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It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad World
We live in a mad world, in which the actions of one person caused a cascade where not one single person considered the possible consequences of their actions. I don't know who the original person was, but there must have been one; the very first person to post on social media about the miracle weight-loss drug, Ozempic. (They didn't mention, or bother to find out, that its primary purpose was to treat diabetes.)
Wow, everyone said, this is amazing, I'm gonna tell everyone I know.
Wow, the newsmedia said, this would make a great story. It won't do any harm, and heck, we don't give a damn if it does any harm, that would make another great story.
Wow, many people said, I'm gonna bug my doctor to prescribe it to me "off-label" (that is, a prescription for a medicine which uses it for something other than what its official purpose is).
Sure, many doctors said, it won't do any harm, it's only for one (two, three, five) of my patients.
Worldwide shortage of Ozempic ensues.
Oh, many doctors said, I'll prescribe Trulicity to my diabetic patients instead.
Worldwide shortage of Trulicity ensues.
And that affects me. Which makes me mad.
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One of the lovely side effects of Ozympic is stomach paralysis. Sounds ghastly in extremis. Plus the fact that you have to take the drug for the rest of your life, and it's damned expensive.
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Ozempic is expensive in the USA because the Pharmaceutical companies can charge whatever they want - in order to make "metric fucktons of money". A lot of them behave like hyenas preying on the sick - I remember hearing about how in the USA they were charging thousands of dollars for Insulin, which Type 1 diabetics need in order to stay alive. That's... utterly foul, and makes the devil cackle in delight.
However, in Australia Ozempic and Trulicity are on the PBS (Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme), which means that the government subsidises the cost for legitimate patients (such as diabetics) so it isn't too expensive. My doctor cynically theorised that one reason they are so difficult to get is that the Pharmaceutical companies only want to sell it to US customers, because they make more money that way.
One of the lovely side effects of Ozympic is stomach paralysis. Sounds ghastly in extremis. Plus the fact that you have to take the drug for the rest of your life
I'd be interested to know where you heard that, because it sounds like a hysterical exaggeration of the facts -- the kind of thing one would hear on the "news" (gossip) channels, rather than from an actual doctor.
This is what I know:
After discussing it with my doctor, we've agreed I'll stick with Trulicity rather than Ozempic, because it starts working right away, while Ozempic needs to have the dosage gradually increased before it starts working. With an unreliable supply, that makes Trulicity the more effective medication for me.
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It wouldn't surprise me in the least if the stomach paralysis cases that I heard about were people taking too much to increase weight loss. While the news sources that I read are fairly trustworthy, frequently they lack detail that I'd like. As far as taking it for life, that's definitely the weight control side rather than for diabetes. I'm glad the Trulicity works well for you, I hadn't heard of that one. Diabetes is not a thing in my family, I don't keep up on drug brand names in that field.