Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It will change his/your life. If he’s medically obese or overweight w/ a comorbidity he may be able to get Wegovy covered by insurance. Otherwise, he can find a pharmacy that will compound the medication at a couple hundred $. It requires a lifestyle change and I’d take him up on it.
What lifestyle change? Pretending they're cardiovascularly fit and self-disciplined eating healthy foods in the right portions?
Does it also create muscle tone, heart health, and well oxygenated blood?
Seems like an increasingly pricey shortcut to eventually looking skinny fat or normal weights.
DP. But I very much want to exercise but literally can't do certain things (Hot Yoga for one, which I love) because my large body can't do it. People have to take a first step. Stop begrudging that.
Would have, Could have, Should have.
Anonymous wrote:I'm so skinny been trying to gain weight for years nothing. My entire family is skinny....I am 6'0 and only 140 lbs. I lift weight but since I am so thin I don't have the pump look ....anyways most people like OP's husband have the opposite problem. Good for him! Support him OP. Maybe a thinner version of him will be better in the bedroom assuming thats currently an issue of course
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It doesn’t have to cost $1000 a month. Insurance can cover it or he can get if for max $225 a month from a compounding pharmacy. I’d bet you’d spend at least $225 a month less on food per month if he went on it. Don’t be a snob OP, it sounds like it could really benefit your husband.
My doctor insisted that I not do this, citing safety concerns.
Anonymous wrote:How’s your weight and if you have any kids how’s their weight?
My husband who previously couldn’t stop chomping on anything not nailed to the walls got the meds and lost lots of weight. He is still eating crap and got into a habit of fat shaming our tween daughter. Tries to go after me too (my BMI is at the upper range of normal, and has been so since I was a teen), but I remind him that his weight loss is covered by my insurance.
So, given your description, you might just exchange one set of troubles for another.
Anonymous wrote:Does the chronic snoring stop too?!?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Exh is on it. Insurance pays. However, he is also extremely active (walks 15,000 to 20,000 steps a day) even before Wegovy. It has made some difference with weight but not that much. I think his activity level helps.
That is amazing. I think I walked about 20,000 steps when I was at Disney World last week.
Anonymous wrote:Exh is on it. Insurance pays. However, he is also extremely active (walks 15,000 to 20,000 steps a day) even before Wegovy. It has made some difference with weight but not that much. I think his activity level helps.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It will change his/your life. If he’s medically obese or overweight w/ a comorbidity he may be able to get Wegovy covered by insurance. Otherwise, he can find a pharmacy that will compound the medication at a couple hundred $. It requires a lifestyle change and I’d take him up on it.
What lifestyle change? Pretending they're cardiovascularly fit and self-disciplined eating healthy foods in the right portions?
Does it also create muscle tone, heart health, and well oxygenated blood?
Seems like an increasingly pricey shortcut to eventually looking skinny fat or normal weights.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Spouse had a recent work lunch with guy who lost a ton of weight on ozempic the last 12 mos.
My spouse over eats, over drinks, over snacks, over works and doesn’t exercise- unless it’s his one of his 1-2 hyper focuses like in grad school. Some overeating and impulse eating is due to his untreated ADHD.
Now he’s hellbent on paying $1k a month to “get in shape” forever.
Worse, I had him cover an urgimed visit for sick kid two days ago with my doctor, and he asked about. That doc loved it for diabetics and said it makes you digest slowly, always feel full, it’s great, come back!
Now DH is telling everyone we see he’s going to do it. He doesn’t read news so hasn’t read about it the last couple years. Can’t believe it took one lunch with a work industry colleague for him to jump on the bandleader.
Pros? Cons? Does it help ADHD and (eating) stims?
I'm morbidly obese and using metformin. It does the same thing - slows down digestion, regulates insulin much better. I don't have stabbing hunger all day and I don't have the shakes from low blood sugar. It gives me more self control to regulate what I eat.
With both, you still must watch what you eat and exercise. Perhaps metform, which is an off label use if you don't have diabetes, might be a good starting point. And an appointment with a dietitian, or medically supervised with something like Noom Med. It's not magic. But it's a tool.
Metformin is super cheap and there are no shortages.
Anonymous wrote:Spouse had a recent work lunch with guy who lost a ton of weight on ozempic the last 12 mos.
My spouse over eats, over drinks, over snacks, over works and doesn’t exercise- unless it’s his one of his 1-2 hyper focuses like in grad school. Some overeating and impulse eating is due to his untreated ADHD.
Now he’s hellbent on paying $1k a month to “get in shape” forever.
Worse, I had him cover an urgimed visit for sick kid two days ago with my doctor, and he asked about. That doc loved it for diabetics and said it makes you digest slowly, always feel full, it’s great, come back!
Now DH is telling everyone we see he’s going to do it. He doesn’t read news so hasn’t read about it the last couple years. Can’t believe it took one lunch with a work industry colleague for him to jump on the bandleader.
Pros? Cons? Does it help ADHD and (eating) stims?
I started Wegovy (that's Ozempic, but branded for weight loss) two weeks ago. I didn't want it, but my BMI is 34 and my glucose and A1C are flirting with pre-diabetes and my doctor talked me into it. I've been fortunate, insurance is covering it (BCBS fep).
Anonymous wrote:Does the chronic snoring stop too?!?