Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is no different, really, than Botox, fillers, etc. being seen as inequitable. I don’t think it’s right that vanity users are snapping it up and people in medical need can’t find it.
I wouldn’t use it unless doctor directed for a legitimate health issue. I think it’s ridiculous that people use it to lose 10-20 lbs. Morbidly obese, that type of thing, due to behaviors…sure, as long as therapy and a prescribed and monitored exercise regimen is also required. As a replacement for actual discipline and willpower? It’s over the top.
No one is saying it is "right" but it is the reality.
I say it's right. Your puritan hangups are yours, not mine. You want to see in people's appearance whether they are "good" and the idea that might be hogwash frightens you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I could afford it but never would do it.
Why? What are your concerns?
Anonymous wrote:I'm so tired of these daily threads about Ozempic. Just live your life and don't worry about what others are doing. It's none of your business.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I could afford it but never would do it.
Same.
Same. I’d never start taking it.
Why? Because I’m already taking a life-time medication and I’m not adding another. Not all bodies are supposed to be thin. I won’t take something to address an issue that can be changed with a lifestyle change. Maybe Oprah, Gail and all the others aren’t supposed to be a size 10?
Sometimes lifestyle changes are not enough, but taking that extra drug can buy you a lifetime.
I will have to take a cancer drug the rest of my life. If I needed to take another drug that reduce the likelihood I get type II diabetes or have a stroke, I would do it. Why leave that to willpower when the risk is so high?
Because most people see obesity as a moral failing and not a metabolic issue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I could afford it but never would do it.
Same.
Same. I’d never start taking it.
Why? Because I’m already taking a life-time medication and I’m not adding another. Not all bodies are supposed to be thin. I won’t take something to address an issue that can be changed with a lifestyle change. Maybe Oprah, Gail and all the others aren’t supposed to be a size 10?
Sometimes lifestyle changes are not enough, but taking that extra drug can buy you a lifetime.
I will have to take a cancer drug the rest of my life. If I needed to take another drug that reduce the likelihood I get type II diabetes or have a stroke, I would do it. Why leave that to willpower when the risk is so high?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is already the case. Weight is associated directly with family income.
This.
Anonymous wrote:Is Ozempic/Semi-G gonna cause inequity in people from different classes appearances? In a few years are only the lower earners gonna have weight problems? I feel like everyone around me is getting thin and fast!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I could afford it but never would do it.
Why? What are your concerns?
DP. I'm normal BMI, but gained 12 pounds and want to quickly drop them. I'm concerned that all the data shows these a lifelong drugs. I'm concerned that I would totally screw up my metabolism and gain way more if I stopped even after short term use.
If I had diabetes, then I might be willing to be on drugs for life.
This is something I've thought about too. There's a handful of the people I know on GLP-1 meds for weight loss who have talked about having very little appetite and eating very few calories over the period of months, one person I know is going on two years. I do wonder about how that continued calorie deficit is affecting their metabolism.
you mean like dieting? that continued calorie deficit?
DP. I think like extreme dieting. Similar to people back when liquid diets were popular and would take in maybe 500 calories a day, even in medically-supervised liquid diets.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:News flash: not everyone wants to look like that. They all look so weird and the other shoe is absolutely going to drop. Something about it just seems wrong.
Oh for Pete’s sake. You people are so sad.
Are you saying that all long-term side effects for this new use of this drug are already known?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I could afford it but never would do it.
Why? What are your concerns?
DP. I'm normal BMI, but gained 12 pounds and want to quickly drop them. I'm concerned that all the data shows these a lifelong drugs. I'm concerned that I would totally screw up my metabolism and gain way more if I stopped even after short term use.
If I had diabetes, then I might be willing to be on drugs for life.
This is something I've thought about too. There's a handful of the people I know on GLP-1 meds for weight loss who have talked about having very little appetite and eating very few calories over the period of months, one person I know is going on two years. I do wonder about how that continued calorie deficit is affecting their metabolism.
you mean like dieting? that continued calorie deficit?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is no different, really, than Botox, fillers, etc. being seen as inequitable. I don’t think it’s right that vanity users are snapping it up and people in medical need can’t find it.
I wouldn’t use it unless doctor directed for a legitimate health issue. I think it’s ridiculous that people use it to lose 10-20 lbs. Morbidly obese, that type of thing, due to behaviors…sure, as long as therapy and a prescribed and monitored exercise regimen is also required. As a replacement for actual discipline and willpower? It’s over the top.
No one is saying it is "right" but it is the reality.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I could afford it but never would do it.
Why? What are your concerns?
DP. I'm normal BMI, but gained 12 pounds and want to quickly drop them. I'm concerned that all the data shows these a lifelong drugs. I'm concerned that I would totally screw up my metabolism and gain way more if I stopped even after short term use.
If I had diabetes, then I might be willing to be on drugs for life.
This is something I've thought about too. There's a handful of the people I know on GLP-1 meds for weight loss who have talked about having very little appetite and eating very few calories over the period of months, one person I know is going on two years. I do wonder about how that continued calorie deficit is affecting their metabolism.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The ozempic people are constipated and smell went so faintly like poop so it all evens out
Is this a thing? Do people on Sema-G smell?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most people don’t get weight loss results until they are at higher doses and that takes about 3 months. Nobody is taking this for 3 months to ‘lose 5 lbs fast’. They have phentermine for that,
Yes they are. Allegedly much safer than other alternatives.