Medical Weight Loss for High Point, North Carolina Residents

High Point, North Carolina residents get physician-supervised weight loss by telehealth from New Hope Weight Loss: a $119 doctor review, then compounded semaglutide from $166/month or tirzepatide from $233/month.

Physician-supervised GLP-1 programs from $166/month, serving High Point through telehealth from our Costa Mesa, California clinic. Doctor review $119. Over 5,400 patients treated.

Start this week from High Point: book a video visit, complete your intake, and if you are a fit, your compounded medication ships to your North Carolina door. No travel to California required. Doctor review just $119 (medication separate).

Why High Point Residents Choose New Hope Weight Loss

For High Point patients who want a doctor genuinely involved, this is the right fit. Compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide are powerful tools, but they are not for everyone, and Dr. Anjmun Sharma treats them that way. She looks at your labs, your medications, and your goals before anything is prescribed, then keeps adjusting as your body responds. These medications are not FDA-approved and results vary, which is exactly why physician oversight matters this much.

High Point is served through telehealth from our Costa Mesa, California clinic. The full physician-supervised GLP-1 program runs by secure video, with compounded medication shipped to your High Point address.

From the first visit to your refills, people in High Point, North Carolina are cared for by Dr. Sharma through telehealth, so the only thing missing is the commute to Costa Mesa. We care for patients throughout the greater High Point area and the Piedmont Triad. Semaglutide starts from $166 a month, or $499 for the 90-day program, and tirzepatide from $233 a month, the same pricing for every North Carolina patient.

Whether you live in central High Point or out toward the edges of North Carolina, you see the same physician, Dr. Anjmun Sharma, and pay the same flat pricing with no distance surcharge. The 90-day semaglutide program is $499, which works out to a lower monthly cost than paying month to month for many High Point patients. Across fast-growing North Carolina, New Hope Weight Loss provides physician-supervised GLP-1 care by telehealth from our Costa Mesa, California clinic, with no need to travel for a visit.

GLP-1 Weight Loss Programs Available

Semaglutide 90-Day Metabolic Reset, from $166/mo

Most High Point patients start here. Semaglutide shares its active ingredient with Wegovy and Ozempic, and in branded-drug trials people lost an average of 15 to 17 percent of body weight. Our program runs $499 for 90 days, with Dr. Sharma adjusting your dose each month by telehealth. Results vary, and compounded semaglutide is not FDA-approved or brand-identical.

Tirzepatide, from $233/mo

Tirzepatide works on two hunger pathways at once, GLP-1 and GIP. In trials of the branded drug, qualified patients reached up to 22.5 percent body-weight loss, which is a high-dose figure and not typical. It shares its active ingredient with Mounjaro and Zepbound.

$119 physician review. Medication is billed separately. We accept HSA, FSA, Klarna, and Affirm, with no surcharge for treating you in High Point by telehealth.

How Telehealth Works for High Point

Here is how the whole thing works, start to finish, for anyone in High Point.

First, you fill out an intake and quiz about your weight history and current health. Next, Dr. Sharma looks it over and meets you by secure video, almost always within 48 hours, to see whether compounded semaglutide or tirzepatide fits your situation. Then, if she prescribes, a state-licensed 503(a) pharmacy ships the medication to your High Point address in cold-pack packaging built to protect it on the road. After that, every follow-up is a video visit, so the care continues no matter where you are in .

Frequently Asked Questions, High Point

Where is the New Hope Weight Loss location serving High Point?

The location serving High Point is our Costa Mesa, California clinic, which is our only physical site. We care for High Point, North Carolina patients through telehealth rather than a local office. Dr. Anjmun Sharma confirms your eligibility for a compounded GLP-1 plan during a private video consult.

Is remote care a real option for High Point patients?

It is the standard for High Point. The whole program runs on telehealth, so consults, follow-ups, and support happen wherever you are. When Dr. Sharma approves you, compounded medication ships to High Point in cold-pack packaging engineered to keep it at a safe temperature in transit.

How much does a High Point patient pay overall?

The physician review is $119. Compounded semaglutide is offered from $166 monthly, or $499 for 90 days, and tirzepatide from $233 monthly. The medication is billed separately from the visit. We accept HSA, FSA, Klarna, and Affirm, and we apply no distance surcharge for High Point patients.

What areas of High Point do you serve?

We serve patients from across High Point by telehealth, including the greater High Point area and the Piedmont Triad.

Are there hidden fees for High Point patients?

No. High Point patients pay the same flat, stated pricing: a $119 physician visit, then compounded semaglutide from $166/month or tirzepatide from $233/month with medication billed separately. There is no membership lock-in and no distance surcharge.

High Point Residents, Get Started Today

Doctor review $119. Semaglutide from $166/mo. Tirzepatide from $233/mo. Medication separate.

Start My Journey →

New Hope Weight Loss | clinic at 1503 South Coast Drive, Suite 322, Costa Mesa, CA 92626 | (657) 837-3342 | Serving High Point, North Carolina by telehealth. Telehealth availability and eligibility are confirmed during the medical consultation.

Wegovy® and Ozempic® are registered trademarks of Novo Nordisk A/S. Mounjaro® and Zepbound® are registered trademarks of Eli Lilly and Company. New Hope Weight Loss is not affiliated with or endorsed by these companies. Compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide are prepared by licensed U.S. pharmacies and are not FDA-approved, not brand-identical, and not reviewed by the FDA for safety, effectiveness, or quality.