People on Ozempic Are Drinking Way Less
People on Ozempic Are Drinking Way Less

People on Ozempic Are Drinking Way Less

People on Ozempic Are Drinking Way Less
People on Ozempic Are Drinking Way Less
So I took it for a little while for my blood sugar. (I'm a non-diabetic hypoglycemic, and it doesn't just 'smooth' glucose for people with diabetes- it smooths it for anybody who could use it for that. I'm off of it now because it's so goddamned expensive.)
Lemme say... It's such a miracle drug, and improves so much stuff, that I'm seriously waiting to find out that it turns us all into spider mutants or something, because even if I found out I'll turn into a spider when I'm 60, I'd still take it. It's that fuckin' amazing.
Absolutely batshit that they've invented a drug so good, almost everybody wants to be on it.
I wonder if it lowers desire for sex as well, or ambition, I am sure more studies are coming.
Almost definitely, side effects should partially mirror what you'd see in unassisted calorie restricted diets.
I feel that a lot of discussion is by people who have never taken ozempic or have and are successful with its treatment. For what it's worth, I'd like to give some insight to my own experience with it and why I'm not on it.
I won't talk about all my medical issues, but to make it very broad - I have type 2 and a genetic disorder regarding my ability to metabolize. I was put on a trial of ozempic because of its apparent effectiveness.
While on it, one of the first things I noticed that no one seems to talk about (so I don't know if it's just me or not): the feeling of being sated and hungry are two different feelings. It was weird being hungry and full all the time. A bit torturous, but something I felt was manageable.
Unfortunately, even on the lowest dosage, the sated feeling was so strong I felt nauseous all the time. It eventually became a problem when I started becoming dehydrated because I couldn't even keep a glass of water down.
I was removed from the medication and I had persistent side-effects afterwards. It's been years now and while the side effects have diminished, I still get random bouts of nausea for no apparent reason. It's unrelated to when I eat or drink, but it's something I've never experienced prior to being on ozempic.
As weird as it sounds, there are some days I wish I could go back on ozempic. It is effective, but now doctors know I retained some side effects, they won't let me try it ever again.
And I guess that's it. Nothing too horrible I guess, but even miracle drugs have side effects. Everyone is built differently, so there will always be outliers.
I play computer games at night - before I was on Mounjaro (okay, not Ozempic, but I guess it still counts) I would have loved a beer or two with that almost every night. Had one once or twice a week.
Now.... no more desire at all. Sometimes, when out in a restaurant I still enjoy a pint - and I also sometimes ejoy getting a bit drunk. Way less often than before.
I feel liberated. I feel I make the choices now - before I was constantly fighting the cravings.
Besides helping with addictions, it also seems to help with dementia, as well as a bunch of other things.
It's a miracle drug, that should be available cheaply to everyone, but so far it's only for rich people.
I would really hesitate calling it a miracle drug as there are documented side-effects and side-effects yet to be fully understood after long-term use.
Additionally while GLP-1 can reduce caloric intake, it doesn't actually fix the poor dietary choices that got you there in the first place. Like a smoker people will misconstrue having a low BMI with being overall healthy, even though there could be a host of macro and micro-nutritional deficits from fiber to omega-3's to vitamins to antioxidants, and still a relatively high consumption of processed foods with things like added sugar.
So sure it reduces the total amount of poor foods being consumed, but of course does nothing in promoting adoption of nutritionally-positive foods. In one respect, the caloric weigh-loss still is itself a net-positive, hopefully people don't end up masking or cementing their other poor eating habits as a consequence.
Additionally while GLP-1 can reduce caloric intake, it doesn’t actually fix the poor dietary choices that got you there in the first place.
This shows an ignorance of how obesity actually works. The primary difference between skinny people and fat people is that fat people are just hungrier. Skinny people have functioning satiation reflexes, while fat people's have been damaged, likely from exposure to highly processed foods during childhood.
Have you learned nothing from the effect of GLP-1 inhibitors? For years, people have been demonizing fat folks as lazy and ignorant, smug in the self-satisfaction that their superior character and intellect could save them from that fate. And now we've apparently learned to bottle willpower, to condense "good dietary choices" into an injection. People take these medicines, and suddenly they find themselves drawn to eat a healthy amount of food, and to eat less sugary and refined crap.
This shows beyond any doubt that people were not making poor choices. They didn't lack willpower. They never had any fundamental character flaws. They just had a broken metabolism that forced them to crave unhealthy levels of unhealthy food. We give them a shot, and somehow this profound flaw in their moral character just vanishes into the wind.
Obesity is a medical problem. It's not an education, a willpower, or a character problem. We have tens of millions of people who have had a core part of their bodies - their satiation reflex, poisoned and damaged by the food industry. And instead of helping them, we declare their poisoning to be a moral failure.
You have learned nothing.
This is all true, but if overweight is your most urgent health issue, and if the excess fat is causing other health issues, simply reducing weight by whatever means can improve health, and there are virtuous cycles too, if you are lighter you can move more, maybe you feel better about your body and treat it better, an upward spiral. The epidemic of overweight (or more specifically over-fat) is causing so many cascade effects here that it's well worth treating aggressively.
What I'd like to know is are these beneficial side effects just due to the weight loss, or are they available to normal weight people who take the drug? Is it actually the drug, or would they get the same benefits by losing weight some other way?
Expecting NO side-effects is an unrealistic objective.
You contradict yourself when you claim there have been no long-term studies, then say it's been used for 20 years, and that's how they discovered the weight loss SIDE-EFFECT.
It certainly does get to the bottom of one of the worst aspects of obesity - overeating. You are assuming that all obese people are eating poor quality food, but that isn't always the case. Often they are eating high quality food, they are just eating too much of it. This address that issue, reduces cravings, and teaches them to eat less. It also seems to help in reducing cravings for poor quality food.
And you are avoiding the addiction issues. That alone makes this drug worth exploring further.
The real issue with this drug isn't the lack of research, it's the fact that it is difficult to access for the average person. Here is a drug that could go a long way in reducing some of the most pressing health issues in our society - obesity, addictions, dementia, etc., and yet insurance companies won't cover it. The cost of the drug would be far cheaper than the associated costs to a society who allows those serious health issues to exist unchecked.
All drugs have side-effects, so what?
You are focusing on the weight loss issue, which is a miracle in itself. So what if they still make unhealthy choices? They are still losing massive amounts of weight, which is us already a HUGE improvement. You can't let perfection be the enemy. So it doesn't solve 100% of the problem, solving 75% is still a worthy improvement.
Then there are all the other things it does. It reduces cravings in addicts of drugs, alcohol, and tobacco, making it much easier to quit. So an unhealthy person with addictions and diabetes can take this drug, get their diabetes under control, lose a ton of weight, and quit smoking and drinking and whatever else, and we're supposed to avoid this drug because there might be some side effects? As long as the side-effects aren't dying 20 years sooner, they're better off with the drug.
It also seems to help with dementia, and other drugs.
You know, all those things like weight loss and addiction control are side-effects, right? They are an unintended consequence of taking the drug, which is what a side-effects is. Sometimes side-effects are bad, sometimes they're good.
Generally, most people we're talking about here don't have dietary nutritional deficiencies. You'd have to specifically eat an unbalanced diet, like chicken nuggets for every meal, for that to happen.
I would bet that anyone prescribed ozempic has also talked with their doctor about their diet before starting.
Have you taken it?
It absolutely reduces craving for l sorts of "bad food".
Try it before being a doomsayer.
I wonder if people are just losing weight and feeling better about their bodies. So while they are not depressed about their weight, they don’t cope with alcohol or other drugs.
I’m on it and it physically makes me sick when I drink alcohol. I get a bad malaise feeling.
They aren't not drinking just drinking less. You get really full 1 beer feels like 3 in your stomach.
It’s definitely more than that. Some people get a sense of well-being and compare it to an antidepressant or anxiolytic. Some people just lose the craving to drink. It’s cut back on the amount of weed I smoke, I just don’t feel the need as much. This is all independent of body image.
There’s also the whole “you get drunk faster on an empty stomach” thing. My partner takes it to balance their insulin, and it has turned them into a complete lightweight. Purely because they’re able to go all day without eating, which means they have an empty stomach when they start drinking.
well I mean are they drinking less than they used to do, or are they drinking less than the average person? (sorry, I know I could just read the article myself, putting kids to bed)
edit: they're drinking less than they themselves used to do
Ozempic shrinks the stomach.
they're less thirsty, less heavy, less happy, less attractive, less wealthy, less strong, less resilient, less hopeful, less honest..
it truly IS a miracle losing drug!
You're just a bigot looking for people to hate.
You've gone your whole life convinced that you have a moral superiority to people fatter than you are. That YOU have the knowledge. That YOU know what a healthy diet is, and they don't. That YOU have more willpower than the slobs who have a hundred pounds on you.
But really all it is, is that you were born lucky. Or you got lucky in the foods you were exposed to in early childhood. Your satiation reflex gives you a hunger level that keeps you at a weight below that of the obese people you take such pride in denigrating. But if you were to receive the same reflex they do, you would quickly find yourself at the same weight they are.
And now, thanks to the miracles of modern medicine, we have invented a way to cure these people. We have discovered the means to help millions, to extend lifespans and healthspans by decades.
And you can't stand it.
Because, now all those evil fat people are going to be a healthy weight again. And how will you know who to cast your judgments upon then? Those damn lying, dishonest, evil fat people! Now they're hiding their fatness from you! They aren't any more moral or willful, they're just hiding their evil!
There is something rotten in your soul.
okay, first of all i apologize. i wasn't talking about the people who actually need this drug, and i'm sorry for that. i live in a small world, and a lot of my exposure to these drugs have been about people who use them for vanity. those are the people i was talking about, but i didnt' state that and i understand and appreciate your reply. i feel like a dick now, but it's not your fault and i thank you sincerely for pointing out the crappiness of my post.
edit - i'll be more conscious of my "jokes" in the future. feels like it wouldn't be a real apology if i didn't include this.
Fitter, happier, more productive, comfortable, not drinking too much, regular exercise at the gym three days a week, getting on better with your associate employee contemporaries, at ease, eating well, no more microwave dinners and saturated fats
A patient, better driver
Fitter, healthier and more productive
A pig
In a cage
On antibiotics
Is this your personal experience or just countering the other guy?
A safer car (baby smiling in back seat), sleeping well (no bad dreams), no paranoia, careful to all animals (never washing spiders down the plughole), keep in contact with old friends (enjoy a drink now and then), will frequently check credit at (moral) bank (hole in the wall)
Favours for favours, fond but not in love
Why did you post this exact, inane comment in two threads?
What's your agenda here with these broad generalizations exactly?
good question, and i apologize.
i posted a reply to someone else who made a very poignant comment:
Lol luddite