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Free tools to verify any GLP-1 telehealth provider — NPI, board cert, state license, malpractice history. Plus pre-verified analysis of 9 major platforms with editorial notes on what to check.
9 platforms analyzed · 5 verified · 1 with active concerns
Each entry shows what we verified, what concerns we found, and where you can verify yourself. All linked registries are free public sources — no API claims, no fake credentials. Editorial cadence: re-verified quarterly.
Enter what you know — we generate verification links across 4 public registries. Searches happen on authoritative sites, not on our servers.
Enter at least provider name (2+ chars) or 10-digit NPI.
We don\'t store your searches. All registries open on their own domains in new tabs. We don\'t use ABMS\'s paid API (would require partnership we don\'t claim) — instead we point you to free public lookups. More transparent + actually verifiable.
NPI (National Provider Identifier) — confirms provider is registered with CMS
Provider name, primary practice address, specialty taxonomy, NPI deactivation status. Public registry — no login required.
Visit registry →Board certification (American Board of Medical Specialties) — confirms specialty board cert valid
Board certified specialties, certification dates, recertification status. Free for individual lookups. API access paid.
Visit registry →State medical license — confirms valid license + any disciplinary actions
License status, expiration, public disciplinary actions. Each state has separate database — use FSMB locator.
Visit registry →DEA registration — confirms authority to prescribe controlled substances
DEA registration status. Requires DEA number to verify (not browseable). Patients can request from prescriber.
Visit registry →Public malpractice history — varies by state (NPDB is provider-only)
State-level malpractice payments + disciplinary actions. Incomplete (NPDB is HIPAA-protected for full data).
Visit registry →Medical director
Obstetrics & Gynecology (ABMS certified)
Primary state: Texas · NPI publicly listed on Hims medical advisory page; verify via NPI Registry
Medical director
Obesity Medicine (ABOM certified)
Primary state: California · NPI on company website; verify via NPI Registry
Medical director not publicly named on platform website
Medical director
Internal Medicine (ABMS certified)
Primary state: California · Publicly searchable via NPI Registry
Medical director not publicly named on platform website
Medical director not publicly named on platform website
Medical director
Family Medicine (ABMS certified)
Primary state: New York · Publicly listed on Ro medical advisory page
Medical director not publicly named on platform website
Medical director not publicly named on platform website
GLP-1 prescribing carries real medical risks — pancreatitis, gastroparesis, contraindications. The provider writing your prescription should be board-certified, properly licensed in your state, and have no disciplinary history. Compounded telehealth platforms often use 1099 contractors with variable verification — checking individual providers protects you.
ABMS Certification Matters API requires paid partnership we don't claim to have. Faking API access would be dishonest. Instead, we point you to free public registries (NPI, FSMB state boards) + ABMS's free individual lookup. Same result, more transparent.
The NPI is on most prescription bottles, in your prescriber's biography on their employer's website, or searchable by name + state on the NPI Registry (free). It's a 10-digit number assigned by CMS — every Medicare-billing provider must have one.
Context matters. A 10-year-old administrative action (e.g., late paperwork) is different from a 2-year-old malpractice settlement. Always read the actual action text on the state board's website, not just whether it exists. Many qualified physicians have minor administrative actions — patterns matter.
No. Telehealth platforms have: (1) corporate medical directors (named, ABMS-certified), and (2) network prescribing providers (often 1099 contractors, variable quality). Verify both. Many platforms hide their prescribing roster as proprietary — that's a yellow flag.
Significant transparency concern. Reputable medical operations name their CMO publicly. If a telehealth platform won't name their medical director, ask why before paying. Either they're hiding something or they're young enough to not have one — both warrant questions.