Editors Choice

AI-Powered Obesity Care: FlyteHealth Delivers Big Wins for Connecticut’s Public Employees

In an era where access to effective obesity care remains mired in controversy over medication costs and payer reluctance, a promising model is gaining traction—and data is backing it up.

A new independent analysis conducted by actuarial firm Milliman reveals that FlyteHealth’s AI-enabled Comprehensive Obesity Care program, piloted in partnership with the State of Connecticut, yielded both high medication adherence and meaningful short-term cost avoidance within its first year.

A Real-World Test: Public Sector, Private Innovation

Faced with surging costs tied to GLP-1 coverage since 2020, Connecticut’s self-insured employee health plan took a bold step in 2023 by launching a pilot with FlyteHealth to better manage obesity treatment for eligible employees and retirees. The results: a projected $1.2 million in pharmaceutical cost avoidance and an 86% adherence rate among new GLP-1 users—figures that far surpass national benchmarks.

In typical commercial settings, just 32% of patients remain on GLP-1 therapy after one year. Worse, only 27% follow their prescribed dosing schedules. These statistics often lead payers to pull back on coverage. But FlyteHealth’s personalized, tech-enabled approach may offer a path forward that makes medical and fiscal sense.

Clinical Expertise Meets AI-Driven Personalization

FlyteHealth’s model blends decades of clinical experience with data intelligence. The care program is rooted in the methodology of obesity medicine expert Dr. Louis Aronne and powered by a patent-pending AI engine that tailors care plans based on individual biometric and behavioral data.

Patients receive virtual care from a multidisciplinary team—physicians, nurse practitioners, and dietitians—alongside medication management, lifestyle coaching, and digital support via wearables and connected devices.

The program’s precision prescribing approach uses BMI-based triage to match patients with the most appropriate treatments, reserving higher-cost medications for those with more severe obesity.

State Leaders Applaud Value-Driven Innovation

“This partnership with FlyteHealth is a clear example of how forward thinking, evidence-based innovation can improve people’s lives while also protecting taxpayer dollars,” said Connecticut State Comptroller Sean Scanlon. “The results show we can deliver high-quality care that’s both clinically effective and fiscally responsible.”

Cheryl Pegus, MD, MPH, FlyteHealth’s executive board chair, echoed that sentiment: “Employers and payers are rightly concerned about costs and access. FlyteHealth is committed to supporting those goals with proven, cost-effective solutions.”

Beyond Cost: Patient Outcomes and Long-Term Potential

While the Milliman study focused solely on pharmaceutical spending, FlyteHealth reports additional health improvements among participants, including:

  • A 7.2% reduction in elevated HbA1c
  • A 9.4% drop in blood glucose levels
  • 13%–16% average weight loss over 12 months

The clinical team also addressed comorbidities such as sleep apnea, steatohepatitis, and cardiovascular disease—highlighting the comprehensive nature of the program.

FlyteHealth CEO Sloan Saunders emphasized that these results demonstrate more than momentary success: “Milliman’s independent analysis validates our model’s ability to achieve patient adherence, optimize resource use, and create meaningful savings. But this is just the start—we’re focused on long-term health and economic impacts.”

Medika Life Created Dalle-4 Image

Looking Ahead

FlyteHealth plans to evaluate broader medical cost offsets and total cost-of-care reductions in future studies. As demand grows for solutions that bridge innovation with fiscal responsibility, the Connecticut pilot could serve as a national model for scalable, AI-informed obesity and cardiometabolic care.

To access the full Milliman report or learn more, visit www.flytehealth.com.

Medika Life

Medika Life is a digital Health Publication for both the medical profession and the public. Make informed decisions about your health and stay up to date with the latest developments and technological advances in the fields of medicine.

Recent Posts

Laugh and Learn to Live This Year

Laughter is one of those human behaviors that feels “light,” but it leaves measurable footprints…

22 hours ago

Why Biological Learning Demands the Friction We Seek to Delete?

This short piece, as always, is born out of my passion for studying how theories…

22 hours ago

AI in 2026 – Boom, Bust or Backlash in Healthcare?

It was the fall of 2022 when large language models and Generative AI burst out…

22 hours ago

From Bread to Barriers: When Health-Care Access Becomes the Crime

Les Misérables was never truly about bread. Bread was the spark, hunger the condition, and…

1 week ago

Promise, Progress and Perspective: Key Takeaways from SABCS 2025

The San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium (SABCS) is one of the largest gatherings where researchers,…

2 weeks ago

What 2025 Taught Us and What 2026 Will Demand

It is impossible to talk about and predict the future without considering past events. Therefore,…

2 weeks ago

This website uses cookies. Your continued use of the site is subject to the acceptance of these cookies. Please refer to our Privacy Policy for more information.

Read More