Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The cost difference is huge. My obese father who is pre-diabetic has used compounded to great success. His insurance won't pay for it because he's not full blown diabetic, and the brand name is prohibitively expensive on his fixed income.
It is criminal that this life saving drug can be made and sold at a tiny fraction of the price and that is not allowed.
Not criminal. Imagine you’d invested millions upon millions into developing a product and someone ripped it off, selling it for a fraction of the cost, thereby making a killing themselves. I support the drug companies who developed these miracle drugs. And I’m someone who does take the compounded version for vanity. I would gladly pay more for name brand if I could get it prescribed to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The cost difference is huge. My obese father who is pre-diabetic has used compounded to great success. His insurance won't pay for it because he's not full blown diabetic, and the brand name is prohibitively expensive on his fixed income.
It is criminal that this life saving drug can be made and sold at a tiny fraction of the price and that is not allowed.
Not criminal. Imagine you’d invested millions upon millions into developing a product and someone ripped it off, selling it for a fraction of the cost, thereby making a killing themselves. I support the drug companies who developed these miracle drugs. And I’m someone who does take the compounded version for vanity. I would gladly pay more for name brand if I could get it prescribed to me.
Anonymous wrote:The cost difference is huge. My obese father who is pre-diabetic has used compounded to great success. His insurance won't pay for it because he's not full blown diabetic, and the brand name is prohibitively expensive on his fixed income.
It is criminal that this life saving drug can be made and sold at a tiny fraction of the price and that is not allowed.
Anonymous wrote:The cost difference is huge. My obese father who is pre-diabetic has used compounded to great success. His insurance won't pay for it because he's not full blown diabetic, and the brand name is prohibitively expensive on his fixed income.
It is criminal that this life saving drug can be made and sold at a tiny fraction of the price and that is not allowed.
Anonymous wrote:https://www.usatoday.com/story/money/business/2025/02/21/wegovy-ozempic-removed-from-us-fda-shortage-list/79448337007/
I read this story with horror, as compounded semaglutide (which I can afford) has helped me lose weight and improve my health. I found this story unclear and don’t see it corroborated in other papers. Is it actually being banned? If so, is there a way to still get it?
Anonymous wrote:Will there be appeals, delaying the timeframe?