I’ve been asked enough times about where I get my GLP-1 medication and NAD+ therapy that it makes sense to write this out properly.

I use ShedRX. I’ve been a patient for over a year. This is an honest review of what the program is, how it works, what it costs, and where it falls short.

Affiliate disclosure: I earn a commission if you sign up through my links. That doesn’t change what I write here — I’d tell you to go elsewhere if something better existed for what this site’s readers are trying to do.

What ShedRX Is

ShedRX is a telehealth platform that provides prescription GLP-1 medications and NAD+ therapy through licensed medical providers. You complete an intake online, a provider reviews your case, and if you’re a candidate, you receive medication shipped to your door from a licensed compounding pharmacy.

The GLP-1 program uses compounded semaglutide — the same active ingredient as Ozempic and Wegovy, produced by a licensed pharmacy rather than a brand-name manufacturer. This is legal and regulated. It’s also how the cost stays at $200 to $400 per month rather than $900 to $1,000 for the brand-name version.

The NAD+ program delivers monthly NAD+ therapy via self-injection protocol, with provider oversight through the platform.

Why I Chose ShedRX

I looked at several telehealth options before landing here. The main reasons I chose ShedRX:

Microdosing approach. ShedRX uses a GLP-1 microdosing protocol — starting at a lower dose than the standard escalation schedule and adjusting based on individual response. My provider explained this reduces side effects in the early weeks and helps find the minimum effective dose for each person. I had significant nausea issues at standard starting doses with another provider. The microdosing approach made the first two months manageable.

Combined GLP-1 and NAD+ availability. Most telehealth platforms offer one or the other. Having both on the same platform with the same provider team made coordination easier.

Provider responsiveness. Messaging through the platform gets a response within 24 hours in my experience. When I had a concern about my dose in month three, I had an answer and a protocol adjustment the next day.

The GLP-1 Program

How it works: After completing an intake form and medical history, a licensed provider reviews your information. If you’re a candidate, you receive a prescription for compounded semaglutide from a licensed compounding pharmacy. Medication is shipped monthly.

The microdosing difference: Standard GLP-1 protocols typically start at 0.25mg weekly and escalate on a set schedule. ShedRX’s approach starts lower and adjusts based on how you’re responding — side effects, weight loss progress, hunger levels. The escalation is slower but more tailored. For me, this meant fewer bad weeks early on.

Cost: $200 to $400 per month depending on dose. No insurance required. No prior authorization wait. The intake process takes about 15 minutes and the first shipment typically arrives within a week of approval.

What you’re actually getting: Compounded semaglutide is the same active ingredient as Ozempic. It’s not the brand-name drug. It comes from a licensed compounding pharmacy under FDA oversight. The cost difference is real and the clinical mechanism is identical.

The NAD+ Program

I added NAD+ in month five on GLP-1. I was losing weight but hitting a wall every afternoon that didn’t improve with sleep or diet adjustments.

The ShedRX NAD+ protocol involves monthly shipments with provider-directed dosing. NAD+ is administered via self-injection — the provider walks you through the process and the needles are insulin-gauge, not intimidating once you’ve done it once.

By week three, the afternoon energy crash was noticeably less severe. By week six I was working out regularly again. I continue NAD+ alongside GLP-1 and notice when I skip it.

Cost is separate from the GLP-1 program. Both can be managed through the same platform and provider relationship.

What’s Not Perfect

ShedRX is a telehealth platform, not a personal physician. The provider relationship is through messaging and periodic check-ins, not in-person visits. If you have complex underlying health conditions, you need a primary care physician involved — ShedRX isn’t a replacement for that.

The daily cap on provider messages can feel limiting during the early weeks when questions come up frequently. The 24-hour response time is generally reliable but not instant.

As with any compounding pharmacy arrangement, the product is not FDA-approved in the way brand-name Ozempic is. The pharmacy is licensed and regulated, but this distinction matters for people who want the brand-name product specifically.

Who ShedRX Makes Sense For

ShedRX is a strong option if:

  • You don’t have insurance coverage for GLP-1 medications
  • You’ve tried brand-name GLP-1 and found the cost unsustainable
  • You want a telehealth provider who offers a microdosing approach to manage side effects
  • You’re interested in combining GLP-1 with NAD+ therapy on one platform
  • You want to start without a months-long referral process through traditional healthcare

It’s not the right fit if you need in-person care, if your insurance covers brand-name GLP-1, or if you have medical complexity that requires close physician supervision.

My Results

I started GLP-1 through ShedRX at 47. I was 68 pounds overweight and had tried keto, calorie counting, and multiple exercise programs without sustained results.

Over 14 months: 31 pounds lost. Hunger that had been a constant variable in my life became manageable for the first time. Energy improved significantly after adding NAD+. I continue both programs.

I write about the details of what I’ve experienced across this site. This review is the summary. The rest is in the individual posts.

How to Get Started

The intake process is online and takes about 15 minutes. A provider reviews your information and contacts you with next steps if you’re a candidate.

Start the GLP-1 intake here.

Start the NAD+ intake here.

Affiliate links — I earn a commission if you sign up. Cost to you is the same either way.

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