←back to thread

234 points Eumenes | 3 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
Show context
diath ◴[] No.42201353[source]
The problem with appetite suppression drugs is that they simply make you not feel hungry, but do nothing to fix your lack of discipline and self-control, I'm sure most people who lose weight on these drugs, and then come off, will just go back to their bad habits.
replies(4): >>42201405 #>>42201431 #>>42201669 #>>42201938 #
echoangle ◴[] No.42201405[source]
So why not just stay on the drugs?
replies(3): >>42201423 #>>42201436 #>>42202081 #
bluSCALE4 ◴[] No.42201436[source]
Most kill you. If I didn't misread articles on ozempic, they can cause digestive problems where food rots in your stomach. Bad depression was another side effect which blows my mind since you'd think looking better would make you feel great. And these were the minor things.
replies(3): >>42201450 #>>42201474 #>>42201523 #
1. tokioyoyo ◴[] No.42201474[source]
I don't think you realize the amount of people have taken Ozempic or similar drug. I'm lucky enough that I haven't had issues with body weight, but if I believe the stats (and my observations in real world confirm it), about 15% of adults are on it.

If it was "killing people", we would be seeing it literally everywhere. We're not talking about a small scale 50K+ observation... we're talking about literal millions.

replies(1): >>42201586 #
2. echoangle ◴[] No.42201586[source]
This says 6% are currently on a GLP-1 drug and 15% have ever taken one in their life:

https://amp.cnn.com/cnn/2024/05/10/health/ozempic-glp-1-surv...

replies(1): >>42201925 #
3. tokioyoyo ◴[] No.42201925[source]
Fair, I remembered my stats wrong. But it's still 15M people in US that are actively on it. That's a lot of people.