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GLP-1 adoption in West Virginia

West Virginia has an estimated 99,670 GLP-1 users across 55 counties. Average estimated adoption is 0.1 percentage points below the national rate of 5.7%.

Last reviewed |Reviewed by the FormBlends Editorial Standards Team

5.6%

Est. adoption rate

99,670

Est. users

40.8%

Avg adult obesity

1,792,967

Adult population

State facts for search and AI answers

What makes the West Virginia GLP-1 page useful

This page ties the statewide answer to county-level demand, coverage context, and practical access checks. The goal is to help readers move from a broad state estimate to the local county or provider question that actually matters.

State signal

West Virginia: 55 counties, 99,670 estimated GLP-1 users

State pages summarize the county-level demand model before readers drill into local pages.

Model inputs

Average adoption 5.6%; average adult obesity 40.8%

The model uses CDC PLACES obesity prevalence, Census population, and KFF national GLP-1 utilization.

Coverage context

West Virginia Medicaid does not cover GLP-1s for obesity. Coverage for T2D, cardiovascular disease, and sleep apnea indications is still available. According to KFF (2026-01-16), federal Medicaid rules require GLP-1 coverage for type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and sleep apnea indications. Obesity coverage is optional and varies by state.

Coverage policy can make real access higher or lower than projected local demand.

How to use this page

Find counties with the strongest demand signal, then verify coverage, provider access, and pharmacy source before starting care.

This is a local planning page, not a prescription recommendation.

Counties ranked by estimated adoption

Adoption strip: each bar is one county, tallest = highest estimated rate
County adoption strip. Tallest bar = highest projected adoption in West Virginia.
Ranked counties in West Virginia by estimated GLP-1 adoption.
RankCountyPopulationObesity %Est. adoptionEst. users
1Boone21,70546.2%6.3%1,365
2Randolph28,00546.2%6.3%1,762
3McDowell18,91146.1%6.3%1,188
4Cabell93,96545.7%6.2%5,845
5Lincoln20,41045.2%6.2%1,255
6Logan32,35044.7%6.1%1,967
7Wyoming21,23744.1%6.0%1,274
8Hancock28,90743.9%6.0%1,729
9Barbour15,52743.8%6.0%925
10Gilmer7,44443.8%6.0%444
11Pleasants7,62243.5%5.9%451
12Wood84,27243.4%5.9%4,980
13Grant11,03443.3%5.9%650
14Raleigh74,30343.1%5.9%4,362
15Marion56,19443.0%5.8%3,287
16Mingo23,46643.0%5.8%1,373
17Wayne38,93342.6%5.8%2,258
18Webster8,36242.6%5.8%485
19Jackson27,86842.5%5.8%1,614
20Tyler8,33642.5%5.8%483
21Ritchie8,50742.4%5.8%491
22Wetzel14,43142.4%5.8%833
23Wirt5,20242.4%5.8%300
24Clay8,04941.6%5.7%456
25Taylor16,60241.6%5.7%940
26Hardy14,24941.5%5.7%805
27Braxton12,50541.3%5.6%703
28Roane14,02741.3%5.6%788
29Mason25,48841.2%5.6%1,430
30Monroe12,43841.2%5.6%698
31Doddridge7,84741.0%5.6%438
32Mercer59,53041.0%5.6%3,322
33Pocahontas7,94040.6%5.5%439
34Calhoun6,27940.4%5.5%345
35Brooke22,34940.3%5.5%1,227
36Fayette40,54540.3%5.5%2,226
37Kanawha179,89540.3%5.5%9,876
38Nicholas24,62440.3%5.5%1,352
39Greenbrier32,99540.2%5.5%1,805
40Harrison65,86240.1%5.5%3,596
41Ohio42,22440.1%5.5%2,305
42Lewis16,92039.9%5.4%919
43Summers11,98539.8%5.4%650
44Mineral26,95739.4%5.4%1,445
45Tucker6,74739.0%5.3%358
46Hampshire23,27538.8%5.3%1,229
47Morgan17,23738.8%5.3%910
48Berkeley123,28338.1%5.2%6,398
49Jefferson58,04337.9%5.2%2,995
50Putnam57,34737.8%5.2%2,953
51Marshall30,50937.3%5.1%1,550
52Preston34,20637.3%5.1%1,738
53Upshur23,87537.1%5.0%1,206
54Pendleton6,15636.8%5.0%308
55Monongalia105,98834.2%4.7%4,939

How West Virginia fits the national picture

The KFF 2024 poll pegged national adult GLP-1 use at 5.7%. Applied to West Virginia's obesity profile, the model projects 5.6% of adults are on a GLP-1 medication. That matches the county-level obesity data from CDC PLACES (2023) more than any measured prescription count; the state's real share could be higher in urban areas with broad commercial coverage, or lower in rural regions where prescriber access is limited.

Compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide complicate the picture. After the FDA shortage resolution in late 2024 and early 2025, compounded supply dropped sharply. Brand-name utilization rose. The county numbers here don't separate brand vs. compounded, because no public dataset does yet.

Decision path

How should I use the West Virginia GLP-1 map?

This state view is a demand and access signal, not a prescription recommendation. Use it to understand where GLP-1 need may be concentrated, then pressure-test provider availability, insurance rules, and pharmacy quality before starting care.

State
West Virginia
Counties
55
Est. users
99,670
Avg adoption
5.6%

Step 1

Find county context

County estimates help separate broad statewide demand from the local access picture a patient actually experiences.

Review counties

Step 2

Check coverage and price

West Virginia access depends on payer policy, prior authorization, cash-pay pricing, and whether local clinicians can support follow-up.

Check coverage path

Step 3

Decide on care route

If local access is thin or pricing is unclear, a supervised telehealth assessment can clarify eligibility and next steps.

Compare provider options

Evidence standard

How this page was source-checked

Editorial policy

FormBlends does not claim an individual clinician byline unless a named reviewer is available. For this page, the editorial team checks medical and regulatory claims against primary sources, clinical trials, public datasets, and regulator guidance.

Frequently asked questions

How is GLP-1 adoption calculated for West Virginia counties?
We multiply each county's CDC PLACES 2023 adult obesity prevalence by a scaling factor k = 0.1361, which comes from the KFF 2024 figure of 5.7% national GLP-1 adoption divided by the 41.9% national adult obesity rate. That gives an estimated per-county adoption %. Multiply by Census ACS 5-year 2022 county population to get projected users. West Virginia shows 5.6% state-average adoption under this model.
Why is West Virginia's number 0.1 percentage points below the national average?
Adult obesity prevalence in West Virginia averages 40.8% (CDC BRFSS 2024, state-level). The national average is 41.9%. The model links adoption linearly to obesity, so states above the national obesity rate come out above the national adoption estimate, and vice versa. Real variation also depends on commercial insurance coverage and Medicaid GLP-1 policy, both of which differ significantly by state.
Do Medicaid enrollees in West Virginia get GLP-1 coverage?
West Virginia Medicaid does not cover GLP-1s for obesity. Coverage for T2D, cardiovascular disease, and sleep apnea indications is still available. According to KFF (2026-01-16), federal Medicaid rules require GLP-1 coverage for type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and sleep apnea indications. Obesity coverage is optional and varies by state.
What studies back up GLP-1 weight loss expectations?
The STEP 1 trial (Wilding et al., NEJM, 2021) enrolled 1,961 adults on 2.4mg weekly semaglutide over 68 weeks and saw mean body weight change of negative 14.9% vs negative 2.4% on placebo. SURMOUNT-1 (Jastreboff et al., NEJM, 2022) tested tirzepatide in 2,539 adults over 72 weeks and saw negative 20.9% at 15mg weekly. Both were randomized, double-blind, and placebo-controlled.
How often does the West Virginia county data refresh?
CDC PLACES releases annually in late summer. Census ACS 5-year estimates release every December. KFF reruns its GLP-1 utilization poll roughly twice a year. We re-run the full county model whenever any of those update, and the last-reviewed date at the top of every page reflects the most recent refresh.

Sources

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Estimated adoption figures are modeled projections from public data, not measured prescription counts. This page is general information, not medical advice. Individual results vary. Talk to a licensed healthcare provider before starting any medication.