| DH and I are both on brand zepbound, prescribed by real doctors. His requires appointments monthly. Mine are every 6 weeks. Most are virtual and we go in person 3-6 months or as needed. Neither of us have major side effects. |
The dosing is not different. |
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I’m on Zepbound.
My doctor prescribes it. For the issues I’ve experienced my doctor has prescribed medications and given great information. |
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I don't think seeing/not seeing a doctor is what influences side effects or "protects you" against them. Many people see their doctor but ignore recommendations. If you do that - doctor or not: if doing at home you still have instructions on everything including diet- then of course you will feel awful.
I do it on my own (again, religiously following instructions I was given) and have daily normal BM, no stomach pain. I'm also careful with what I eat. Only side effect has been mild nausea here and there. Would I feel terrible if I ate fried food all day? I'm sure. But I didn't do that before tirzepatide and I don't do that now. |
If your doctor has prescribed Ozempic for weight loss, instead of Wegovy, they will know what dose you should be taking. |
I don't know which person you are here, but someone said "You're thinking of Ozempic, no? Zepbound was formulated specifically for weight loss and is not FDA approved for diabetes." which made it sound like you were equating Ozempic and Zepbound, which are two different medications with two different ingredients. Ozempic = semaglutide and yes, Ozempic is prescribed for diabetes. Wegovy is the same ingredient (semaglutide) and is prescribed for weight loss. Similarly, Mounjaro = terzepitide and is prescribed for diabetes. Zepbound is also terzepitide and is prescribed for weight loss. Hope I helped you out there with your misunderstanding, PP! |
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Going back to OP - I think there are two different concerns with getting medication through online doctors.
1. The medication iteself: A lot (but not all) of the online doctors are prescribing compounded medication which is (1) not regulated and (2) not the same formulation as the brand names - many of them have additional ingredients. 2. Access to the prescribers: Personally, I feel more comfortable with a doctor or practice that I have met and that I know that I am going to be able to get a hold of if I have questions, concerns, and most importantly side effects or reactions that I need immediate responses to. I am sure some of the online practices are better and more responsive than others, but some of them also really feel like fly by. night operations and I've read online about people not being able to get a hold of their prescribers and/or having a different practitioner every time they log on for an appointment (or worse, some of these are solely by messaging with no live interactions at all). |
Nope. Someone said "zepbound and wegovy are for weight loss, not diabetes" and someone else responded "they are absolutely for people with diabetes!" That prompted me to respond that I bet they actually meant Ozempic, because Zepbound IS specifically for weight loss, NOT diabetes. So I'm actually specifically pointing out their core difference, which is the opposite of equating them. My response was not argumentative in the slightest- I was just correcting the poster that zepbound wasn't a drug for diabetes. Do you have any additional questions, or....??? |
Your response made it sound like you thought Ozempic and Zepbound were the diabetes vs. weight loss version of semaglutide when they are two different purposes, ingredients, manufacturers. That's all! |
Not wrong. The difference between poison and medicine is dose. Dose is critical, and will render efficacy, side effects, and more very different. |
The dosing is higher for weight loss. The highest dose of Ozempic is 2, whereas it is 2.4 for Wegovy. This is a significant difference, and many don't see weight loss until 2.4. |
Highlighting this, which is on topic. |