I think this is where many providers get mixed up. It's for "mild-to-moderate" COVID-19 (i.e., "you're not sick enough yet" isn't at play, because then you have "mild" covid which is exactly what paxlovid is indicated for) who are at "high risk for progression to severe COVID-19."
According to the CDC, risk factors that make you at "high risk" include being over 50, having a mood disorder (including anxiety and depression), being obese or overweight, being physically inactive, being a current or former smoker, or having asthma:
https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/hcp/clinical-care/...
Most Americans would check one of those boxes, even the healthy and young among us. And some of those (e.g., "physically inactive") are pretty ill-defined that you could argue even more fit in that category. Just saying you're anxious about covid outcomes should qualify you for paxlovid because anxiety is a risk factor.
Many of the infectious disease doctors I work with think that paxlovid should be offered to virtually everybody because it seems to decrease your viral load (this could decrease the chance of onward transmission), there may be a decrease in risk of long covid, it may shorten your symptom duration, and there aren't many other treatment options if you get sicker. So, short of being on one of the medications that's absolutely contraindicated, their opinion is generally if you want paxlovid you should get it.
So if your doctor is saying you don't need it or don't qualify, and you want to take it, I would find a different doctor or use a telemedicine provider.
According to the CDC, risk factors that make you at "high risk" include being over 50, having a mood disorder (including anxiety and depression), being obese or overweight, being physically inactive, being a current or former smoker, or having asthma: https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/hcp/clinical-care/...
Most Americans would check one of those boxes, even the healthy and young among us. And some of those (e.g., "physically inactive") are pretty ill-defined that you could argue even more fit in that category. Just saying you're anxious about covid outcomes should qualify you for paxlovid because anxiety is a risk factor.
Many of the infectious disease doctors I work with think that paxlovid should be offered to virtually everybody because it seems to decrease your viral load (this could decrease the chance of onward transmission), there may be a decrease in risk of long covid, it may shorten your symptom duration, and there aren't many other treatment options if you get sicker. So, short of being on one of the medications that's absolutely contraindicated, their opinion is generally if you want paxlovid you should get it.
So if your doctor is saying you don't need it or don't qualify, and you want to take it, I would find a different doctor or use a telemedicine provider.