS Caremark said it was dropping Eli Lilly’s blockbuster obesity drug Zepbound from its coverage in July.

MEGAN LENA: I was devastated.

LUPKIN: She’d been able to afford the $30 copay for Zepbound and lost 50 pounds in a year. Lena wound up switching to Wegovy , CVS Caremark’s new preferred drug at the same copay, and was relieved that it worked for her. But just a few months later, in October, her employer’s health plan dropped Wegovy, too.

LENA: It felt like a double punch. And that’s kind of the point where I was like, I guess I can’t make it work.

LUPKIN: She felt defeated. Making matters worse, her monthly health insurance premium went up 20%. The school district’s insurer sent a letter saying it was because of expensive GLP-1s, the same ones that were no longer covered.

LENA: That was the first moment that I was like, holy cow, these insurance companies – they’re now making medical decisions for me. And that really, really made me mad.

LUPKIN: Lena is one of the many people who lost coverage for these medicines. That’s according to research by GoodRx, a website that helps patients find discounts on prescription drugs. It found that over the last year, 12 million people lost coverage for Zepbound, and 12 million lost it for Wegovy. Amanda Nguyen, the senior health economist at GoodRx, says without adequate coverage, the drugs cost people hundreds of dollars a month.

AMANDA NGUYEN: For many Americans, they can’t afford that. So that’s the difference between – for many people – taking the medication that their doctor wants them to take and having to forego it.

LUPKIN: With coverage, the common restrictions include a prior authorization or, something I’ve heard from a lot of patients, that the insurance plan requires a body mass index, or BMI, of 40. That’s well above the obesity threshold of 30. Sometimes even people who do have coverage still have to pay hundreds of dollars a month because their plans only pay for a small percentage of the drug’s price.

TRACY ZVENYACH: There are, like, the lucky ones that have some form of coverage that is also affordable. But they are few and far between.

LUPKIN: That was Tracy Zvenyach, the vice president of advocacy and research at the nonprofit Obesity Action Coalition, which receives financial support from drugmakers, including Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk.

ZVENYACH: Essentially, every insurance carrier is just making it up – making up the policy, the limitation, the restriction on eligibility in the way that they want to, in a way that will, you know, kind of reduce the eligible population.

LUPKIN: In Virginia, Dr. Catherine Varney is the obesity medicine director for UVA Health. She has about a thousand patients on obesity drugs, and she says 60% of them are paying out of pocket, and insurance coverage barriers are growing.

CATHERINE VARNEY: I feel like more of a financial planner these days than a physician because we’re crunching the numbers.

LUPKIN: The Pharmaceutical Care Management Association says employers and their pharmaceutical benefit managers are working to expand coverage for GLP-1s and have made huge progress despite significant cost challenges. Asked about dropping Zepbound in favor of Wegovy, CVS Caremark says its formulary strategy uses competition to drive down costs. It says the drug company’s high prices for Zepbound and Wegovy are the biggest barrier to patient access.

As for Megan Lena in Massachusetts, her doctor works with a compounding pharmacy he trusts and helped her switch to a medication she can afford. Compounded drugs aren’t generics. They’re made with the same active ingredient as the brand-name versions but by a specialized pharmacy, not a drug company.

LENA: There’s so much uncertainty around these medications. Am I going to be able to get it? Can I afford it? Is it going to change? Is it ever going to be affordable?

LUPKIN: Lena now pays about $300 a month for compounded medicine, compared to Eli Lilly’s 450 cash price for her dose of name-brand Zepbound. It’s expensive, but she says it’s her best option for now. Sydney Lupkin, NPR News.