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Foundayo™
Orforglipron pill
0.8|2.5|5.5|9|14.5|17.2 mg
Indication: Foundayo™ (fown-DAY-OH) is an oral prescription medicine that may help adults with obesity, or some adults with overweight who also have weight-related medical problems, to lose excess body weight and keep the weight off. Foundayo should be used with a reduced-calorie diet and increased physical activity.
- Foundayo should not be used with other GLP-1 receptor agonist medicines.
- It is not known if Foundayo is safe and effective for use in children.
Foundayo details
Dosage Form
Oral pill
How to Store
Store in the medicine carton to protect it from light. Store at room temp (68-77 deg. F).
When to Take
Once a day
What to Know
Can be taken without food or water restrictions.
How to Pay
Insurance accepted
Self-pay available
How to TakeTaken as a tablet by mouth.
How to Store
Carry and store in a standard pill box.
When to Take
Taken on a regular daily schedule.
What to Know
Can be taken with or without food.
How to PayInsurance accepted
Self pay available
Zepbound®
Tirzepatide injection
2.5|5|7.5|10|12.5|15 mg/0.5 mL
Indications: Zepbound® (ZEHP-bownd) is an injectable prescription medicine used with a reduced-calorie diet and increased physical activity to help adults with:
- obesity, or some adults with overweight who also have weight-related medical problems, to lose excess body weight and keep the weight off.
- moderate-to-severe obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) and obesity to improve their OSA.
Zepbound contains tirzepatide and should not be used with other tirzepatide-containing products or any GLP-1 receptor agonist medicines. It is not known if Zepbound is safe and effective for use in children.
Dosage Form
Injectable medicine
How to Store
Store medicine in the original carton to protect it from light. Do not freeze. Do not use medicine if frozen.
When to Take
Once a week
What to Know
Can be taken without food or water restrictions.
How to Pay
Insurance accepted
Self-pay available
Step 1
Ask your doctor to send your prescription to:
LillyDirect Pharmacy
NPI: 1912889320 | NCPDP: 1574056
1555 S Harding St, Ste 171-B68,
Indianapolis, IN 46221
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Step 2
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- Insurance Coverage: Options available depending on your provider.
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00:00-00:03
[The Lilly logo appears on screen in red text on a white background]
00:03-00:08
[The screen fades to black and transitions to Liz sitting in a chair talking to the camera.]
Liz: I was put on my first diet that I was aware of in sixth grade.
00:08-00:19
[The video cuts to two photographs of Liz in France as an exchange student.]
Liz: I was going to France as an exchange student and my mom said, “Hey, if you lose X amount of weight, you can earn your pocket money while you're there.”
00:19-00:23
[The video cuts back to Liz sitting in a chair talking to the camera.]
Liz: It was very confusing, and it was very shameful.
00:23-00:37
[The video cuts to multiple photographs of Liz as a child. Liz is smiling in the photographs, playing soccer, and dressed in a Halloween costume.]
Liz: It wasn't for not being an active kid, I played soccer. I spent my days riding bikes around the neighborhood. I did everything that my sister did or friends did, and I was the only one who had a problem.
00:37-00:48
[The video cuts back to Liz sitting in a chair talking to the camera.]
Liz: That was the first experience with, “Oh, this is something society says, isn't quite right.” My name is Liz Paul, and I live with obesity.
00:48-01:07
[As Liz is sitting in a chair talking to the camera, the caption “Liz’s Story” appears on screen. The screen fades to black and fades back to Liz sitting in a chair talking to the camera.]
Liz: We've been conditioned to say that people who live in larger bodies are lazy, eating too much, they don't exercise. We're given all of these stereotypes. It's just not true.
01:07-01:16
[The video cuts to Liz walking into her office and using a laptop at a desk, then cuts to an image of her with her daughter’s Cub Scout Pack.
Liz: I'm busy from the moment I get up till the time my kids go to bed. I'm the Cubmaster for my daughter's Cub Scout pack.
01:16-01:44
[The video cuts to Liz giving a speech at the Mankato Kiwanis Club and sitting at a table listening to other’s give a speech. The video then cuts to Liz playing a trumpet in a church, and cuts back to Liz sitting in a chair talking to the camera.
Liz: I am the president of the Mankato Kiwanis Club, which does service projects around town. I play trumpet in church. When you live in a larger body, you kind of want to hide yourself, but playing trumpet is something that people enjoy, and it's a chance to say, “Look, I can do something. I'm useful.” Doctors told me that I was the only one who was ever going to fix me, and had nothing but shame and blame for me.
01:44-01:56
[The video cuts to photographs of Liz doing CrossFit, running a 5K, her on her wedding day, and photographs of her in a mirror. The video cuts back to Liz sitting in a chair talking to the camera.]
Liz: I have done CrossFit. I have done 5Ks. I have gained and lost hundreds of pounds over my adult life. I would say my most successful was after my son was born.
01:56-02:31
[The video cuts to Liz and her son sitting on a boulder. The video cuts back to Liz sitting in a chair talking to the camera.]
Liz: I lost 80, 100 pounds, and it was great and I felt really good. And then it stopped working. The actual disease of obesity came back to really bite me. I had lost this weight, but it kept creeping back on, and on, and up. And I said, “Well, apparently I can't do this. Apparently I'm just a failure. I will always be living in a larger body,” and kind of gave in to the depression of it all.
02:31-02:52
[The video cuts to Liz at the Obesity Action Coalition. The shots include the schedule for the convention, multiple people giving presentations and participating in panels, and Liz watching a presentation. The video then cuts back to Liz sitting in a chair talking to the camera.]
Liz: Around this time, I was invited to the Obesity Action Coalition, their “Your Weight Matters” Convention. Here were experts in the field who said obesity is a chronic, complex disease that can't be cured just by eating less and moving more. And I'm like, “What is this, and why am I just hearing about this now?”
02:52-03:03
[The video cuts to two people having a conversation at the Obesity Action Coalition while Liz is looking at pamphlets on a table, the three of them begin to have a conversation. The video then cuts back to Liz sitting in a chair talking to the camera.]
Liz: People who live with obesity deserve access to care, bias-free, stigma-free treatments to help them manage their disease.
03:03-03:39
[The video cuts to Liz walking outside in a park. The video cuts back to Liz sitting in a chair talking to the camera, and then cuts back to Liz walking outside in the park while looking at the camera.]
Liz: I'm always trying to lose weight and make good choices and try to move my body every day. I try to eat right. I do as much as I can. I don't like to limit myself, but sometimes my body pays for it. Hopefully one day we'll find the tool or the treatment or anything that'll stick. But I know this will be something I'll be living with my whole life, regardless of whether I have lost weight or not. It's hard to to not be a little bit afraid of all of that. I want to see my kids grow up. I want to be there with them, which is why I never stop trying to lose weight.
03:39-03:43
[The video fades to white as the Lilly logo appears in red text on the white background.]
00:00-00:10
[Gentle music begins to play as the video shows photographs of Michele laid out on a table. The video cuts to Michele sitting on a couch while talking to the camera and then cuts to Michele talking to her son in the kitchen.]
Michele: My name is Michele Tedder and I'm from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. I am a mom and I have three children.
Caption: Michele Tedder
00:10-00:31
[The video cuts to Michele sitting on a couch talking to the camera, then cuts to Michele and her children looking at photographs of when she was a child. The video cuts back to Michele sitting on a couch talking to the camera.]
Michele: Growing up dealing with obesity. First off, that really was not a term. All I knew was that you're fat. My journey with obesity has empowered me to understand it in the context of it being a disease, and that that requires a comprehensive treatment plan. You know, some people are born with type 1 diabetes.
00:31-00:41
[Michele is sitting on the couch talking to the camera. The video cuts to Michele standing in her kitchen while drinking out of a mug.]
Michele: Well, if I had any other disease, I would take control by doing the treatment are most likely to help me to have success with.
00:41-01:08
[Michele sitting on a couch talking to the camera. The video cuts to Michele walking outside and then back to Michele sitting on a couch talking to the camera.]
Michele: I had a knee injury. I was working out, one of my many, many attempts at losing weight, and I had hired a trainer and kept complaining about knee pain. But one of the orthopedic doctors that I had seen in that string of doctors said to me, he said, “Well, lose 50 pounds and see me in a month.” Who loses 50 pounds in a month? Like?
01:08-01:27
[Michele is washing dishes in the kitchen. The video cuts to Michele sitting on a couch while talking to the camera, and then cuts to Michele looking through her clothes in her closet.
Michele: Everything is about lose it quick, the latest, greatest fad diet and you're going to be the 125 pounds and an hourglass and be able to wear the latest bikini. And that's just simply not real.
01:27-01:49
[Michele is sitting on a couch while talking to the camera. The video cuts to Michele standing in her kitchen, then back to Michele sitting on a couch while talking to the camera, and then cuts to Michele walking outside.]
Michele: When I think about fashion, there were certain stores and certain manufacturers that did not make clothes in my size. So I think that's where the imposition of society saying, “Well, you're different and we don't cater to you.” So basically, like, don't come here.
01:49-02:04
[Michele is sitting on a couch while talking to the camera.]
Michele: The one thing about wanting to gain control of my obesity was that I really wanted to be able to do all the things, like all the things that everybody else does.
02:04-02:32
[Gentle music continues to play as the video cuts to behind Michele as she’s walking outside. The video cuts to Michele sitting on a couch while talking to the camera. The video cuts to Michele getting out of a car, and then cuts to a close up of Michele’s legs as she’s walking outside.]
Michele: I had a wonderful PCP at the time who had watched me struggle trying to lose the weight over the years. And she really helped me to understand that this was not because I was, you know, eating all the wrong things, that because I'm, you know, not trying hard enough and that was incredibly valuable. And so that's how it all started.
02:32-02:42
[The video cuts to Michele sitting on a couch while talking to the camera and then to Michele laughing and talking to her child while washing the dishes in a kitchen.
Michele: Obesity is, it's a disease that you have to keep managing. It requires is a village. You know, it's not something that you can necessarily do on your own.
02:42-02:55
[The video cuts to Michele sitting on a couch while talking to the camera, and then cuts to Michele showing her phone to the camera. There’s an image of Michele on the phone. The video then cuts to Michele and her children looking at photographs of Michele.]
Michele: I'm more hopeful about obesity management and treatment because there's more and more information, public information, that's coming out about obesity as a disease.
02:55-03:30
[The video cuts to Michele sitting on a couch while talking to the camera, and then cuts to Michele looking through her clothes in her closet. The video then cuts to Michele and her children looking at photographs of Michele, and then cuts back to Michele sitting on a couch talking to the camera.]
Michele: Something that I wish everyone who's dealing with obesity knew is it is not a sign of moral failure. You are not a failure. You are an individual, you're unique, you're journey is unique. And so as you build your village and your toolbox, just keep in mind that it might not look exactly like mine, but it will be yours. It's possible because I was there one time, and I really did not think that I would ever be where I am today, but I am.
03:30-03:39
[The video fades to white as gentle music continues to play. The Lilly logo appears in red text on the white background.]
Frequently asked questions
LillyDirect is a different kind of pharmacy experience. We work with licensed third-party pharmacy service providers to give you personalized access to a convenient pharmacy experience.
Current pharmacy providers are detailed below.
Prescryptive® is a third-party healthcare technology company connecting the healthcare ecosystem to put consumers first. Through Prescryptive®, you have digital control over your prescriptions, helping you understand your medication costs and find ways to pay less.
Amazon Pharmacy is a full-service, digital first pharmacy offering wide selection, medication details, 24/7 U.S.-licensed pharmacist support, and a familiar Amazon shopping journey that includes upfront pricing. Amazon Pharmacy delivers quickly and securely to all 50 U.S. states with FREE shipping, allowing most customers to receive their medications in 1-4 days. Same-day delivery is available in select metropolitan areas. Most insurance plans are accepted, including Medicare and Medicaid, and multiple savings options are available, including automatic coupons.
Fuze Health is a healthcare solutions company that provides a wide range of pharmacy dispensing services including online ordering, insurance and manufacturer savings processing, order notifications, refill reminders, and prescription renewals. It owns and operates several mail-order pharmacies that accept most insurance plans and ship medications nationwide. A team of licensed pharmacists ensures medications are safely and securely dispensed and shipped, and knowledgeable support professionals are available 24/7 to answer your questions.
Gifthealth is a third-party, self-pay pharmacy fulfillment provider. When you purchase Lilly medication through Gifthealth, you will have the option to receive discreet home delivery or pick up your medication at retail location near you. By selecting this option to purchase Lilly medication, you agree not to seek payment or accept reimbursement, either directly or indirectly, from any insurance plan or other third-party payer.
Walmart Pharmacy is a full-service pharmacy offering patients the convenience of in-store prescription pickup at over 4,600 locations nationwide. Walmart offers patients the convenience of picking up their eligible LillyDirect medications from their local pharmacy. By selecting this option to purchase Lilly medication, you agree not to seek payment or accept reimbursement, either directly or indirectly, from any insurance plan or other third-party payer.
Information will be updated when additional service providers are added.
We want all Americans to have access to life-changing medicines. That's why we’re committed to making our medicines more affordable. Lilly is partnering with the federal government to make Zepbound® available to millions of Americans through Medicare and Medicaid programs.
Starting in 2026, Medicare beneficiaries will pay less than $50 per month* for Zepbound®. State governments will also have the ability to expand access to Zepbound through Medicaid, helping more people get the care they need.
LillyDirect’s pharmacy fulfillment options give patients a simple way to get more consistent and convenient access to Lilly medicines once they have a valid prescription.
LillyDirect’s pharmacy fulfillment options give patients access to Lilly's affordability solutions, like automatic application of available savings cards when applicable. Assistance with prior authorizations is available as needed. Pharmacy fulfillment options offer patients the ability to purchase medicine available through self-pay only.
Our hope is that the opportunity to get select Lilly medicines through many pharmacy fulfillment options will create an exceptional experience for patients. That's why we offer the convenience of home delivery or pickup at a retail location near you.
What you eat and drink affects your weight, but obesity management isn't just about dieting.
- Find what works for you: There's no one perfect diet. A registered dietitian can help create a plan that fits your lifestyle.
- Improve your relationship with food: Many people struggle with food. A therapist or healthcare professional can help you build healthier habits.
- Balance food and exercise: Eating well and staying active are both important for your overall health, even if weight loss is slow.
Get expert nutrition support with Nourish-virtual registered dietitians covered by many insurance plans.
Get started
If your medicine is available through LillyDirect, you can ask your healthcare provider to send a new prescription.
Please see the Available Medicines page for which Lilly medicines are available through LillyDirect and what information to share with your healthcare provider.
Make sure the provider has your updated contact information. They must include your mobile phone number and/or email address when sending your new prescription through their Electronic Health Record (EHR) system.
LillyDirect® is expanding services to offer you more ways to receive your Zepbound® (tirzepatide) vial medicine. You can now choose to get your medicine through free home delivery or in-store pick-up at a local Walmart Pharmacy™.
Shop Zepbound vials
LillyDirect® is expanding services to offer you more ways to receive your Zepbound® (tirzepatide) vial medicine. You can now choose to get your medicine through free home delivery or in-store pick-up at a local Walmart Pharmacy™.
Shop Zepbound vials
Progress powers us forward
Learn more about pharmacy options
We want all Americans to have access to life-changing medicines. That's why we’re committed to making our medicines more affordable. Lilly is partnering with the federal government to make Zepbound® available to millions of Americans through Medicare and Medicaid programs.
Starting in 2026, Medicare beneficiaries will pay less than $50 per month* for Zepbound®. State governments will also have the ability to expand access to Zepbound through Medicaid, helping more people get the care they need.
Zepbound®, its delivery device base, KwikPen®, and LillyDirect® are registered trademarks and Foundayo™ and the appearance of the orforglipron tablet are trademarks owned or licensed by Eli Lilly and Company. Foundayo and Zepbound are available by prescription only.
CMAT-10499 04/2026 ©Lilly USA, LLC 2026. All rights reserved