You may have heard that to qualify for GLP-1 medications, your body just has to meet a specific number.
A number. A BMI of 30 or higher (or 27 if you also have a weight-related condition like high blood pressure, high cholesterol or sleep apnea).
But what if your BMI is 29.7? Do you round up? Do you not qualify?
Hang on.
Yes, numbers matter - especially to your clinician to start the conversation and for insurance to approve the prescription. But they aren’t the whole story.
BMI is a screening tool, not a full health profile. It doesn’t tell you how someone’s metabolism is functioning, what their disease risk looks like or how their body has responded to past treatments.
Two people can share the same BMI and have very different health situations. Same number. Different biology. Different risks. Different needs.
That’s why experienced clinicians don’t treat BMI like a final verdict. They look at the bigger picture. Things like insulin resistance, existing medical conditions, current medications, family history and patterns in blood sugar or appetite regulation.
So no, it’s not about hitting a number. It’s about whether the medication actually makes sense for your body.
Because healthcare shouldn’t follow some generic formula.
It should be thoughtful. And it should be individualized.



