Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is available to you.
Not OP but I am overweight with high cholesterol and my doctor wouldn't prescribe. I don't want to have to shop around for a doctor. Frustrating that another formerlly overweight friend is now thin but I have to go hungry to barely see any results and stay overweight.
Pay for ozempic instead of groceries? You'll be doubly thin?
Not you again.
I actually don't know who you're talking about. Ozempic is widely available, but you may have to pay OOP. If your budget is that tight, saving on groceries is actually a smart way of carving some money in your budget.
Ok, I'll play. Healthy high quality foods are expensive. McDonald's is very cheap. People on a tight budget will struggle to pay for a diet comprised of lean protein, fresh vegetables, and low sugar sweets.
My nutritionist wants me to eat 90 grams of lean protein a day while I'm losing weight. That's not cheap.
Anonymous wrote:I was really hoping this thread was about where to get it if you have a prescription. I got one yesterday ad of course my Walgreens is out of stock.
Looks like I can change to a different location online, but I can't tell if that means that pharmacy has it, or I'm just moving the problem farther away.
Does anybody have any tips for locating it?
(I promise I did search this first.)
Anonymous wrote:The gym is available
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is available to you.
Not OP but I am overweight with high cholesterol and my doctor wouldn't prescribe. I don't want to have to shop around for a doctor. Frustrating that another formerlly overweight friend is now thin but I have to go hungry to barely see any results and stay overweight.
Pay for ozempic instead of groceries? You'll be doubly thin?
Not you again.
I actually don't know who you're talking about. Ozempic is widely available, but you may have to pay OOP. If your budget is that tight, saving on groceries is actually a smart way of carving some money in your budget.
Ok, I'll play. Healthy high quality foods are expensive. McDonald's is very cheap. People on a tight budget will struggle to pay for a diet comprised of lean protein, fresh vegetables, and low sugar sweets.
My nutritionist wants me to eat 90 grams of lean protein a day while I'm losing weight. That's not cheap.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is available to you.
Not OP but I am overweight with high cholesterol and my doctor wouldn't prescribe. I don't want to have to shop around for a doctor. Frustrating that another formerlly overweight friend is now thin but I have to go hungry to barely see any results and stay overweight.
Pay for ozempic instead of groceries? You'll be doubly thin?
Not you again.
I actually don't know who you're talking about. Ozempic is widely available, but you may have to pay OOP. If your budget is that tight, saving on groceries is actually a smart way of carving some money in your budget.
Anonymous wrote:I use a compound through my doctors office and it is $250-500/month depending on the dosage. I am tapering off after losing 40 lbs and it's currently $300 for 4 shots, but I am stretching them to every 10 days now so that works out to $200/month. Totally worth it, and have never had issues with supply.
Anonymous wrote:I need to lose about 50 lbs and I can't afford it and never will be able to. I think it's a travesty that this drug is only available to diabetics and rich people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The compounded versions work very well and are inexpensive.
But they are not FDA approved and regulated in any way. So the pharmacies can put whatever they want in there.
That's not true https://www.fda.gov/drugs/guidance-compliance-regulatory-information/human-drug-compounding