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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone Basics & Questions
Getting Insurance After Being on Self Administered TRT
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<blockquote data-quote="f16doc_FitMD" data-source="post: 213942" data-attributes="member: 43382"><p>This is very good advice. I am a physician who prescribes a lot of testosterone. I use GoodRx for instead of insurance for my prescription so that I can get a 10 ml vial for around the same price point you note (actually currently $36 in my area). I find this very useful for my patients when either insurance won't cover (as in my Medicaid patient's who are androgen deficient but not necessarily hypogonadal by definition) or who prefer to get the larger vial. In general, a good commercial insurance policy will cover the script even for my androgen deficient patient's for a copay that is even less than with GoodRx but they often are limited to getting only a 3 month supply (insurance rule rather than state controlled substance rule) at a time.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="f16doc_FitMD, post: 213942, member: 43382"] This is very good advice. I am a physician who prescribes a lot of testosterone. I use GoodRx for instead of insurance for my prescription so that I can get a 10 ml vial for around the same price point you note (actually currently $36 in my area). I find this very useful for my patients when either insurance won't cover (as in my Medicaid patient's who are androgen deficient but not necessarily hypogonadal by definition) or who prefer to get the larger vial. In general, a good commercial insurance policy will cover the script even for my androgen deficient patient's for a copay that is even less than with GoodRx but they often are limited to getting only a 3 month supply (insurance rule rather than state controlled substance rule) at a time. [/QUOTE]
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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone Basics & Questions
Getting Insurance After Being on Self Administered TRT
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