If you live in Louisville and you have been weighing your options for medical weight management, you have likely run into the same problem most Kentuckians do: plenty of national programs will happily sign you up, but almost none of them say anything specific about Kentucky, or about who is actually responsible for your care. This guide is written for Louisville and the rest of the Commonwealth. It explains how online, physician-led weight management works for Kentucky residents, what compounded GLP-1 care involves, what it costs, and how to separate a careful provider from a careless one.
Everything happens online. There is no drive across town, no waiting room, and no need to find a specialist with an opening. What does not change is the medicine: a licensed physician still reviews your health, decides whether treatment is appropriate, and stays involved over time. The visit simply comes to you.
Why a Kentucky-licensed physician is the detail that matters most
Start here, because it is the thing national platforms are quietest about. Telehealth is regulated state by state, which means a physician treating a patient who lives in Kentucky needs to hold a Kentucky license. “Available nationwide” is not the same as “licensed to treat you in Kentucky.” Many large platforms route patients to whichever clinician in their network happens to be free, which can leave you unsure who is accountable for your care or whether they are properly licensed in the Commonwealth.
Gentle Health is built the opposite way. Care is physician-led by Dr. James Simmons, MD, who is licensed in Kentucky, and the practice serves only Kentucky and Arkansas on purpose. That narrow focus is the point: the physician overseeing your care is licensed where you live, and you are working with a small, accountable care team rather than an anonymous, rotating panel. When you evaluate any online provider as a Kentuckian, “who is the physician, and are they licensed in Kentucky?” is a fair question - and a good provider answers it without hedging.
How online weight management works for Kentucky residents
The process is straightforward, though how seriously each step is taken varies a lot between providers. Here is the shape of it.
Start with a health assessment. You complete a detailed questionnaire about your medical history, current medications, past experience with weight management, and your goals. This is the physician’s first look at whether treatment is safe and appropriate for you.
A licensed physician reviews your profile. A Kentucky-licensed physician reviews what you submitted and decides whether a GLP-1 medication fits your situation. Not everyone is a candidate, and a program willing to say “not right now” is a program practicing careful medicine.
You get a personalized plan. If treatment is appropriate, you receive a plan that may include compounded semaglutide or compounded tirzepatide, with dosing guidance tailored to you rather than a fixed template.
Medication comes to you, and so does follow-up. Prescriptions are filled by a licensed compounding pharmacy and shipped to your door anywhere in Kentucky. Scheduled check-ins track how you are responding so the plan can be adjusted.
The design removes the friction of in-person care without removing the care itself. For a Louisville professional, a parent in Bowling Green, or someone in a rural county hours from the nearest obesity-medicine practice, that can be the difference between starting and putting it off another year.
Medication options: compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide
GLP-1 medications work with your body’s own appetite-regulation signals. In compounded weight-management care, two show up most often:
- Compounded semaglutide - available in oral and injectable forms.
- Compounded tirzepatide - a dual-action injectable.
A note on what “compounded” means, because it trips people up. Compounded medications are prepared by a licensed compounding pharmacy rather than mass-manufactured, and they are not reviewed by the FDA the way mass-produced medications are. That is precisely why physician oversight and transparent pharmacy sourcing matter so much: a careful provider will tell you which compounding pharmacy fills your prescription and will only prescribe when a clinician has judged it appropriate for you. Outcomes vary from patient to patient, which is another reason ongoing supervision is built into the model rather than tacked on.
Which option fits you is a clinical conversation to have with the physician during your evaluation, not something to settle from a website.
What it costs
Cost is where the category gets murky, so here is a straight answer. Gentle Health is cash-pay, with flat monthly pricing and no insurance billing:
- Oral semaglutide: $112 per month
- Injectable semaglutide: $135 per month
- Tirzepatide: $169 per month
The price you see is the price you pay - no membership tier stacked on top, no surprise charges. Cash-pay also matters in Kentucky specifically, because coverage for GLP-1 treatment is inconsistent and many plans do not cover it for weight management at all. A flat, predictable price means you are not waiting on a coverage decision to begin, and you can budget for it like any other monthly expense.
Access across Kentucky, not just Louisville
Louisville has more in-person options than most of the state. Much of Kentucky does not. Large stretches of the Commonwealth - eastern Kentucky and Appalachia in particular - are a long drive from the nearest weight-management or obesity-medicine practice, and Kentucky consistently ranks among the states most affected by obesity-related health conditions. That combination is exactly where telehealth earns its place.
Because care is delivered entirely online, the same physician-led program reaches you whether you are in Louisville, Lexington, Bowling Green, Owensboro, Covington and Northern Kentucky, or a small town in the eastern part of the state with no specialist nearby. You complete your assessment from home, meet with the physician virtually, and have medication delivered to your door. Gentle Health serves patients throughout Kentucky, as well as Arkansas. For rural Kentuckians especially, removing the drive removes one of the biggest practical barriers to care - the standard of treatment stops depending on your county.
What to look for in an online weight-management provider
If you take one thing from this guide, make it this short checklist. As a Kentucky resident comparing providers, ask:
- Who is the physician, and are they licensed in Kentucky? You want a named, accountable clinician licensed where you live.
- Is there a real evaluation before a prescription? A genuine clinical review, not an instant yes.
- Is there ongoing follow-up? One-and-done prescribing is a warning sign.
- Is the pricing transparent? You should know the full monthly cost before you commit.
- Where does the medication come from? A careful provider names the compounding pharmacy.
A provider that answers all five plainly is worth your time. One that dodges any of them has told you something.
What good clinical oversight looks like
“Clinical oversight” gets used loosely, so here is what it should mean in practice: a real review of your history and medications before anything is prescribed, screening for the conditions where a GLP-1 may not be appropriate, thoughtful dosing rather than a fixed regimen handed over once, and scheduled follow-up to see how you are doing. This is the part of the category that has drawn regulatory scrutiny - federal regulators have sent warning letters to telehealth companies over how compounded GLP-1 products were marketed and prescribed, and the common thread is thin or absent oversight. For a Kentucky patient, the practical takeaway is simple: choose a provider where a licensed physician is genuinely involved, not one where the medication just shows up with no one accountable behind it.
At Gentle Health, care is physician-led by Dr. James Simmons, MD, licensed in Kentucky and Arkansas. A licensed physician reviews your health profile before prescribing and stays involved through follow-up.
Frequently asked questions
Is online weight management available in Louisville? Yes. Gentle Health is a telehealth practice serving all of Kentucky, including Louisville, with care led by a physician licensed in Kentucky. Everything is handled online, and medication is delivered to your door.
Who oversees my care? Care is physician-led by Dr. James Simmons, MD, who is licensed in Kentucky and Arkansas. A licensed physician reviews your health profile before any prescription and stays involved with follow-up.
What medications are offered? Compounded semaglutide (oral and injectable) and compounded tirzepatide, when a physician determines they are appropriate for you.
Are compounded medications the same as the mass-produced versions? No. Compounded medications are prepared by a compounding pharmacy and are not reviewed by the FDA for safety or effectiveness the way mass-produced medications are, which is why physician oversight and transparent pharmacy sourcing matter.
How much does it cost? Cash-pay, flat monthly pricing: oral semaglutide $112/month, injectable semaglutide $135/month, and tirzepatide $169/month. No insurance billing and no membership tiers.
Do I need insurance? No. Gentle Health is cash-pay only, so you can begin without waiting on insurance approvals - which matters in Kentucky, where coverage for GLP-1 weight management is often limited.
Can I do this if I live outside Louisville? Yes. Because care is virtual, it is available across Kentucky - from Lexington, Bowling Green, and Owensboro to Northern Kentucky and rural eastern counties - as well as in Arkansas.
How do I get started? You complete an online health assessment, a Kentucky-licensed physician reviews it, and if treatment is appropriate you receive a personalized plan with medication delivered to your home.
Sources
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration - information on compounded drugs and compounding oversight (fda.gov).
- National Institutes of Health - overview of GLP-1 receptor agonists in weight management (nih.gov).
Dr. James Simmons, MD — Licensed in Arkansas (E-14098) and Kentucky (59884)
Compounded medications are not FDA-approved. Treatment subject to medical evaluation.