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dirtbagskier 8 hours ago [-]
I'd take them even if they didn't make me lose weight - and I'm the type of person that doesn't like takeing Tylenol unless absolutely necessary.
The best way I can describe it: my body and mind are no longer is in starvation mode. I plan, do, act and sleep well.
faangguyindia 4 hours ago [-]
>my body and mind are no longer is in starvation mode
What does it mean? If a drug reduces your desire to eat food, wouldn't it also decrease your desire to eat food beneficial for your body?
I think the effect most people want is to stop craving junk food but still eat nutritious food required for muscle growth and health.
lrasinen 4 minutes ago [-]
My personal experience is like getting eye glasses for your appetite. Easier to eat reasonably sized portions and they're nutritionally well-balanced.
Also the late night cravings are more specific: instead of vague "need to eat something", it's "I'd love a tomato" or "mmm yogurt" or "actually a load of carbs would hit the spot".
planckscnst 5 minutes ago [-]
You don't desire to brush your teeth (at least not in the way that you desire to consume calorie-dense foods). But you manage to still do it anyway. (maybe not you specifically, but people in general) You can make the same choice about nutrition. The lowered desire makes it easier/possible to do this
kube-system 29 minutes ago [-]
It does which is why medically supervised weight loss with GLP1s includes diet recommendations to mitigate this.
But in my experience, decreased cravings make it easier to choose food rationally. The food noise that causes people to overeat usually doesn’t cause them to overeat healthy foods anyway.
ceejayoz 4 hours ago [-]
What if you could intentionally eat good food?
I've heard it widely described as reducing mental noise around food.
testbjjl 48 minutes ago [-]
Intentionally eating good food is a lot more about where your head is at than what you’re eating, like any other devices. You can better understand the mentality of a person by their diet that they evolved through personal experience.
mycall 1 hours ago [-]
People can get fat by eating too much healthy food.
faangguyindia 1 hours ago [-]
true but you'll struggle getting tons of calories out of whole foods.
This is why mass gainers are popular, underweight people find it hard to gain weight so they dirty bulking using fast food which is often calorie dense.
Eating healthy food alone isn't solution, you need to make your life active as well.
theturtletalks 49 minutes ago [-]
The glycemic index also comes into play. It essentially measures how much certain foods keeps you full regardless of calories. So healthy food, even if you’re consuming the same calories as junk food, is going to keep you full longer.
solumunus 25 minutes ago [-]
Specifically for me it makes junk food unpleasant. My diet is now impeccable. I hardly ever have a takeaway and if I do it needs to be something that is not greasy and is good clean food.
I also find drinking alcohol much less pleasant. I still drink sometimes but after a few beers or glasses of wine it starts to become very unappealing and I stop.
I do bodybuilding and I’m still getting my 150g of protein in.
I’m barely overweight and I’m losing weight very slowly but I’ve decided I’m likely to stay on GLP’s long term, if not forever, just because the lifestyle changes have been so incredibly good.
Perhaps this helps dispel the myth that GLP drugs inherently = relentless starvation.
sublinear 2 hours ago [-]
If you want the real answer, people suck at shopping for groceries and don't know how or want to cook.
Long before LLMs, there was a different but similarly misguided hype around making food more convenient. Making money off ignorance is not "innovation", but we live in a world convinced by arrogant and pretentious fearmongering liars.
As always, just do it yourself. It's not that hard after all.
crooked-v 5 minutes ago [-]
If it "wasn't that hard", obesity rates would be much lower.
rnewme 2 hours ago [-]
Do you know what food noise is?
sublinear 8 minutes ago [-]
Yes. I'm saying that it goes away when you fix your diet.
Do you know what nutrients are? Deficiencies are the cause of the noise. This is an evolutionary feature, not a bug. Your body is expecting you to keep eating alternatives until you eventually stumble onto the foods that make you feel better and then keep eating those. In severe cases you might need more patience with the right foods, but if you already feel like crap and you know you just started barely eating healthier (thanks to living in the future), why stop now?
This search process has been somewhat disrupted by our modern environment, but it's not like the good food isn't right there. On the other hand, you don't need trial and error anymore. There's plenty of information available. You can even go see a doctor and get a blood test to confirm both your deficiencies and everything else I just said.
Does that answer your question?
faangguyindia 1 hours ago [-]
Does food noise exist in active tribal people (if so why they have less proportion of obese people?) or is it something which happens to sedentary people?
kube-system 7 minutes ago [-]
I suspect it does, but their ability to act upon it is significantly different. Perhaps if they had hot pockets and Taco Bell, they would have similar problems.
Addiction-like behaviors related to food transcend not only human culture but also even other species.
solumunus 22 minutes ago [-]
Does drug addiction? Because food noise should be viewed through that lens, and I’m no expert but I suspect our modern non tribal life and culture is the root of our abundant addiction issues.
1 hours ago [-]
dmayle 3 hours ago [-]
I had the same experience, but not with GLP-1 drugs, but by upping my protein intake to about 0.7g per pound of body weight.
Night and day, stopped always being hungry... I've tried Noom before (eating highly filling, low calorie foods, but filling, not satiating), but that only worked while I was tracking (and always forcing myself to keep it up)...
Losing weight required work on top of that, but the protein just made my hunger response start working properly again.
magicalhippo 1 hours ago [-]
I recall reading a metastudy of EU studies about 10 years ago, where they focused on three different diet classes: calorie counting, low carb, high protein.
Calorie counting diets had no restrictions on what they ate, as long as the participants didn't exceed the calorie target.
Low carb (Atkins) had no calorie restriction but had to restrict carbs.
High protein also didn't have calorie restriction but participants had to ensure at least 20% of the calories in meals were proteins.
They found that while all helped people lose weight, only the high-protein made it stick reliably.
I used that as basis for my own weight loss and it worked very well for me. As you said it made me full in a different way. YMMV.
sublinear 3 hours ago [-]
I had a similar experience bringing down my A1C.
People talk a lot about meat, but not enough about dairy. My prayers were answered at the altars of feta, greek yogurt, half and half, butter, cottage cheese, etc. They made salads not suck. They opened up a ton of lower carb dessert options. My gut health improved. All of my health improved.
I no longer treat these humble foods as optional extras. They perfectly fill the gap in my daily protein needs. They were never unwelcome, just forgotten.
barake 7 hours ago [-]
Semaglutide does an incredible job of keeping my autoimmune issues in check. The only side effect I've had is needing to drink more water or else I feel like I've got the flu. Minimal tradeoff IMO
faangguyindia 4 hours ago [-]
I remember reading the Hazada paradox, where they found these Hadza tribe members who live an active life, walking miles, hunting, and doing all physical labour, have the same maintenance calories as a Western person.
So where does the energy burn in a sedentary population come from vs highly active Hadza tribe members?
Pontzer’s research showed that while the Hadza were highly active, they actually demonstrated lower baselines of certain markers of metabolic and physiological stress over time compared to Western populations.
Don't quote me on this; I am paraphrasing things I remember from.
> Nonetheless, average daily energy expenditure of traditional Hadza foragers was no different than that of Westerners after controlling for body size. The metabolic cost of walking (kcal kg−1 m−1) and resting (kcal kg−1 s−1) were also similar among Hadza and Western groups. The similarity in metabolic rates across a broad range of cultures challenges current models of obesity suggesting that Western lifestyles lead to decreased energy expenditure.
> So where does the energy burn in a sedentary population come from vs highly active Hadza tribe members?
P.S.: One theory I've seen is that the extra sedentary-spend is in the immune-system, which may have both beneficial and harmful effects, depending on whether it's doing useful work versus causing problems.
spbaar 4 hours ago [-]
Thirst affects me in a different way too. My throat doesn't feel dry and uncomfortable because before it reaches that point I almost get naseous.
npunt 7 hours ago [-]
oh say more?
cjbgkagh 7 hours ago [-]
This is why I took it, auto immune related ME/CFS. Works great. I still get PEM but outside of that I get to live a normal life.
emmelaich 4 hours ago [-]
Interesting! Is it possible that you're just eating less of whatever triggers the autoimmune symptoms?
cjbgkagh 4 hours ago [-]
No, if that’s all it was then ME/CFS would be a cake walk and it isn’t. I have such a crazy restrictive diet and have had for a long time that one of my issues was being kicked out of doctor's offices for looking too healthy. The diet is necessary but not sufficient.
s5300 26 minutes ago [-]
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catigula 2 hours ago [-]
This sounds concerning to me.
taurath 3 hours ago [-]
As a counter example, I found myself unable to eat anything at all even with anti nausea meds, and my head utterly in a fog that felt like I was becoming ill.
diggerboy 7 hours ago [-]
Did you have to reach a certain dose for such effects?
chadd 7 hours ago [-]
the minimum dose of monjaro (2.5mg injection once/week) can often be enough
joshuamcginnis 7 hours ago [-]
Studies show almost all subjects regained the weight and reversed gains within 2 years. This means underlying issues (e.g., food addiction) aren't being addressed. Short of changing habits, the only maintenance solution is lifelong drug use and that doesn't sit well with me.
thaw13579 5 minutes ago [-]
The issue is that our modern world has engineered our food to be highly energy-dense and incredibly appealing, so the root cause is an evolutionary mismatch with our environment, which has diverged incredibly from early humans.
Personally, I look at GLP-1 agonists as akin to wearing glasses. Some people are just born without the ability to regulate their appetite in accordance with our society, but there is a tool / prosthetic to change that, often that's a lifelong solution.
wpm 7 hours ago [-]
Why not? People take depression meds, blood pressure meds, all kinds of meds for their whole life. I'll be on omeprazole for reflux my whole life. It doesn't solve the underlying problem of my gut being prone to overpumping acid into my stomach. So omeprazole is problematic?
The underlying issue is being treated, it's treated by taking the drug. It works. It's doing its job.
I'd be curious as to how you came to this conclusion.
htk 4 hours ago [-]
No, the symptom is being treated, not the underlying issue.
And that's ok, but treating the underlying issue, when possible, is better, as the problem ceases to exist.
SoftTalker 2 hours ago [-]
But that's not what the pharma companies want. They want you on the lifetime prescriptions that don't actually address the underlying problem.
thesmtsolver2 58 minutes ago [-]
Are they hiding true solutions treating the underlying issues?
joquarky 3 minutes ago [-]
Consider history, the incentives, and the current political climate.
crooked-v 4 hours ago [-]
For many people, the "underlying issue" is fundamentally just being too hungry for how they live. GLP-1s absolutely treat that.
Barrin92 2 hours ago [-]
> the "underlying issue" is fundamentally just being too hungry for how they live
operative phrase in that sentence "how they live". They need to live more active lives. And that's better than a weight loss drug because inactivity causes systemic disease beyond weight gain.
GLP-1 drugs do to hunger what pain meds do to pain, but if you're overweight and your back is aching because you're sedentary the solution isn't a cocktail of drugs, it's to get off your ass, because that lifestyle is going to cause you biomechanical, metabolic and even cognitive issues down the road.
There's disease you can't do anything about and need to treat with medicine, but if you're experiencing symptoms because your lifestyle is abusing your body change your life. There'll come a moment where there's no wonder pill to fix your issues and in that moment you're better of if you know how to actually get control of yourself. Which most import of all is going to give you the confidence that you can change. You don't want to be 50 years old and your only cope in life is praying that a pharma company mutes whatever symptoms plague you.
thaw13579 8 minutes ago [-]
It's great to be active, but there's more to it than that, namely that our modern world has highly engineered our food to be highly energy-dense and incredibly appealing. So the root cause is an evolutionary mismatch with our environment, which has diverged incredibly from early humans. Expecting an individual to overcome won't generally work, since their brains are simply wired for it. Sure there are some people who can simply choose to ignore the fast food place at every corner and go to the gym via willpower alone, but they are exceptional in their brain's capacity for executive control.
Personally, I look at GLP-1 agonists akin to wearing glasses. Some people are just born without the ability to regulate their appetite in accordance with our society, but there is a tool / prosthetic to change that. That said, it's not one or the other, it's always great to be more active.
kube-system 37 minutes ago [-]
Unfortunately the reason many live sedentary lives is indirectly a result of broader societal conditions. The trend towards a more sedentary society is not a coincidental individual failing of millions of people. It is because our economies and our built environment contributed to it.
netheril96 2 hours ago [-]
> They need to live more active lives.
When I become more active, I also become more hungry due to the extra energy consumption. The net effect is little weight loss and more often than not weight gain. While being physically active is beneficial to health in many ways, it does little for losing or maintaining weight, at least for me.
faangguyindia 1 hours ago [-]
deficit = tdee - intake
Active life = higher TDEE which means you can eat more food while still maintaining same deficit.
kube-system 35 minutes ago [-]
Exercise also stimulates digestion and triggers a hunger response in many people. This is why exercise without diet often fails to result in weight loss.
faangguyindia 4 hours ago [-]
for many people the underlying issue is serious lack of education when it comes to nutrition.
Not understanding calorie balance, not understanding calorie density of the food they eat.
How many people know 1kg fat = 7700kcal that if they could create deficit of 7700kcal they could potentially lose 1kg bodyfat? Ofc, i know the relationship isn't that simple but for most people this roughly holds true.
If you are eating granolas in breakfast, it may come across as a shock how many calories they pack, go ahead look it up many people believe that's a low calorie health breakfast option.
Many people don't know
1g of carb or protein = 4kcal
1g of fats = 9kcal.
dgabriel 3 hours ago [-]
I understand calorie balance. I've been on a diet since I was 12 years old, and am now approaching 50. I've lost and regained the same 60lbs about 4 times now. I have logged every bite that goes into my mouth, and lived with a constant hunger for as long as I could take it. Then I ate until I felt satisfied and gained it all back. I know how many calories are in anything, and I can eyeball any serving size. I've been doing it for decades. When I take GLP-1s, I can just stop. My appetite and body maintains itself at a healthy weight, and I don't cry myself to sleep from either hunger or shame.
I think I'm not the ignorant one.
QuiEgo 1 hours ago [-]
That sucks. If GLP-1s work for you, more power to you.
Curious: how big of a calorie deficit did you run, and what was your macro (protein/fat/carbs) balance.
My personal experience is going low on carbs (especially added sugars) and high on fiber and protein made running a deficit suck much less in terms of feeling satisfied.
Also, a 10% deficit was okay (I was hungry but could mostly ignore it). A 25% deficit was very annoying and about as much as I'd care to do.
faangguyindia 1 hours ago [-]
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faangguyindia 3 hours ago [-]
I have no personal animosity toward you, but I've heard all this many times, so I'll respond accordingly.
>I've been on a diet since I was 12 years old, and am now approaching 50. I've lost and regained the same 60lbs about 4 times now
You can lose weight by crash dieting, which does not prove much. The first thing that comes to mind for people is simply: "I'll just eat very little and lose weight." It even works, but people quickly get results; it makes them miserable, and they gain it back.
People get stuck between "eating too little" and "binge eating".
>I have logged every bite that goes into my mouth, and lived with a constant hunger for as long as I could take it
This proves you are sincere in calorie tracking, but it doesn't tell us much about what kind of deficit you were in. What were your maintenance calories, and how did you calculate them?
What kind of deficit did you run over what time period?
In my experience, while people know all these things, execution still requires knowing all the "gotchas".
Going from 2700kcal calories to 1000kcal a day diet will make anyone hungry and miserable.
phil21 2 hours ago [-]
> In my experience, while people know all these things, execution still requires knowing all the "gotchas".
In my experience, people that think they know all the "gotchas" don't really know as much as they think they do.
Knowing fat is calorie dense is great. Without context one would attempt to try to cut it out of your diet almost entirely. Sort of like what literally happened with the food industry in the 80's/90's and 00's.
But then they would wonder why they are so hungry and likely consuming more sugars. Which is even worse for most folks due to glycemic index and how that interacts with hunger.
A little bit of knowledge can be actively harmful. Common sense on this topic actually does far better than most who think they know better. Almost everyone knows what "healthy food" looks like without needing to know anything about much else. Education is not the issue.
faangguyindia 2 hours ago [-]
If you are taking shots at me, just know i wrote this guide:
it's an ad free, subscription free app, i don't make money from this.
genericresponse 2 hours ago [-]
Obesity is widely regarded as a chronic disease that includes the interaction of genetic and other factors with behavioral factors.
The unbelievably low success rate of diet and exercise programs for long-term weight reduction is widely documented and quite consistent with the earlier poster's experience.
faangguyindia 2 hours ago [-]
>The unbelievably low success rate of diet and exercise programs for long-term weight reduction is widely documented and quite consistent with the earlier poster's experience.
where is your data from? what protocol did they follow?
klipklop 2 hours ago [-]
This comes off as extremely condescending. I am pretty sure the person you are trying to give basic dieting advice already knows this. Why are you trying so hard to convince people to not take medication that helps them?
faangguyindia 2 hours ago [-]
when someone says something doesn't work, is it condescending to ask them what exactly they did?
dotcoma 2 hours ago [-]
Wow. I wish you could find a way to do this without meds, but I certainly can’t blame you for taking them.
toast0 3 hours ago [-]
Plenty of people can take this intelectual knowledge and turn it into eating behaviors that work for them.
But this intelectual knowledge doesn't really help if your body is telling you it's hungry all the time and it's hard not to eat something. Better choices can help, because different calories deliver different satiety; but some people don't get much satiety no matter what they eat.
Calories in vs calories out is true, but it's very hard to measure calories out, so it's sometimes helpful and sometimes completely unhelpful.
These drugs seem to help a lot of people in different ways, but if the underlying issue is that they don't get the satiety signals they need to eat healthy amounts without it, of course it's not surprising that when they stop medicating, they stop getting the satiety signals.
There's a lot of variance among humans, but everybody seems to want a one size fits all approach to eating. That doesn't work; you have to find all the things that work for some people, and then try the most promising options until you find something that works for you. Many people crave novelty, and anyway people change over time, so something that works for someone today might not work for them next year, etc.
faangguyindia 2 hours ago [-]
>But this intelectual knowledge doesn't really help if your body is telling you it's hungry all the time and it's hard not to eat something. Better choices can help, because different calories deliver different satiety; but some people don't get much satiety no matter what they eat.
Maybe try to figure out why you’re feeling hungry. Is it because you’re running a 1000 kcal deficit?
Can your body really tell whether you ate 200–300 kcal less today than you did yesterday?
Most of us can easily notice a 1000 kcal difference, but very few can reliably detect a day-to-day difference of just 200–300 kcal.
What are your maintenance calories? Are they around 1800 kcal, where even a 300 kcal deficit puts you on a 1500 kcal diet? That’s very little food for many people.
In that case, it may be better to focus on increasing your maintenance calories by becoming more active in daily life.
Deficit = TDEE - Intake
either drop intake or boost tdee or do both.
If you managed to boost your tdee to 2500kcal, now a deficit of 300kcal means you eat 2200kcal day to day and 2200kcal isn't very little food making diet easy to follow.
>There's a lot of variance among humans, but everybody seems to want a one size fits all approach to eating.
I think there isn't as much variance as people like to believe, how many people you see walking around you with 3 eyes? and 4 hands?
toast0 1 hours ago [-]
> Maybe try to figure out why you’re feeling hungry. Is it because you’re running a 1000 kcal deficit?
I know several people who are feeling hungry because they're not dead, regardless of how much calorie surplus or deficit they have.
We can do the same activities and eat the same meals and I'll be satied and they will be hungry. Or I can confuse the hell out of them when we do some big activity and I say "i'm not hungry, we worked too hard"... or when we miss a meal by several hours and I tell them "I'm not hungry anymore, it's been too long... but I should probably eat something"
> I think there isn't as much variance as people like to believe,
Oh sure, I don't think everyone is really a unique snowflake, there are patterns. You can find lots of people in these threads who have a broken hunger sensor. You can find lots of people in these threads that can manage this intellectually. I don't see a lot of people in these threads like me who keep a healthy(ish) weight because IBS punishes them for bad food choices, but I'm sure they're out there. Plenty of people out there where celiac drives their relationship between calories in and calories out.
Diet research would be a lot more interesting if there were ways to classify people by their 'metabolism type' and then see what can work for which type. Maybe there would be more reproducability that way, too.
faangguyindia 1 hours ago [-]
>I know several people who are feeling hungry because they're not dead, regardless of how much calorie surplus or deficit they have.
Are you saying 1000kcal vs 200kcal deficit makes no difference?
>Diet research would be a lot more interesting if there were ways to classify people by their 'metabolism type' and then see what can work for which type. Maybe there would be more reproducability that way, too.
You can easily track your maintenance calories, by tracking your weight vs intake overtime.
kube-system 13 minutes ago [-]
Bariatrics would be a much more simple discipline if it were a problem that could simply be solved with education. Education is the first step in any treatment, but it often fails to produce results alone.
crooked-v 3 hours ago [-]
Being aware that there are deceptively calorie-dense foods doesn't help the basic equation there. Anecdotes are not data, but my anecdotal experience is that if I ate nothing but bulk vegetables whenever my hindbrain wanted food, I would still be eating over my maintenance calories every day.
faangguyindia 3 hours ago [-]
What's your maintenance calories and how did you calculate it?
Most people calculate it wrong.
Affric 3 hours ago [-]
Right so it would seem increased physical exertion would be the answer.
Yeah, humans should have more free time and do enough work or exercise each day to keep their body in shape.
spudlyo 2 hours ago [-]
One might think that weight loss is simply an energy balance issue. Sadly, it's far more complicated than that. You can burn 500-800 calories in an hour of cardio, and you can consume 500-800 calories of food in a few minutes.
faangguyindia 1 hours ago [-]
If you are eating 2700kcal a day which is what an average male probably eats in West
Why would you eat 2700+800 = 3500kcal? when you can do with 2700kcal?
ajross 3 hours ago [-]
> No, the symptom is being treated, not the underlying issue.
That's a semantic argument. The "issue", medically, to most people viewing this as a health problem, is excess body fat and not eating behavior.
I mean, you're not wrong, but this seems silly. YES, it would be better to have developed a cure for disordered and unrestrained eating. We didn't. And we don't really even know how. Oops, as it were. But we do have a treatment that avoids the most significant impacts of those problems.
Medicine is harder than software engineering. Not all bugs are shallow even with all the eyes in the world.
fwip 3 hours ago [-]
Additionally - GLP1 drugs work by changing those eating patterns.
hack1312 3 hours ago [-]
But those changes don’t stick if the drug is discontinued.
nemomarx 2 hours ago [-]
Diets also don't stick when you discontinue them.
It would be an incredible advancement if we figured out a reliable and replicatable way to just eat less food, but until then I think a drug that makes you do that is pretty decent.
hack1312 2 hours ago [-]
> Diets also don’t stick when you discontinue them.
Yes, obviously. Which is why sustainable weight loss takes a commitment to making a change in lifestyle.
What’s more sustainable, changing your lifestyle to maintain the weight you lost, or being beholden to taking a drug to maintain that same lifestyle change for a hope at maintenance?
macintux 2 hours ago [-]
At a large enough scale, being beholden to a drug is far more sustainable.
We’ve tried shaming people into being healthy. Amazingly enough, it doesn’t work very well.
hack1312 1 hours ago [-]
You claim shame was tried and was unsuccessful thus we should drug people. But what about the opposite of shame? Education, encouragement, non-judgementalism, and providing all other support required.
nemomarx 1 hours ago [-]
We've been doing that for a while too - it was Michelle Obama's whole thing, for example?
It could definitely use more support, but it doesn't do a ton if the structure of people's lives is being changed by other factors. (Car based commutes, long work hours, lack of exercise at their job, the cheapness of certain kinds of foods, food advertising.)
If we had a lot more political power to work on public health programs, maybe. But obesity rates are rising throughout the developed world regardless of local culture so there is a ton of work needed there.
topgrain2 2 hours ago [-]
The drug is more likely to work long-term. Diet & exercise, as a treatment plan, are distressingly ineffective.
Well-studied problem.
It makes more sense when you realize that something like sheer dieting/exercising willpower isn't why some populations are skinnier than others. Pick another country with a healthier-weight population, start placing some of them in the US, and they'll gain weight. Put them back, and it'll drop again.
If "just diet and exercise" (the advice, and individual effort to that effect) aren't what are keeping some populations skinnier, why would it cure a population with an obesity epidemic?
hack1312 1 hours ago [-]
So clearly it’s something to do with the difference in their lives in the USA, but your first response is to treat the symptom with drugs rather than look at their life holistically?
Just off the top of my head the food (portions, quality, etc) in the USA combined with how much people no longer can walk vs being required to drive are a huge contributor to weight gain of immigrants to the USA.
nemomarx 2 hours ago [-]
From the last time I looked at studies on basically any diet, I think prescribing people drugs for life probably lasts longer. Do you have any longitudinal studies of people making lifestyle changes for 10+ years to keep off weight?
ajross 1 hours ago [-]
> What’s more sustainable, changing your lifestyle to maintain the weight you lost, or being beholden to taking a drug to maintain that same lifestyle change for a hope at maintenance?
That's some pretty... charged language. But even so: the drug, clearly. People take drugs reliably as a matter of empirical fact. People likewise emphatically don't "change their lifestyles" as a general rule. If they did we wouldn't be talking about this new drug, would we?
hack1312 1 hours ago [-]
It’s reality.
People take drugs if they can afford them; will GLP-1’s be available dirt-cheap to the masses or limited to those fortunate enough to have health insurance.
ssl-3 2 hours ago [-]
Is the drug at risk of being discontinued? If so, then can that risk be quantified in any way?
(For comparison: Countless scores of diets are discontinued daily.)
hack1312 1 hours ago [-]
If the person can’t afford the drug then it’s at risk of being discontinued.
ssl-3 27 minutes ago [-]
That's certainly a risk for a subset of people with limited incomes.
Meanwhile: Diets have been discontinued by people of all income levels for as long as we've had diets to discontinue. Some people succeed with their diets, and some don't.
ElProlactin 2 hours ago [-]
> People take depression meds, blood pressure meds, all kinds of meds for their whole life.
And a lot of these medications have side effects that can affect quality of life negatively in other ways. That doesn't mean they're not helpful, or shouldn't be taken. But the "no free lunch" rule usually applies, sometimes to a noticeable degree.
hamhock666 4 hours ago [-]
If you can find a way to use your own free will and self-discipline to stop the bad condition then that seems preferable to using a drug. Maybe someone doesn't have the willpower in which case it's good that we have the drug.
With regards to omeprazole, I changed my diet a bit and no longer needed the omeprazole. I don't know exactly what it was, but if you can get off of a drug because you don't need it anymore that seems ideal.
paulddraper 4 hours ago [-]
I mean…that’s just like depression medication.
It’s possible to ignore sadness as well as hunger.
hamhock666 4 hours ago [-]
There are usually ways to fix the problems in your life, like sadness and hunger, without resorting to using drugs. Maybe not everyone but it is something we should strive for.
tuckerman 2 hours ago [-]
Why is that something to strive for though? Maybe for some people that mental energy is better spent everywhere. If there is a simple and safe pharmaceutical solution for a problem, that sounds like great progress to me!
soared 2 hours ago [-]
Omeprazole is not great long term FYI - worth talking to your doctor or getting a second opinion to discuss.
catigula 2 hours ago [-]
I’ve been taking high doses long term for over a decade and I don’t really have any substantial issues.
derekja 2 hours ago [-]
The primary concern is reduced stomach acid leading to nutrient deficiencies, particularly b12. There have been some long term studies correlating to dementia as a result. And some studies that have not found this. So the jury is still out, but keeping an eye on some nutritional markers is not a bad idea.
dotcoma 2 hours ago [-]
Good for you, but this mere fact does not mean it’s ideal.
Not a doctor, but I would at least try to look into this. Best of luck!
joshuamcginnis 7 hours ago [-]
I think there's a distinct difference between taking medicine for things you can fix on your own (diet + exercise) vs things you cannot (excess acid production).
ceejayoz 7 hours ago [-]
> things you can fix on your own (diet + exercise)
We have decades of research showing this is more in the "excess acid production" realm of things.
applfanboysbgon 6 hours ago [-]
We also know there's a replication crisis in psychology and medicine, that it's easy to publish results that show the effect you're looking for, that there are rich, developed countries with obesity rates <5%, and that the obesity rate for Western countries spiked in recent years. This idea that Americans are genetically pre-ordained to be fat seems like fanciful thinking.
ceejayoz 6 hours ago [-]
> We also know there's a replication crisis in psychology and medicine…
It seems unlikely to extend to bariatric surgery outcomes.
> This idea that Americans are genetically pre-ordained to be fat seems like fanciful thinking.
This idea that Americans are genetically pre-ordained to lack willpower seems like fanciful thinking.
applfanboysbgon 6 hours ago [-]
Of course they aren't genetically pre-ordained to lack willpower. That's why they could stop being fat, if only they chose to. The issue is cultural, not genetic. You don't go from 12% obesity to 40% obesity in 40 years due to a genetic shift, but rather a cultural one.
ceejayoz 6 hours ago [-]
> That's why they could stop being fat, if only they chose to.
This seems like one of those "replication crisis" claims.
> That's why they could stop being fat, if only they chose to.
So they're pre-ordained not to?
I have a loved one who certainly chooses to, to the point of having had bariatric surgery; GLPs have been an important follow-up. It's really not as simple as you make it out to be.
> You don't go from 12% obesity to 40% obesity in 40 years due to a genetic shift, but rather a cultural one.
What if that cultural one is letting the processed foods industry engineer everything to be deeply addicting?
applfanboysbgon 6 hours ago [-]
> So they're pre-ordained not to?
No. I'm saying it's within their power, so they aren't pre-ordained either way. You were suggesting that it's impossible for a large percentage of the population to not be obese without medical intervention, that it was comparable to excessive acid production which is a genetic anomaly and out of an individual's own control.
> What if that cultural one is letting the processed foods industry engineer everything to be deeply addicting?
Sure, the industry bears some blame and is part of the cultural issue, but even if presented with addicting substances, it is both an individual choice to consume them and a collective cultural choice not to regulate them.
cflewis 5 hours ago [-]
Yeah, you see, this is the same thinking that leads you to say "People who are depressed should just think happier thoughts."
ksenzee 4 hours ago [-]
What evidence do you have that it is a cultural shift, rather than, say, a chemical in the environment that wasn't there before, or a difference in the food supply?
faangguyindia 3 hours ago [-]
Are food options today not more calorie-dense than they were back in time? More easily accessible? Calories have become increasingly cheap and dense to come by. You've lots of processed food being engineered to be highly palatable and calorie dense at an industrial scale.
Plus, cars and all "comforts" eating into your physical activities?
dotcoma 2 hours ago [-]
The real shift happened in what BigFood started putting into their highly processed food, imho.
PaulHoule 3 hours ago [-]
America is more obese than many nations but obesity is increasing the world over.
The timing is just about right to blame it on Reagan, either the theory that neoliberalism leads to "structured stress" or than some environmental chemical got approved in that time frame.
thereisnospork 6 hours ago [-]
>This idea that Americans are genetically pre-ordained to be fat seems like fanciful thinking.
The idea that it being genetic or not should matter is odd? Who cares why people are fat? They inarguably are fat and will by all available evidence be skinnier and healthier on a glp drug.
I fail to see the need for additional analysis or consideration?
Digging into the root cause or petitioning to tweak the food supply to reduce HFCS are admirable, but entirely orthogonal to the questions: "will taking ozempic et al make an overweight person's life better?" and "will making ozempic et al widely available improve America as a whole?"
applfanboysbgon 6 hours ago [-]
> I fail to see the need for additional analysis or consideration?
Having 40% of your population on a lifetime drug seems like it could cause significant issues in the long-term, especially if there are unforeseen longterm side effects. Medical intervention seems like it should be a last resort, not something half the population is subscribed to by default, so if the problem can be addressed by other means, it really should be.
dghlsakjg 3 hours ago [-]
Look up what percentage of people take statins long term at some point in their life. For people in certain age brackets it's more than the 40% of people taking GLP-1s that you are so concerned with. Why don't they just lower their cholesterol via other means?
Look up what percentage of people take antidepressants. Why don't they just try being happy?
Look up what percentage of people regularly take OTC pain killers, Benadryl, etc. Why don't they just tough it out?
You are only picking on GLP-1s which happen to treat obesity among other illnesses. All of the other medications I listed are treating conditions with non-pharmaceutical interventions, but you haven't stated a problem with a huge percentage of the population using them.
If your problem is with chronic medication use, this isn't the one to pick on. It is insanely effective.
> not something half the population is subscribed to by default, so if the problem can be addressed by other means, it really should be.
What makes you think that these people haven't tried other options. What makes you think this is the default option, and not a later option? Do you think they are unaware of diet and exercise? Do you think that they choose to be fat? Do you think that people that can get PHDs doing world changing science, climb mountains, run Fortune 500 companies, hell - run marathons, are just too undisciplined or stupid to lose weight?
applfanboysbgon 10 minutes ago [-]
> Look up what percentage of people take antidepressants. Why don't they just try being happy?
If there's a genuine chemical imbalance that needs correcting, whether that's causing obesity or depression it certainly warrants medical intervention. That should only account for a couple of % of people, however. If 40% of your population is on antidepressants, in other words 40% of your population is chronically depressed, that points to much, much deeper root issues pervading society, and I do not in fact think it's a great idea to "solve" that by drugging up half the population on antidepressants for life either.
> Look up what percentage of people regularly take OTC pain killers, Benadryl, etc. Why don't they just tough it out?
It's funny you mention this because American doctors will in fact tell people who literally need painkillers to function to tough it out, after overcorrecting for a period where they were handing out chronic medication like candy and causing more problems than they solved.
> If your problem is with chronic medication use, this isn't the one to pick on. It is insanely effective.
My problem is with the scale of chronic medication use. Chronic medication is life-saving as a targeted intervention for people who genuinely need it, and I have no problems with that. Using it as a population-wide bandaid for every societal issue instead of fixing root causes is bound to end poorly, though. What happens when 50% of the population is on some cocktail of GLPs, stimulants, painkillers, sleep meds, and antidepressants simultaneously because it was deemed easier and more instantly gratifying to prescribe chronic medication for everything than addressing any actual causes?
> Do you think they are unaware of diet and exercise? Do you think that they choose to be fat?
I think they are perfectly aware of diet and exercise and mostly choose not to bother because it has become culturally accepted to disregard one's own health for the joy of a Big Mac and a Coca Cola or 15. It is worth noting that the obesity rate for Asian Americans is only 16%, despite being exposed to the same environment and food industry. Did eg. caucasian American genetics take a nosedive in 40 years, or did they just normalise being self-indulgent to an unhealthy degree? I think one of those explanations is more likely than the other, even if it's not something they'd like to hear.
ceejayoz 4 hours ago [-]
> especially if there are unforeseen longterm side effects
GLP-1s have been used widely for 20+ years now.
crooked-v 6 hours ago [-]
I'm not on GLP-1s, but I've been looking at very seriously because something I can't "fix on my own" is just... always feeling hungry. That's just how my body works. Exercise doesn't help; there's no reasonable amount of exercise that will help with my office-worker stomach wanting 3000 calories a day. So far through my life I've just lived with it and managed my diet as best I can and it just absolutely sucks.
buck746 5 hours ago [-]
Terzepitide took me from always wanting food to actually being able to focus on other things fully. I was concerned with being able to inject myself weekly, but it's easy and worth the 1-2 minutes a week. If you start, the dosage schedule is more a suggestion than an absolute. I noticed side effects getting worse so I dropped back to a lower dose and have held there for a couple months now. Only real drawback has been from a friend giving me a hard time after seeing the vial in my fridge, but he seems to be coming around after seeing obvious results.
throwatdem12311 4 hours ago [-]
Why would exercise use help? Burning calories makes your body want to eat, obviously - this is how our bodies are supposed to work.
untrust 3 hours ago [-]
Exercise absolutely helps as it helps regulate blood sugar more effectively. A surprising effect of building muscle and exercising is that your body becomes more insulin sensitive and your blood sugar stabilizes instead of having drastic swings.
habinero 6 hours ago [-]
Yeah, I posted elsewhere about it, but GLPs instantly switched that feeling off like it was throwing a breaker. It's wild.
saberience 6 hours ago [-]
Exercise will help. It's Physics, it's not an opinion based thing that works for some people and not others. It's energy in vs energy out. If you simply eat less calories then you exercise/use, you WILL lose weight.
I don't get this weird thing people do where they act like their bodies don't follow the laws of conservation of energy.
hackingonempty 6 hours ago [-]
It is of course true that caloric input is a thermodynamic limit and restricting it sufficiently relative to caloric expenditure will cause you to lose weight. (Lisa, in this household we obey the laws of thermodynamics...)
However, not all calories are the same, metabolism is dynamic, and the brain is complex and exerts a powerful influence over behavior.
Increasing exercise will make you hungrier and most people are simply unable to resist this and end up not losing weight. It is why there is a common saying that "you cannot outrun your fork." Restricting calories generally is difficult in today's environment with plentiful calorie dense food everywhere. People don't cook as much as they used to and restaurant meals have more calories than ever.
AFAIK GLP-1 drugs work because they calm the minds desire to eat which is baked in deeply from millions of years of our ancestors struggling to get sufficient food.
Aaargh20318 6 hours ago [-]
The problem with exercise is that our bodies are quite efficient with their energy usage. A few minutes of ‘calories in’ takes many hours of ‘calories out’ to burn.
You can’t really exercise enough to offset the food you can eat in a day, even if you somehow were able to dedicate all your time to exercising you would still have to limit your food intake.
Add to that the fact that exercise is mind numbingly boring and you have to conclude it is not a practical solution at all.
buck746 5 hours ago [-]
More importantly we have decades of irrefutable evidence that diet and exercise alone are about as effective as abstinence only sex education. It's great there are people that can just decide to eat less, but it's foolish to assume that can work for everyone.
It's odd how people act as tho there's a "moral argument" against using a tool to help reach the goal. It feels a lot like the argument that "morals are from religion", as if you need god to know that murder isn't really a productive activity (unless you work in a slaughterhouse).
I wish American money could go back to having "mind your business" printed on it instead of "in god we trust", it was a huge loss to all of us when that garbage was passed. It was also a huge loss when everyone just decided to go along with saying "taxpayer money" instead of saying "public funds/money", but slippery psychological slopes are everywhere.
Aaargh20318 5 hours ago [-]
> It's great there are people that can just decide to eat less, but it's foolish to assume that can work for everyone.
More importantly: I don’t want to eat less. I want to eat more. There is so much amazing food.
amluto 1 hours ago [-]
> You can’t really exercise enough to offset the food you can eat in a day
This is not true. There are plenty of activities that a healthy, enthusiastic person can do for quite a few hours per day that burn calories rapidly, and it takes serious effort to eat enough to offset the calorie usage. Think distance running, skiing, cycling, rowing, etc.
Sometimes people go to extreme technological measures to optimize their ability to consume calories (see recent record-setting marathon results). Sometimes people rely on extremely calorie-dense foods (butter, nuts, etc) so they can carry meals with them that are not wildly calorie-deficient for their long, unsupported travels.
When people are burning calories at this rate, they are probably not doing it for exercise — they’re probably either doing it because it’s fun or it’s part of an adventure.
I’m suspect that, if someone is overweight but in good enough shape to cross-country ski for six hours a day, then even if their body tends toward telling them to eat too much, they could probably lose weight by doing so for many days in a row.
tayo42 2 hours ago [-]
You can pick better activities for exercise. You don't have to run on a treadmill
hackingonempty 5 hours ago [-]
> You can’t really exercise enough to offset the food you can eat in a day, even if you somehow were able to dedicate all your time to exercising you would still have to limit your food intake.
People racing the Tour Divide, a 2700 mile solo unsupported bikepacking race through the Rocky Mountains, lose weight when riding their bikes 18 hours a day for 2-3+ weeks straight. They describe being unable to choke down enough food even though what they are eating is very calorie dense. Hotdogs, burritos, burgers, pizza, a pound of gummies every day, chocolate milk and ice cream when resupplying, McDonalds where they fill their hydration bladders with PowerAde, anything they can get their hands on quickly when they arrive at a small mountain town which frequently has nothing more than a gas station.
Obviously not a practical solution as you say but they do exercise enough to offset the food when eating as much as they can.
phil21 5 hours ago [-]
Great? When I worked landscaping I would plow through 2-3 double quarter pounder meals every lunch break. And then a dominos pizza or three when I got home for dinner. Plus a gallon or two of full sugar soda throughout the day, and snacks.
It’s not practical in the least for the average office worker to outrun the fork. It’s just silly advice and pointless to even bring up. When it takes an hour or more of treadmill work to cancel a single donut you don’t need to think about it any longer than that.
You exercise for health. Not to lose weight. Until you are at the margins and can consistently create an extra 100-200 calorie deficit by walking for an hour every evening or whatever.
My three gym days a week don’t do much for the scale. Those are for physical and mental health. The weight part is in the kitchen.
dghlsakjg 2 hours ago [-]
It's physics that you just need to go a certain speed to put an object in orbit.
That doesn't make it an easy thing to do.
Fat people are aware of diet and exercise. They aren't stupid.
Until you have been chronically obese, or helped someone that is chronically obese, you don't understand that it is a deeply rooted subconscious issue, not a physics issue.
Fat people don't want to be fat, anymore than depressed people want to be sad. But something in their minds or bodies makes it non-optional. Pharmaceutical interventions change that thing.
When people - in their millions - say that this is the only effective thing, you could, I dunno, believe them. Or at least believe the pharmacological/medical science, which is, to circle back, all just physics.
SpaceNugget 6 hours ago [-]
They said exercise doesn't help them with reducing the feeling of hunger. I don't know why they thought it would, because generally if you do a lot of exercise you get more hungry not less hungry, but regardless, you are responding to something that wasn't said.
crooked-v 6 hours ago [-]
Exercise will burn calories, yes. But my life doesn't fit the several hours of exercise a day, every day, forever, that would be needed as an already-small person to burn the 1000+ excess calories a day my body is constantly hungry for.
habinero 7 hours ago [-]
Why? They both get you to the same place, and one is vastly more likely to work. I don't get the weird moralizing around this.
9x39 6 hours ago [-]
If they were a normal weight they would not have been prescribed the drug. The underlying issue is they're overweight because they eat too much. Anything more is speculation.
There is usually no free lunch when it comes to pharma, and extrapolating long term or lifetime dependence as being equivalent to short term interventions is an unsupported leap.
MPSimmons 4 hours ago [-]
Oh hi, I'm a heart attack survivor who had GLP-1 prescribed by my cardiologist for its heart-protecting benefits. I told my cardiologist that I wasn't losing weight as fast as I thought I would, and he said, quote, "I don't care about you losing weight. That's not why I prescribed you this."
So I'm not sure your first sentence is universally accurate.
Aaargh20318 6 hours ago [-]
That’s the problem with these new weight loss drugs. Ultimately they work by reducing food intake.
For many people food is one of the few things in life that gives them some form of joy. I won’t ever take any drug that will take that away from me. Life is depressing enough as is.
What we need is a weight loss drug that lets you eat unlimited amounts of food, preferably even suppressing the feeling of fullness, without gaining weight.
SubiculumCode 5 hours ago [-]
Have you taken this drug? Because they don't reduce my enjoyment of food. Quite the opposite; I enjoy it more...its just that I get full feeling much quicker, and am less likely to go graze in the kitchen. But enjoy? No, I enjoy my food quite a bit.
MPSimmons 4 hours ago [-]
It doesn't take away joy. It does cause me to be slapped in the face with the "full" feeling while I am in the middle of eating, which is like 15 minutes earlier than I used to get it. I don't overeat anymore because I would be literally miserable if I did. It would be like force-feeding myself. But before I get that full feeling, food is excellent.
JumpCrisscross 6 hours ago [-]
> that will take that away from me
They don’t stop eating, just overeating. Getting joy from food is different from self medicating with overconsumption. (For the record, I love food. I also don’t have an issue maintaining a healthy weight and physique.)
cflewis 5 hours ago [-]
This is it.
I am on GLP-1 (Zepbound). I have done Weight Watchers multiple times. I'd lose the weight for a little bit, then it would come back. The reason was _I was hungry all the time_. It's not sustainable. As someone else in WW told me: "The easy bit is losing the weight. The hard part is continuing to eat that way your whole life."
It's simply a faulty hunger sensor in my body. It was not what I was eating, simply how much.
GLP-1s fix the sensor. It's really simple. Nothing else to it.
I still enjoy food (although my palette has turned away from anything greasy, which is for the better anyway), but I can finally understand why someone would eat half a plate of something and say "I'm good" and actually mean it rather than trying to diet/starve themselves.
JumpCrisscross 3 hours ago [-]
My friends who have been on it can genuinely enjoy food more now. There is no guilt. The portions make restaurant budgets more manageable. And they’re trying more of the menu. They liked food before. I think they can genuinely love it now, and that’s really great to experience with them, even aside from the massive lifestyle benefits losing weight brings.
cflewis 3 hours ago [-]
Yes!
I was able to drink an Italian soda this week and not feel like "oh God I'm drinking my calories I'm going to be punished for this on the scales later".
SubiculumCode 5 hours ago [-]
So many misconceptions in these threads; your take is spot on and accurate.
wincy 2 hours ago [-]
I’m on the max dosage of Zepbound and ate an entire six course meal at a Michelin star restaurant last year. It was an incredible experience. I just don’t eat an entire frozen pizza by myself, or box of zebra cakes where I’d then wake up with horrifying heartburn at three in the morning anymore. My life is so much better and my relationship with food is still totally fine. Sure I’ll have a treat sometime, but I’m not finding myself hungry at 11pm driving to the store to buy a box of them because I feel like I’m starving. I was well on the path to becoming diabetic and it felt like something I could barely control. When I’d try to diet I’d wake up shaking from night time blood sugar drops. All that hell is gone now.
toast0 2 hours ago [-]
Maybe there's something that you can take to simulate IBS...
I'm pretty sure when food goes right through me that I'm not getting any of those calories. Otoh, I have some idea of what types of foods (and how much) will trigger and the foreknowledge of that certainly reduces the joy of eating some foods I otherwise enjoy.
I still have trouble with calorie balance, but although I enjoy many kinds of ice cream, I have no problem going into an ice cream shop with friends and not ordering anything, even if I'm hungry. A 'single' scoop is way beyond my limit, and if I order a scoop, I won't order a scoop, take two bites and toss the rest, I'll eat the whole thing, so it's not worth it.
When I was doing bike commuting with real hills, I could eat anything, but now I work from home and can't convince myself to put that much time in the saddle just to eat whatever.
dotcoma 2 hours ago [-]
> For many people food is one of the few things in life that gives them some form of joy.
This is the problem to be addressed, not hoping for a miracle drug that will let you chuck down 5,000 calories a day and be healthy, imho.
phil21 5 hours ago [-]
I dunno. It’s not universal, but I have a newfound joy when it comes to food after being on a GLP-1 and losing about 100lbs.
Sure, I don’t get the instant giant dopamine spikes from binge eating $30 worth of Taco Bell or a couple large pizzas. Once in a while I do miss that, but I can still do it now that I’m a few years into the weight staying off. It’s just not worth how shit I feel the next couple days afterward.
But healthy Whole Foods? What was once kind of meh for me is now something I look forward to and explore. Both going out to foodie type spots, and cooking at home. Both gourmet and basic. Just tasting the nuances and everything in some well prepared veggies or whatnot is great and not something I used to appreciate.
I also don’t constantly feel like crap with stomach issues either. I suppose there is less “addictive” type vice enjoyment in my life in some way, but the tradeoff has been life changing. I certainly still get plenty of joy from many of my meals when I feel the need!
wincy 2 hours ago [-]
You and I are kindred souls here buddy, I haven’t had heartburn in months and it used to be an almost daily occurrence. When it does occur it’s fixed by one Tums. I’ve lost 120 pounds taking Zepbound. My life used to be Waking up and downing half a bottle of Pepto because my stomach was an acid volcano. Doctors telling me that it’s just the way my life is now, and to take PPIs. Eating a pizza in one sitting. Feeling the urge at 11pm to go get fast food after eating dinner because I was so hungry. Now if I get Taco Bell it’s like $8 and it still tastes good, but I tucked into cauliflower and Caesar dressing as a snack today instead.
Totally transformative.
thereisnospork 6 hours ago [-]
Nonsense, one not just as easily say they are overweight because they aren't taking enough GLP-1 agonists. A patient with scurvy is proscribed vitamin C - they might even need to take it for the rest of their lives to stay healthy.
Woe is them I guess for their chemical dependence.
buck746 5 hours ago [-]
One could even argue food is a lifetime chemical dependance. An assortment of chemicals really with the amino acids, lipids and sugars involved. People who are against these medications typically draw arbitrary lines for what treatments are "acceptable".
Until starting tirzepitide I always thought about food, now I don't. Had depressive issues since I was a teenager as well. I took Wellbutrin for 20 years and had an interruption in the last six weeks due to an insurance issue. Payed for the tirzepetide out of pocket, take that once a week, my depression is manageable without the Wellbutrin for the first time in my life. I'm still going thru depression, but that's due to my husbands death in early March. If I wasn't taking my weekly shot I would easily be morbidly obese and probably suicidal. The cost isn't an issue either, I would spend more on food that I'm not buying or eating each month than it costs to buy the medication.
Just because something might not be interesting to someone doesn't mean it has no value. I have no interest in sports, but that doesn't mean they shouldn't exist. I could argue they shouldn't be as prominent in society but that's a different argument.
If you have struggled with your weight, depression, have early warning signs of cardiac problems and a range of other conditions it can be worth considering semaglutide or terzepitide. As long as you stick to the lowest dose that's effective the side effects are minimal to non existent. Categorically dismissing these drugs is as silly as refusing pain meds because "god designed us to experience pain".
9x39 6 hours ago [-]
I think you dislike the personal responsibility angle, which is fine but separate from caloric intake being the source of obesity. The fat is stored energy from food, it would violate conservation of energy otherwise.
There's metabolism, food density, food availability, psychology, culture, economics, etc in play, but it's important not to lie to ourselves that the proximal cause of obesity isn't from over consumption.
JumpCrisscross 6 hours ago [-]
> dislike the personal responsibility angle
I dislike the rejection of evidence. These drugs solve a problem. Preaching personal responsibility does not. In that way it almost reminds me of drug prohibition and abstinence-only rhetoric.
9x39 5 hours ago [-]
The evidence of where their fat stores came from?
JumpCrisscross 5 hours ago [-]
> evidence of where their fat stores came from?
Yes. Specifically, how basal metabolism is not a consciously-controlled rate that modifies itself against diet and exercise to the point that in some people with serious metabolic syndrome it may be impossible for them to lose weight through diet and exercise without suffering nutritional shortfalls.
Also, the clinical evidence around what works for people losing weight and getting healthier and what doesn’t. Like, I get we have a powerful fast-food and sugary-drinks lobby in America, but wow is it wild seeing people get uppity about third parties’ private healthcare decisions like this.
faangguyindia 4 hours ago [-]
>Yes. Specifically, how basal metabolism is not a consciously-controlled rate that modifies itself against diet and exercise to the point that in some people with serious metabolic syndrome it may be impossible for them to lose weight through diet and exercise without suffering nutritional shortfalls.
The average person does not understand how weight loss works; many people do not know the concept of maintenance calories, and don't know how calorie surplus or deficit works.
Simply putting them on drugs for life isn't a solution. The average person does not have metabolic syndrome, yet the average person is increasingly becoming obese or perhaps already is obese in many countries.
crooked-v 4 hours ago [-]
> Simply putting them on drugs for life isn't a solution.
Plenty of people are on drugs for life for a variety of things that have less health impact than being overweight.
s1artibartfast 3 hours ago [-]
Third party private healthcare decisions are almost non-existant in the US due to the payment systems. People are on the hook for the decisions of others either through their premium, taxes, or both. Of course, this is non-central and rarely the concern people present.
That said, 2026 US GLP-1 healthcare sales projections run between 60 and 100 billion [1]. it will be interesting to see if these miricle drugs can really provide that much benefit/offset that much cost.
> Third party private healthcare decisions are almost non-existant in the US due to the payment systems
The payment part is almost entirely pushing against GLP-1 agonists. Nobody has a long-term financial stake in patient costs to care that lifetime costs will likely be lower; insurers are just looking at the next couple years against expected churn. Another cost of tying health insurance to employment.
phil21 5 hours ago [-]
Who is lying? I was fat because I ate too much.
Why I ate too much is uninteresting to me. I also don’t have some moral hang up over it. Give me that easy button all day long so I can focus on shit in my life that actually matters.
If it makes someone feel better about themselves to believe in woo-woo science that violates the laws of physics and ascribe magical properties to GLPs, why do you care?
faangguyindia 4 hours ago [-]
>If it makes someone feel better about themselves to believe in woo-woo science that violates the laws of physics and ascribe magical properties to GLPs, why do you care?
Why we should not care about putting people on drug who do can benefit from making lifestyle changes, being less sedentary and leaning about maintenance calories and how calorie surplus and deficit works?
if there is no resistance, simply prescribing GLPs to average person may become a new normal.
toast0 2 hours ago [-]
We don't seem to care much about giving people access to caffeine, allergy pills, corrective lenses, and in many places alcohol and marijuana.
Why is it a problem if there's wider access to these drugs? So far, afaik, there's been no long term major adverse effects, and especially I've seen no reports of adverse effects that extend beyond use of the drug (as has been the case with previously popular weight loss drugs that could injure people's hearts).
We're 5 years since fda approval specifically for weight loss and 9 years since fda approval for type 2 diabetes. That's a pretty good amount of time to find serious problems, although certainly many withdrawn drugs were on the market for longer, ex wikipedia says Ranitidine was the biggest selling prescription drug in 1987, but was found to be problematic in 2019 (apparently a new formulation is available as of late 2025!)
Sure, there are other ways to work on weight, just like there are other ways to work on allergies and exercises some people say are effective for vision problems. But we don't force people to give up pets or move somewhere that has fewer triggering allergens, we let them take allergy pills; we let people use eyeglasses or contact lenses or have their eyeballs adjusted so they can see; etc. There's a tool that's effective for many people, why not use it?
phil21 2 hours ago [-]
> being less sedentary and leaning about maintenance calories and how calorie surplus and deficit works?
Because it's useless advice that doesn't work in practice. As witnessed by decades of failure, with the only thing turning the tide on the obesity epidemic on a population scale being GLP-1 drugs.
> if there is no resistance, simply prescribing GLPs to average person may become a new normal.
Probably not ideal, but until Western society decides to change from the ground up it's better than the alternative which showed literally nothing but failure. One is something that works, the other is something that will take multiple generations to correct.
faangguyindia 1 hours ago [-]
>Because it's useless advice that doesn't work in practice. As witnessed by decades of failure, with the only thing turning the tide on the obesity epidemic on a population scale being GLP-1 drugs.
I think you are looking at research on obese people but applying it to average people who are simply overweight.
epihelix 1 hours ago [-]
If your biology is working against you, why not fix your biology?
I'm not someone who needs to take GLP-1 receptor agonists, but if I had any issues with weight then I'd have no issue taking them life-long. The long-term health benefits are already strong enough to make it a no-brainer. If you are overweight and a GLP-1 drug helps you lose that weight, you will very likely live a longer, healthier and happier life by taking the drug.
All that said -- this article was discussing a new paper in Cell Host & Microbe (high-impact Cell Press stable journal), https://www.cell.com/cell-host-microbe/fulltext/S1931-3128(2... . And the point of that paper is that, at least in mice, the anti-depressive effect of GLP-1 receptor agonists was related to a change in gut microbiota, and not to activation of the GPL-1 receptor. It's work in mice only, so whether or not this holds in humans is unclear, but the researchers showed this worked in mice lacking the GLP-1 receptor and via fecal microbiota transplantation of bacteria from the guts of mice taking GLP-1s.
So, if all you cared about were the mental health benefits of taking GLP-1s, then potentially you could gain these by simply changing your gut flora, without taking a GLP-1 drug at all. That might sit much better with you, by the sounds of it.
flextheruler 7 hours ago [-]
Unfortunately for a lot of people with weight issues it stems from becoming overweight during puberty which is uniquely bad. Your body's appetite signals are permanently impaired if you become overweight during puberty because during this window your fat cells don't just increase in size, but also in number and this increased quantity does not go away once created. Fat cell shrink as weight is loss, but they are not destroyed and they are responsible for appetite signaling. It's one of the reasons that childhood obesity is actually leagues worse than it first appears and I think should be considered child abuse in extreme circumstances.
apt-apt-apt-apt 2 hours ago [-]
What you said isn't unique to puberty, it's the same with being overweight in adulthood (AIUI).
mullingitover 5 minutes ago [-]
Diet programs as a weight loss strategy are utter failures, and it’s malpractice to push them as a treatment. Yet there are still people pushing them as something that’s perfect, if only you didn’t screw them up.
When a treatment can’t fail and can only be failed, it’s big red flag for me.
SubiculumCode 6 hours ago [-]
And this morning, I cut another hole in my belt. Turns out, losing weight and being thin was never about willpower or laziness in the face of absolute food abundance. It was mostly about whether a person was born lucky enough to have a moderate appetite, or was born burdened by exaggerated appetite.
The underlying issue is physiological food cravings, not some personal failing or lack of willpower, and GLP-1 absolutely addresses those "underlying issues". That it isn't some one and done pill is hardly a realistic expectation as that would require probably genetic and epigenetic reprogramming.
nihonde 6 hours ago [-]
The idea that appetites are assigned at birth is a bold claim. Is there evidence to support it?
9x39 5 hours ago [-]
Well, not assigned by the hospital or your parents, but being a DNA-based lifeform a genetic baseline is a safe assumption. Experiences vary after that:
I think there is much stronger evidence that it is metabolic damage from overconsumption in an earlier stage in life.
Not unlike if you shatter your legs, your recovery may be long and incomplete.
SubiculumCode 5 hours ago [-]
Genetics and epigenetic factors.
PaulHoule 3 hours ago [-]
It's not like anything else in terms of drugs, surgery, or lifestyle changes has been proven safe and effective. A person who is dependent on opiates or caffeine or cannabis can possibly live without those substances, you can't go "cold turkey" from food.
Funny I just shot myself with a Zepbound autoinjector for the first time! My primary care doc told me he thought I was a good candidate a year ago but that he had trouble getting insurance to pay for it, it took me a year to get in with a specialist, insurance approved it right away, and now I am supposed to keep a food an exercise log.
I am well in the obese BMI range but I've been active my whole life (e.g. I can't see how people can get through the day without going to the gym or something) so I have a high lean mass and don't look that fat with my clothes on. I've struggled for years with various conditions associated with "metabolic syndrome" and I'm on numerous maintenance medications already and may be able to delete some of them.
I am currently around 250 lbs which has been my usual for the past 20 years or so. Had some luck with Zone, ketogentic and bean plan diets but couldn't stay on any of them indefinitely. Got my weight down to about 208 lb in six months when I quit taking antidepressants at my doctor's suggestion (never went back), had something like a manic episode where I manifested an "evil twin" who was vain highly motivated [1] and worked out like... a maniac and I also discovered I had TMJ dysfunction and took load off my jaw by throwing comically random food (cashews, seaweed, celery, potatoes, carrots, pork, ...) into a pot and grinding it with an immersion blended. Not sustainable, not least because my evil twin's antics got me kicked out of the gym.
[1] as-a-fox one axiom is that "I never push on a string" and have a hierarchy of goals, non-goal goals and non-goals; my non-goal goals are his OKRs
SOLAR_FIELDS 4 hours ago [-]
Statins are a well understood mechanism of action for controlling cholesterol. We generally understand that people with cholesterol problems leverage statin therapy to address those, and there is a well audited corpus of placebo controlled double blind trials that demonstrate the efficacy of the solution for statin therapy. If you discontinue the statins, you lose the benefit to some extent. How is this situation fundamentally different?
dmayle 3 hours ago [-]
The issue isn't food addiction, it's a broken hunger response (broken by Howard Moskowitz intentionally in the name of profits)...
You have to change your food regimen completely (higher fiber, more protein, less sugar, less carbs, less fat), and that's tough to do when you're surrounded by options that aren't...
I think the real problem is that the symptom we're trying to treat is "overweight", and it's actually a two-stage problem... Fix the hunger response... and only then work on fixing the weight... Fixinig the latter without fixing the former means you'll always gain the weight back, fixing the former doesn't guarantee you lose weight (and is only temporary, if you're using drugs for it)... You have to go after both problems.
basch 3 hours ago [-]
We shouldn’t ignore grocery stores and marketing.
Aisles and aisles of sugar drinks and colorful sugar packaging.
The way society leaves it up to people to make their own decisions creates the problem at scale.
Society essentially has to take weekly injections to avoid the temptation of coca cola.
mynameisash 2 hours ago [-]
What breaks the hunger response, and how does one fix it?
Maybe it's well-known, but I read the starvation response Wikipedia page[0] and didn't grok it.
Buy unprocessed food and prepare it yourself. Don't add sugar. Eating processed food and even most restaurant food is eating food that's designed to make you want more, not satiate you.
mynameisash 2 hours ago [-]
I guess I should have asked about the technical mechanism of what causes and what actually 'breaks', and then what the technical remedy is.
vidarh 7 hours ago [-]
Given that we know that diets and changing habits doesn't have lasting effects, what doesn't sit well with me is to risk my health to avoid taking a drug that helps.
brazukadev 7 hours ago [-]
changing habits do have lasting effects, I'm not part of this "we" that doesn't know that.
topgrain2 6 hours ago [-]
People talk past each other on this because for an individual it technically can work, and sometimes does, but on a population level, as extensively studied by people whose job it is to study that, it definitely does not work. Even with tons of regular attention from professionals and a cohort selected to have above-average motivation, it’s surprisingly poorly-performing (and that’s a crazy expensive level of intervention)
Think about how we describe contraceptives, medically speaking: a failure rate is tracked and promoted that’s the in the wild rate of failure, not the ideal-use rate of failure (which can be effectively zero!). The diet and exercise equivalent of a contraceptive couldn’t be sold, because its failure rate would be way higher than its success rate.
So “we” (people who’ve paid attention to the science on it) know it doesn’t work (on a population level), like for-sure definitely does not work, but a person reads this assertion of fact and goes “but wait it worked for me, this person must be dumb or something” but that’s not it. It’s two different perspectives on what it means for it to “work”.
yakz 6 hours ago [-]
I think it'd be more accurate to say that informing people that they should change their behavior doesn't work. A person changing their behavior can escape obesity. The reality is that most people won't be able to change their behavior without some other kind of assistance.
topgrain2 5 hours ago [-]
Even with extensive assistance (which is way too expensive to widely deploy) outcomes are weak.
Last I checked, researchers in the specific area of high-touch weight interventions were excited that they finally had a tool that might more-than-barely work… in glp-1 agonists.
yakz 4 hours ago [-]
I didn’t mean to suggest that GLP-1s don’t count as assistance.
Informing people that they can avoid pregnancy and STDs if they’d just stop fucking each other doesn’t work at scale either.
vidarh 6 hours ago [-]
If you succeed at changing your habit, it works.
However, all the evidence is that the vast majority of people fail at changing their habits in ways that produce lasting weight loss, so it does not generally work as advice for reducing your weight.
So you're technically right, but it is irrelevant, because we don't know how to actually get people to change habits with any meaningful rate of success.
At this point it is downright harmful and wildly unethical to recommend it when we now have a far more successful option.
JumpCrisscross 6 hours ago [-]
> almost all subjects regained the weight and reversed gains within 2 years
Source? I thought it was 2/3rds of the weight regained, which is still a substantial long-term loss.
mukbangpervert 3 hours ago [-]
What facts do you have that make you certain that the underlying issue is "food addiction" rather than, say, a difference in body chemistry that changes perceived hunger levels?
rfv6723 3 hours ago [-]
The only underlying issue is an evolutionary mismatch: human evolution is too slow to keep pace with the modern abundance of food.
What we now call food addiction is exactly what kept our ancestors alive during famines.
LaurensBER 7 hours ago [-]
I've gained and lost 10kg twice in my life. Maintaining the weight loss isn't that hard once you've a rhythm dialed in.
In my case I just weight myself daily, track the weight and scale my food consumption with the current trend. If I'm gaining weight I'll skip a meal.
It takes a while to figure out what works for you but I can tell you that making small lifestyle changes to maintain your weight is fairly easy compared to figuring out how to lose 10 kg.
coffeemug 6 hours ago [-]
When I was lifting weights I went from 170lbs to 210, and back to 170. Doing that isn’t technically hard, and maintaining is even easier. But I had to think about it _all_ the time. Maybe it’s because I’m older now, but I just don’t want to spend that much effort thinking about food.
faangguyindia 3 hours ago [-]
lifting weight isn't efficient for weight loss.
Without calorie deficit, you'll not lose much weight by lifting alone.
SoftTalker 2 hours ago [-]
You'll probably gain weight in fact. Muscle is heavier than fat.
kolinko 7 hours ago [-]
Just because it wasn’t hard for you doesn’t mean it isn’t hard for the others. Grom what you said it seems you just had some bad habits you had to fix and that’s it.
3stacks 7 hours ago [-]
It’s the food equivalent of declaring bankruptcy. If you don’t fix the behaviours you’ll just end up in debt again.
kolinko 7 hours ago [-]
This assumes underlying behaviours are core reason. Research (tein, adoption) suggests otherwise
yakz 6 hours ago [-]
Practically speaking, any person could starve themself (short of death) and lose weight. In almost all cases there is no magic to storing more energy than you need.
shadowpho 4 hours ago [-]
Practically speaking any person cannot maintain that for significant length of time.
Dieting has like a 99% fail rate by year 2.
It’s hard to maintain that for many people — your body will keep you in starvation mode, keep you hungry and hang on to every calorie received.
PeterHolzwarth 7 hours ago [-]
A couple years of reduced weight, and all the benefits that entails, doesn't sound bad.
crooked-v 7 hours ago [-]
Plenty of people have lifelong drug use of, say, caffeine, or aspirin as a blood thinner, or various antihistamines. Why is this somehow worse? Particularly keeping in mind that it's very easy to make, so once the patents expire, it's going to be dirt cheap as generics everywhere.
joshuamcginnis 7 hours ago [-]
I'm just sharing my personal preference and not trying to tell people how to live their lives. I don't like personally like the idea that I'll only be healthy if I take this drug for the rest of my life when I could (again - speaking for me), be more disciplined about the food I put into my body.
m1keil 6 hours ago [-]
Why this has to be all or nothing?
You can use the drug to loose weight while trying to understand the underlying problem.
3 hours ago [-]
kolinko 7 hours ago [-]
“be more disciplined” - did you read any studies about the sources of obesity? Or do you struggle with weight since childhood yourself?
6 hours ago [-]
fragmede 6 hours ago [-]
The drug stops working if you stop taking it? Shocking! Heart medication for hypertension also stops working if you don't take it. Sure there's a vast conspiracy by the pharmaceutical industry to hook us all on drugs because we can't learn to exercise, but that's hardly Ozempic's fault. Now if you were looking at brain surgery that zaps the reward center of the brain causing permanent changes so the patient was less addicted to food, but the patient kept needing to have brain surgery, then you'd have a point, but "drug stops working if you don't take it" is hardly the gotcha some make it out to be. Insulin also stops working for diabetics if they don't take it. That's kind of medication's whole deal.
Now that we know obesity can be controlled via medication, and it'll cost $foo over the lifetime of the patient, the next step is to optimize. If there is a treatment involving ultrasonic brain surgery that costs less than $foo, the expectation is for the market to find that. Ultrasonic brain surgery is in its infancy, but it's already showing utility for Alzheimer's and addiction. The real question is if the pharma companies are going to be able to keep it from going mainstream because it's less profitable for them.
gedy 7 hours ago [-]
The "underlying issues" are not all moral failings as you hint. In my case, as I've aged my appetite due blood sugar/insulin resistance/etc means I'm basically hungry all the time if I restrict calories to maintain lower body weight. Yes - even if I exercise frequently. Yes - even with healthy food and snacks. My wife tells me my stomach is growling at night.
I will slowly gain about 10-15lbs a year due to excess calories if I try to maintain weight at < overweight BMI. GLP-1 drugs have been great to take that edge off.
anon291 7 hours ago [-]
Why? If you have too much help or whatever being produced such that your body eats too much, just take a drug. The harm of being fat is worse than anything ozempic does
aaron695 6 hours ago [-]
[dead]
hellzbellz123 7 hours ago [-]
As a habitual habit developer, Im keeping my hopes up that in 5 or 10 years, this is something that can help me and many others.
I've read experiences from people on illicit substances that claimed they helped them quit.
It would be beat if this carried over to things like caffeine/nicotine/thc/etc.
kube-system 23 minutes ago [-]
I believe it. I never heavily drank but I have very little interest in drinking on tirzepatide. The “it would be nice to have a drink or two” on a Friday evening just vanished.
buck746 5 hours ago [-]
There's anecdotal accounts of GLP meds helping with a range of addictions. Of course in science anecdotal accounts are the lowest tier of evidence, that's only top shelf in law.
declan_roberts 3 hours ago [-]
It's not just anecdotes. Eli Lilly is actively in trials with a glp-1 peptide brenipatide for treatment for certain kinds of addictions, such as alcohol, smoking and opioid addictions.
storus 7 hours ago [-]
Metabolic theories of mental illnesses and cancer are seriously understudied.
zhivota 7 hours ago [-]
Tirzepatide at 1mg/week reduced my muscle soreness. I felt less depressed but this might just have been situational because I've been plagued by bad soreness after working out for years.
Unfortunately after twelve weeks I had to stop because I felt a lot of nausea and tenderness in my upper abdomen, and was worried it might be pancreatitis developing. I'm not sure why it would happen at such a low dose but the symptoms reduced pretty quickly as it wore off.
I may go back on later with a dose spread over a longer period with the hypothesis that the drug has a longer half life in my body and what I experienced was a gradual build up. Considering I lost 15 pounds over 3 months as well, I believe this to be very plausible.
tapoxi 7 hours ago [-]
I got pancreatitis from Zepbound, but it was indirect.
Turns out rapid weight loss can cause gallstones, especially if you're genetically predisposed to them. I had one that ended up stuck in the bile duct, causing acute pancreatitis. I had to get my gallbladder removed shortly after and hundreds of stones were found.
I would consider getting an ultrasound since the stones don't just go away when you stop taking the drug.
(Gallbladder removal aside I had no lasting issues and kept the weight off.)
perilunar 41 minutes ago [-]
Wouldn't that be cholecystitis (and a cholecystectomy), not pancreatitis?
zhivota 6 hours ago [-]
Thanks for sharing, it makes sense. Even before taking Tirzepatide I have had issues my whole life with greasy / fatty stool, and now that I've had reason to research the gall bladder, it does make me wonder if perhaps I also have stones.
rossdavidh 3 hours ago [-]
Might be worth trying live yogurt in the meantime, per the article?
zhivota 3 hours ago [-]
Yep one thing I did as part of going off tirzepatide was go immediately on a high fiber and fermented foods diet. It has helped a lot actually.
It's quite hard to maintain over time is all, I have a lot of social occasions where healthy choices are not really available, and from experience I know that over time I'll slowly drift back towards an unhealthy eating pattern. The modern world is just geared that way, unfortunately.
y-curious 7 hours ago [-]
I got severely downvoted in the past for badmouthing GLP1s here. Then I did my research, got on them and I take it all back. These things are on par with statins in terms of potential societal impacts.
SubiculumCode 5 hours ago [-]
GLP1s are one of today's real, true, modern miracles. It deserves a Nobel, but not to one person, but the teams upon teams upon teams that made it possible to get here.
api 4 hours ago [-]
A central flaw in the Nobel is that it rewards one or two people for what is often the work of teams.
PeterHolzwarth 7 hours ago [-]
That's quite admirable to correct yourself in public. Good on ya.
nubg 7 hours ago [-]
Yes. I wonder if taking GLP-1 made him have higher morals as well!
SubiculumCode 5 hours ago [-]
its possible.
taurath 3 hours ago [-]
It’s so funny, because they did well for you you’re now incredibly on board for all of society.
I tried them and my health got massively worse and I couldn’t eat at all, on a sub minimum dose.
phil21 2 hours ago [-]
> These things are on par with statins in terms of potential societal impacts.
I put them just under antibiotics. In terms of quality of life years given back at a population scale.
HedonicEscal8r 6 hours ago [-]
GLP-1s are far more effective than statins.
sph 7 hours ago [-]
Very weird (or funny?) to use statins as an example of a ‘good and effective’ drug.
incognito124 6 hours ago [-]
Why do you say that? My first exposure to statins was in https://myticker.com and they seem somewhat important
9x39 6 hours ago [-]
That says more about the harmful effects of obesity than anything.
PeterHolzwarth 3 hours ago [-]
That's kind of the point.
OptionOfT 7 hours ago [-]
My insurance stopped covering, now I'm looking at $450 for Zepbound / month. Just the weight coming back is making me more depressed...
cjbgkagh 7 hours ago [-]
I get mine on the black market, 50c/mg for semaglutide, $3 per month at my current rate of usage. I’ve been on it for years, I was getting gray market at $12/mg for 3 years before RFK clamped down on that market. It’s exactly the same stuff (for me, no guarantee for others), had it tested in a lab and as the side effect profile is on point. It massively relieved my ME/CFS, back when I started there was no way I could have gotten a prescription let alone insurance to cover it.
declan_roberts 3 hours ago [-]
GRAY market is way undercounted in peptide use. Go to the gym and there's like 25% of the people there taking gray market peptides (some for weight, some for injury repair, etc)
phil21 2 hours ago [-]
That would be black market, almost assuredly if you are talking about "injury repair" peptides. Exceedingly few prescribers in the US are writing for those.
Grey market references stuff like HIMS where you are getting a real doctor to write you a prescription and a shady compounding pharmacy takes those Chinese black market peptides, compounds them, and ships them to your door.
Black market is just going direct to the source in China and getting them for yourself without a prescription.
cjbgkagh 49 minutes ago [-]
Gray market includes research peptides in that they are legal to sell for research purposes, not for the purpose of human consumption.
whatthesmack 2 hours ago [-]
I had the same issue with Zepbound (tirzepatide) 10mg/0.5ml when they wanted to push me to Wegovy (semaglutide), even though Zepbound was already working and helping. Zepbound isn't even on their formulary now.
I wrote the insurance company a detailed letter (helped by AI) containing evidence for the benefits of Zepbound over Wegovy and Zepbound over nothing, as well as documented the benefits I already experienced taking the medication. They approved coverage based on this pushback, and I just paid $25 for 3 months' supply.
Might be a potential avenue for some folks...
declan_roberts 3 hours ago [-]
Gray market peptides are excellent. You can do you own independent lab testing, buy with a group who's testing, or buy from a reputable vendor who pre-tests before sales.
Even after all that it comes down to like $50 a month at the highest dose.
faangguyindia 4 hours ago [-]
Without long term positive dietary changes most people are unlikely to keep the weight off unless you want to take this stuff for life.
declan_roberts 3 hours ago [-]
I have to exercise and go to the gym for life already?
jzkdroid2 7 hours ago [-]
You can probably use some coupons like goodrx to get it for $300 a month.
crooked-v 7 hours ago [-]
I'm curious if this post will also have the same phenomena I've seen before of people springing out of the woodwork to post moralizing comments about people shouldn't rely on drugs, about how actually GLP-1s are bad because they don't fix problems indefinitely with a single dose, about how people should fix their problems by just having more willpower, talking about 'but what about the unknown side effects?' of drugs that have been in use for twenty years already, etc.
buck746 5 hours ago [-]
Semaglutide has been used for diabetics for roughly 20 years. The FUD angle is just people rambling against something that doesn't affect them personally. Everyone knows the only things that matter are what effects "you", everything else is just fantasy. If we could rid ourselves of that mindset we could build a much better world.
nonethewiser 7 hours ago [-]
Why shouldnt it?
SubiculumCode 5 hours ago [-]
And it surely did. Like clockwork. And it is annoying.
sp527 3 hours ago [-]
A lot of people have had to accept that they've wasted a considerable amount of time and energy on something that is being heavily devalued by GLP-1's. They've also lost an important vector for status signaling. This particularly offends narcissists and the hyper-competitive.
They desperately need to restore status, and one easy option is, in effect, "oh you're still ugly on the inside."
By way of analogy, it has the same underlying motivation as the various sumptuary laws that arose in response to the mass-manufacture of silk.
> The Elizabethan Restrictions: In 1574, Queen Elizabeth I passed strict sumptuary laws to curb "unprecedented social mobility". The Crown decreed that no woman could wear silk cloaks unless her husband was at least a knight, and restricted fabrics mixed with gold or silver to Earls and above.
> Income Thresholds: In 14th-century England, if an esquire or merchant wanted to wear silk, they had to legally prove they made at least £100 a year. If they didn't meet the financial threshold, wearing the fabric was a criminal offense.
6 hours ago [-]
devcatapult 7 hours ago [-]
What about the reports of bone density loss? Any downsides to this?
pitaj 3 hours ago [-]
From what I've seen it's mostly related to just losing weight in general (less weight -> less musculoskeletal stress -> weaker bones and muscles). Weightlifting can counteract it.
phil21 2 hours ago [-]
Like all weight loss, you will lose lean muscle mass and bone density as part of it if you do not take corrective measures. And even with such measures, you will likely lose some either way for the medium term. It's very difficult to lose only fat during a long term calorie deficit.
The answer is getting into a regular schedule with resistance weight training. Obviously not all that many people will pull it off, but if you can pull it off you can stave off the worst of the side effects in many cases.
kolinko 7 hours ago [-]
What reports?
TMWNN 1 hours ago [-]
The more I hear about GLP-1 drugs, the more I think there is something to the joking suggestion of putting it in the water supply.
jbird99 7 hours ago [-]
Could be related to endorphins and BDNF, similar to the effect from fasting.
replwoacause 7 hours ago [-]
Hasn't done jack shit for my depression.
Also worth mentioning GLP1's are known to cause anhedonia. So there's that...
declan_roberts 3 hours ago [-]
I can say the things I like, I like the same or even more (higher sex drive is one noted example). I can sit and program for hours now without thinking about other things. I assume this is what people who took Ritalin felt.
I do notice it makes it harder for me to get up and do certain harder, outdoor chores.
jfaat 3 hours ago [-]
Known to who? I just did a quick search didn't see anything that like a scientist or physician said about this. Someone who describes himself as a 'biohacking educator' said it without citing sources though.
downrightmike 2 hours ago [-]
Yup, helps Gila monsters go so long without eating/doing anything
dyauspitr 7 hours ago [-]
What’s the downside to this magical drug. There has to be a downside…
ceejayoz 7 hours ago [-]
Why does there have to be a downside?
What was the downside of washing hands before surgery?
OscarCunningham 3 hours ago [-]
One argument would be that Ozempic doesn't give your body any additional resources. It just triggers your body to behave in a different way. But if the changes it causes are universally good, why didn't evolution already make your body work that way?
I suppose the counterargument would be that modern life is different from the evolutionary environment, and so it's possible for a change to be beneficial now that wasn't beneficial then. But it would still be good to understand better the mechanism of the effect of Ozempic on things like addiction.
ceejayoz 2 hours ago [-]
> But if the changes it causes are universally good, why didn't evolution already make your body work that way?
That’s not how evolution works.
crooked-v 2 hours ago [-]
> But if the changes it causes are universally good, why didn't evolution already make your body work that way?
We evolved in an environment where every bit of food took hours of effort and food preservation was impossible, so the only logical thing to do with extra food was feast and store up as much fat as possible for lean times. We're still many generations away from evolving to compensate for the discovery of fire, let alone everything that came after that.
9x39 6 hours ago [-]
Because our bodies are delicate systems of networks, and inputs in one area can have complex/unpredictable outputs elsewhere, it seems.
Typically, if something "works", there often appear to be side effects. A free lunch is rare.
> Typically, if something "works", there often appear to be side effects
Unless it’s literally a deficit. There isn’t a downside to treating vitamin C deficiency with vitamin C.
krackers 6 hours ago [-]
The fact that GLP-1 seems to have roles not just in satiety but that agonists seem to reduce other types of impulsiveness (e.g. gambling, shopping) is interesting. That's not something you'd predict as a consequence, and perhaps is downstream of some gut-brain connection.
Of course we already manipulate brain chemistry in other more direct ways with antidepressants so perhaps any unwanted second-order effects could be minor in comparison to the profile of existing antidepressants .
9x39 6 hours ago [-]
Yeah, that's a good point. I hadn't heard about impulsiveness. I had read that taste preferences changed - e.g., salty, sweet, savory, fatty:
I've been watching developments on how GLP1s seem to go beyond just hunger/insulin response, even how they may affect symptoms of polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS), which is difficult on women who have it:
Even if there are zero effects other than the advertised weight reduction, one downside is obvious from the comments here - some people will stop exercising.
While exercise has many positive effects, which I'd argue are more important than the weight loss, the latter is the primary reason many people exercise and likely to stop when given the weight loss by other means.
phil21 1 hours ago [-]
> one downside is obvious from the comments here - some people will stop exercising.
Is there any source on this? The precise opposite has happened in my experience. I was an early evangelist for these drugs, and have many dozens of people who I talk to regularly who have since taken them over the years. I cannot think of a single person who went from regular exercise to reducing or eliminating it after taking the drug. Exactly zero.
I can think of well over a dozen folks who started regular exercise for the first time in their lives after losing 50 or more pounds.
Certainly many who did not change their habits either way. But overall this matches with what the trainers in my gym report. They were initially worried GLP-1s would reduce their client base, but the exact opposite has happened for them. It's brought an entirely new demographic into play and business is booming.
> which I'd argue are more important than the weight loss,
You would be making an argument contrary to most established science on the topic. Exercise is important and quite beneficial to health. Obesity is far worse. Not many obese people working out regularly to start with though, so I don't think this point holds much water to begin with. We are not a nation full of obese gym rats.
chrisco255 2 hours ago [-]
Most people are achieving weight loss by dietary changes. It takes a massive amount of exercise to significantly alter your calorie balance. Definitely good for you either way but most people who exercise also want to be toned or muscular.
subtlejellyfish 3 hours ago [-]
We should stop telling people that exercise is a primary driver of weight loss.
That said, exercise has a direct impact on metabolic health which is pretty necessary to maintain a healthy weight.
declan_roberts 3 hours ago [-]
Some downsides:
1. They make you stop eating, which for most of human history kills you.
2. They are a life-long treatment and kind of expensive unless you go gray market.
3. Gastrointestinal issues especially when titrating up.
chrisco255 2 hours ago [-]
1. They don't make you stop altogether, they just make you feel full on less calories, which is good when you are in a calorie dense environment like modern society.
2. Not necessary here either if dietary habits are permanently altered, which can happen more easily after several months on GLPs.
3. Perhaps!
cflewis 5 hours ago [-]
Nothing in this world is free, GLP-1s have their downsides (excluding cost).
Mostly it's nausea and gastrointestinal distress side effects. These tend to cool down over time, but it'll put a ceiling on how big a dose you can tolerate. Some people can't tolerate a dose at any level.
kolinko 6 hours ago [-]
And downsides of penicilin? There are some but they are massively offset by not having alt consequences
sevenseacat 15 minutes ago [-]
As someone with a severe allergy, lots of downsides to me!
culi 3 hours ago [-]
There are massive downsides to any antibiotic. A single dose of a broad-spectrum antibiotic can permanently alter a kid's gut microbiome and make them more likely to develop a variety of mental health issues like depression
Not by themselves - its the result of weight loss that can make your skin sag a bit.
Aaargh20318 6 hours ago [-]
The downside is that they make you eat less thereby taking away one of the few things that make life worth living.
SubiculumCode 5 hours ago [-]
That is the silliest take ever. I am on GLP-1s, and I still enjoy my food..maybe more than ever before.
jona-f 46 minutes ago [-]
The "gut-brain axis" is mostly bullshit invented to cope with the fact that doctors have sent patients to shrinks for decades with real sicknesses. Everybody knows you feel bad when your digestive is out of balance. It's the same english word for "I'm sick" and "I feel sick" since forever. No magical newly found "gut-brain axis" needed.
Eating junk food, especially sweetened food is a drug. You can do a withdrawal and get the reduction of food noise reported with semaglutide without getting dependent on another drug with so far unknown long-term effects.
vladmk 8 hours ago [-]
Mice are not people, but interesting link
randycupertino 8 hours ago [-]
I'm on GLP-1 and it's completely stopped my urge to online shop. I used to browse/shop for fun and out of habit or when I was stressed out or wanted a treat etc. Entirely resolved! I've also lost 40lbs on it.
meetingthrower 7 hours ago [-]
To the others on this reply, I take 1/4 dose of the "clinical dose" and it has been life changing. I've lost 30 lbs. I've done that in the past, but for me that was harder than ranger school in the army.
I LOVE food. Eating out and family dinner were always important to me. I was very worried that I would lose my pleasure in this.
I haven't.
But now I can just eat 1/2 slice of pie. Or 1 scoop of ice cream, etc etc. I don't have the crazy urge to EAT IT ALL.
Also I loved drinking. I actually still love drinking. But I get done at 2.5 drinks. And once a week.
It adds up. Makes you wonder what free will is.Variance in GLPs are naturally occuring. I find the people who say "I forgot to eat" relatable now. Our bodies were not designed for abundance. At least not mine.
replwoacause 7 hours ago [-]
I've been on Mounjaro for a couple of years. Unfortunately this effect seems to plateau somewhat and you have to bump your dose. I've changed doses 3 times now, so I'm pretty familiar with how long each increase lasts. It still provides some appetite control, but those initial gains, or the honeymoon phase, definitely tapers. Still, I'm better off being on it versus not and I think it allows me to maintain a healthy weight easier. Plus reap all the other benefits we're learning more about.
declan_roberts 3 hours ago [-]
Did it still plateau on the highest dose?
replwoacause 3 hours ago [-]
I’m at 7.5mg now so can’t speak to any doses higher than that. But I’m assuming each step up would reintroduce more appetite control and reduce food noise and then level back off a bit. Not saying the effects go to zero, just that they start off more pronounced.
SubiculumCode 5 hours ago [-]
Exactly my experience.
sandcat_ 7 hours ago [-]
I'm curious, has it affected pleasure at all in other areas of life? Are things you used to enjoy still as enjoyable? Is it more the "addictiveness" of things that has dropped, as opposed to how enjoyable they are?
(Never tried them myself, but very intrigued by them.)
vidarh 7 hours ago [-]
I went on them because I started boomeranging back after a long and very successful diet. It was pretty much the plan - I wanted to get as far as I could "naturally" and then use GLP-1's to bring me the rest of the way and keep me there, but I was surprised at just how rapidly I started adding weight again.
It stopped me cold and has gotten me almost back down at the lowest I was at after my diet so far and I keep losing at a slower pace but basically without effort.
In terms of pleasure, I'd say mostly no with some caveats. I have fewer snacks, and drink less coke, and I enjoyed both. I don't find chocolate or baked goods as enticing any more, but it's not stopped me from enjoying them on occasion.
It's more that it's stopped me from wanting them as often. I find it easier to tell myself not to grab a snack when I'm already full in particular. Before I might overeat to the point of discomfort.
So when I now actively choose to enjoy those things, I'm more likely to actually enjoy the whole experience.
I'd say the exception is probably coke, which I do find less enjoyable.
SubiculumCode 5 hours ago [-]
First, I eat...but seem to get full fast. Its like before, my body would really delay sending me the "you're full now" signal while eating, but now it starts to come half way through my plate. But did I enjoy the food? Hell yeah. It might even taste better. And because I get full quicker, I eat slower so I can enjoy it more.
Outside of eating, I drink less, but do have occasional beers. I enjoy them.
And my relationships are not less fulfilling, and I don't find my life and work less interesting. All in all, the only thing I don't like is the occasional "egg" burps I get from it.
randycupertino 6 hours ago [-]
I definitely used to use food as a source of joy, so I had try to and find things to replace that. I got really into getting my nails done, nail art and perfume/fragrances to help fill the joy gap. Also exercise and audiobooks.
I had to conscientiously try and find new "fun" things in my life to replace food, which used to be my treat/highlight of my life lol.
I notice a little less joy, pizza used to make me soooo happy lol. Now even if I have pizza- which I still totally can, I just accommodate for it, but it's just like... okay, whatever here's some pizza, cool. I can have 1 or 2 slices and feel fine and not go hog on the entire thing and have it be this amazing fantastic binge.
habinero 6 hours ago [-]
It's more like...you just don't want them? It's kind of wild. The first week I took them, I discovered there was a loop in my brain that was constantly thinking about food, and I never realized until it got switched off.
That's the best way I can describe it. I could basically always eat before and now I just...don't feel like it lol.
I will say, they are rough when you first start out on them. During the 1st 6-8 weeks I had several instances of maaaaaybe five seconds of warning between feeling nauseated and vomiting.
It settles down after a couple months and it was never bad enough to be a dealbreaker, but it's a fun time.
rubicon33 7 hours ago [-]
Do you honestly believe in the so called “free lunch”? I mean there are MANY substances you can presently take that make you feel way better, but always come with a cost or a downside. Why should we believe GLP-1 class drugs are any different?
randycupertino 6 hours ago [-]
It definitely has downsides- it's $$, you have to take a shot every single week, I need to make sure to eat enough fiber now or I will not be regular. But that's a positive lifestyle change anyways- essentially am diligent now to ensure I get fiber every single day!
For me the pros outweigh the cons, I don't obsess over food constantly, my belt size went down and my watch band closed a few notches and even my dental hygienist mentioned last week my face was thinner. Overall it's a huge win.
I pay out of pocket $450 a month for it and it's worth it. The money I saw from no more online shopping habit and no more doordashing or drinking probably breaks even.
tsol 5 hours ago [-]
Antibiotics are pretty much a free lunch but they exist. Completely stops deadly disease without causing any long term damage. They exist it's just rare
rubicon33 5 hours ago [-]
Interesting point… and I suppose for the most part, I agree. A rare case of a mostly free lunch.
bawolff 7 hours ago [-]
All drugs have side effects and downsides. The question should be if the benefits outweigh the costs, not if the drug is pure magic. Obviously its not pure magic, nothing is, but its still a useful drug.
kolinko 6 hours ago [-]
The point of modern mefivine is that we have drugs that have benefits that outweigh risks and downsides.
crooked-v 7 hours ago [-]
We already know the downsides (https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5397288/). The family of drugs has been in use since 2005 for controlling glucose with diabetes. The only new thing is the mass-market use when it turned out to also reduce the physio-mental effects of cravings (food but also apparently other things) in general.
api 4 hours ago [-]
Why is this a hard rule?
I know people who have had miraculous benefits from psych meds. No downside. Using them for years. Or if there is a downside it’s massively outweighed by the upside.
cyberax 6 hours ago [-]
> Do you honestly believe in the so called “free lunch”?
Yes. Why not? A body is a complex biomechanical system, that can be influenced by certain chemicals. Some of them can solve the underlying problem.
Why everything has to be a morality play?
> Why should we believe GLP-1 class drugs are any different?
Why are they any different from, say, antiretroviral drugs? Or from something like statins?
I started the GLP-1 drugs with liraglutide, a predecessor of Ozempic. It works similarly but its half-life is just several hours, so you had to get a daily injection. It has been in use for two decades by now with great results.
metalman 7 hours ago [-]
so, the whole mouse thing is a scam, and now they are openly testing on us, first, and publishing in psychology today to see if we notice.fiendish.
The best way I can describe it: my body and mind are no longer is in starvation mode. I plan, do, act and sleep well.
What does it mean? If a drug reduces your desire to eat food, wouldn't it also decrease your desire to eat food beneficial for your body?
I think the effect most people want is to stop craving junk food but still eat nutritious food required for muscle growth and health.
Also the late night cravings are more specific: instead of vague "need to eat something", it's "I'd love a tomato" or "mmm yogurt" or "actually a load of carbs would hit the spot".
But in my experience, decreased cravings make it easier to choose food rationally. The food noise that causes people to overeat usually doesn’t cause them to overeat healthy foods anyway.
I've heard it widely described as reducing mental noise around food.
Eating healthy food alone isn't solution, you need to make your life active as well.
I also find drinking alcohol much less pleasant. I still drink sometimes but after a few beers or glasses of wine it starts to become very unappealing and I stop.
I do bodybuilding and I’m still getting my 150g of protein in.
I’m barely overweight and I’m losing weight very slowly but I’ve decided I’m likely to stay on GLP’s long term, if not forever, just because the lifestyle changes have been so incredibly good.
Perhaps this helps dispel the myth that GLP drugs inherently = relentless starvation.
Long before LLMs, there was a different but similarly misguided hype around making food more convenient. Making money off ignorance is not "innovation", but we live in a world convinced by arrogant and pretentious fearmongering liars.
As always, just do it yourself. It's not that hard after all.
Do you know what nutrients are? Deficiencies are the cause of the noise. This is an evolutionary feature, not a bug. Your body is expecting you to keep eating alternatives until you eventually stumble onto the foods that make you feel better and then keep eating those. In severe cases you might need more patience with the right foods, but if you already feel like crap and you know you just started barely eating healthier (thanks to living in the future), why stop now?
This search process has been somewhat disrupted by our modern environment, but it's not like the good food isn't right there. On the other hand, you don't need trial and error anymore. There's plenty of information available. You can even go see a doctor and get a blood test to confirm both your deficiencies and everything else I just said.
Does that answer your question?
Addiction-like behaviors related to food transcend not only human culture but also even other species.
Night and day, stopped always being hungry... I've tried Noom before (eating highly filling, low calorie foods, but filling, not satiating), but that only worked while I was tracking (and always forcing myself to keep it up)...
Losing weight required work on top of that, but the protein just made my hunger response start working properly again.
Calorie counting diets had no restrictions on what they ate, as long as the participants didn't exceed the calorie target.
Low carb (Atkins) had no calorie restriction but had to restrict carbs.
High protein also didn't have calorie restriction but participants had to ensure at least 20% of the calories in meals were proteins.
They found that while all helped people lose weight, only the high-protein made it stick reliably.
I used that as basis for my own weight loss and it worked very well for me. As you said it made me full in a different way. YMMV.
People talk a lot about meat, but not enough about dairy. My prayers were answered at the altars of feta, greek yogurt, half and half, butter, cottage cheese, etc. They made salads not suck. They opened up a ton of lower carb dessert options. My gut health improved. All of my health improved.
I no longer treat these humble foods as optional extras. They perfectly fill the gap in my daily protein needs. They were never unwelcome, just forgotten.
So where does the energy burn in a sedentary population come from vs highly active Hadza tribe members?
Pontzer’s research showed that while the Hadza were highly active, they actually demonstrated lower baselines of certain markers of metabolic and physiological stress over time compared to Western populations.
Don't quote me on this; I am paraphrasing things I remember from.
> Nonetheless, average daily energy expenditure of traditional Hadza foragers was no different than that of Westerners after controlling for body size. The metabolic cost of walking (kcal kg−1 m−1) and resting (kcal kg−1 s−1) were also similar among Hadza and Western groups. The similarity in metabolic rates across a broad range of cultures challenges current models of obesity suggesting that Western lifestyles lead to decreased energy expenditure.
> So where does the energy burn in a sedentary population come from vs highly active Hadza tribe members?
P.S.: One theory I've seen is that the extra sedentary-spend is in the immune-system, which may have both beneficial and harmful effects, depending on whether it's doing useful work versus causing problems.
Personally, I look at GLP-1 agonists as akin to wearing glasses. Some people are just born without the ability to regulate their appetite in accordance with our society, but there is a tool / prosthetic to change that, often that's a lifelong solution.
The underlying issue is being treated, it's treated by taking the drug. It works. It's doing its job.
I'd be curious as to how you came to this conclusion.
operative phrase in that sentence "how they live". They need to live more active lives. And that's better than a weight loss drug because inactivity causes systemic disease beyond weight gain.
GLP-1 drugs do to hunger what pain meds do to pain, but if you're overweight and your back is aching because you're sedentary the solution isn't a cocktail of drugs, it's to get off your ass, because that lifestyle is going to cause you biomechanical, metabolic and even cognitive issues down the road.
There's disease you can't do anything about and need to treat with medicine, but if you're experiencing symptoms because your lifestyle is abusing your body change your life. There'll come a moment where there's no wonder pill to fix your issues and in that moment you're better of if you know how to actually get control of yourself. Which most import of all is going to give you the confidence that you can change. You don't want to be 50 years old and your only cope in life is praying that a pharma company mutes whatever symptoms plague you.
Personally, I look at GLP-1 agonists akin to wearing glasses. Some people are just born without the ability to regulate their appetite in accordance with our society, but there is a tool / prosthetic to change that. That said, it's not one or the other, it's always great to be more active.
When I become more active, I also become more hungry due to the extra energy consumption. The net effect is little weight loss and more often than not weight gain. While being physically active is beneficial to health in many ways, it does little for losing or maintaining weight, at least for me.
Active life = higher TDEE which means you can eat more food while still maintaining same deficit.
Not understanding calorie balance, not understanding calorie density of the food they eat.
How many people know 1kg fat = 7700kcal that if they could create deficit of 7700kcal they could potentially lose 1kg bodyfat? Ofc, i know the relationship isn't that simple but for most people this roughly holds true.
If you are eating granolas in breakfast, it may come across as a shock how many calories they pack, go ahead look it up many people believe that's a low calorie health breakfast option.
Many people don't know
1g of carb or protein = 4kcal
1g of fats = 9kcal.
I think I'm not the ignorant one.
Curious: how big of a calorie deficit did you run, and what was your macro (protein/fat/carbs) balance.
My personal experience is going low on carbs (especially added sugars) and high on fiber and protein made running a deficit suck much less in terms of feeling satisfied.
Also, a 10% deficit was okay (I was hungry but could mostly ignore it). A 25% deficit was very annoying and about as much as I'd care to do.
>I've been on a diet since I was 12 years old, and am now approaching 50. I've lost and regained the same 60lbs about 4 times now
You can lose weight by crash dieting, which does not prove much. The first thing that comes to mind for people is simply: "I'll just eat very little and lose weight." It even works, but people quickly get results; it makes them miserable, and they gain it back.
People get stuck between "eating too little" and "binge eating".
>I have logged every bite that goes into my mouth, and lived with a constant hunger for as long as I could take it
This proves you are sincere in calorie tracking, but it doesn't tell us much about what kind of deficit you were in. What were your maintenance calories, and how did you calculate them?
What kind of deficit did you run over what time period?
In my experience, while people know all these things, execution still requires knowing all the "gotchas".
Going from 2700kcal calories to 1000kcal a day diet will make anyone hungry and miserable.
In my experience, people that think they know all the "gotchas" don't really know as much as they think they do.
Knowing fat is calorie dense is great. Without context one would attempt to try to cut it out of your diet almost entirely. Sort of like what literally happened with the food industry in the 80's/90's and 00's.
But then they would wonder why they are so hungry and likely consuming more sugars. Which is even worse for most folks due to glycemic index and how that interacts with hunger.
A little bit of knowledge can be actively harmful. Common sense on this topic actually does far better than most who think they know better. Almost everyone knows what "healthy food" looks like without needing to know anything about much else. Education is not the issue.
https://www.reddit.com/r/tirzepatidecompound/comments/1omfgx...
which is often shared on fitness subreddits, nowhere it asks people to completely stop eating fats.
furthermore i run dieting app with thousands of users so i am not the one who is going to promote zero sugar or fat diet.
My app: https://macrocodex.app/
it's an ad free, subscription free app, i don't make money from this.
The unbelievably low success rate of diet and exercise programs for long-term weight reduction is widely documented and quite consistent with the earlier poster's experience.
where is your data from? what protocol did they follow?
But this intelectual knowledge doesn't really help if your body is telling you it's hungry all the time and it's hard not to eat something. Better choices can help, because different calories deliver different satiety; but some people don't get much satiety no matter what they eat.
Calories in vs calories out is true, but it's very hard to measure calories out, so it's sometimes helpful and sometimes completely unhelpful.
These drugs seem to help a lot of people in different ways, but if the underlying issue is that they don't get the satiety signals they need to eat healthy amounts without it, of course it's not surprising that when they stop medicating, they stop getting the satiety signals.
There's a lot of variance among humans, but everybody seems to want a one size fits all approach to eating. That doesn't work; you have to find all the things that work for some people, and then try the most promising options until you find something that works for you. Many people crave novelty, and anyway people change over time, so something that works for someone today might not work for them next year, etc.
Maybe try to figure out why you’re feeling hungry. Is it because you’re running a 1000 kcal deficit?
Can your body really tell whether you ate 200–300 kcal less today than you did yesterday?
Most of us can easily notice a 1000 kcal difference, but very few can reliably detect a day-to-day difference of just 200–300 kcal.
What are your maintenance calories? Are they around 1800 kcal, where even a 300 kcal deficit puts you on a 1500 kcal diet? That’s very little food for many people.
In that case, it may be better to focus on increasing your maintenance calories by becoming more active in daily life.
Deficit = TDEE - Intake
either drop intake or boost tdee or do both.
If you managed to boost your tdee to 2500kcal, now a deficit of 300kcal means you eat 2200kcal day to day and 2200kcal isn't very little food making diet easy to follow.
>There's a lot of variance among humans, but everybody seems to want a one size fits all approach to eating.
I think there isn't as much variance as people like to believe, how many people you see walking around you with 3 eyes? and 4 hands?
I know several people who are feeling hungry because they're not dead, regardless of how much calorie surplus or deficit they have.
We can do the same activities and eat the same meals and I'll be satied and they will be hungry. Or I can confuse the hell out of them when we do some big activity and I say "i'm not hungry, we worked too hard"... or when we miss a meal by several hours and I tell them "I'm not hungry anymore, it's been too long... but I should probably eat something"
> I think there isn't as much variance as people like to believe,
Oh sure, I don't think everyone is really a unique snowflake, there are patterns. You can find lots of people in these threads who have a broken hunger sensor. You can find lots of people in these threads that can manage this intellectually. I don't see a lot of people in these threads like me who keep a healthy(ish) weight because IBS punishes them for bad food choices, but I'm sure they're out there. Plenty of people out there where celiac drives their relationship between calories in and calories out.
Diet research would be a lot more interesting if there were ways to classify people by their 'metabolism type' and then see what can work for which type. Maybe there would be more reproducability that way, too.
Are you saying 1000kcal vs 200kcal deficit makes no difference?
>Diet research would be a lot more interesting if there were ways to classify people by their 'metabolism type' and then see what can work for which type. Maybe there would be more reproducability that way, too.
You can easily track your maintenance calories, by tracking your weight vs intake overtime.
Yeah, humans should have more free time and do enough work or exercise each day to keep their body in shape.
Why would you eat 2700+800 = 3500kcal? when you can do with 2700kcal?
That's a semantic argument. The "issue", medically, to most people viewing this as a health problem, is excess body fat and not eating behavior.
I mean, you're not wrong, but this seems silly. YES, it would be better to have developed a cure for disordered and unrestrained eating. We didn't. And we don't really even know how. Oops, as it were. But we do have a treatment that avoids the most significant impacts of those problems.
Medicine is harder than software engineering. Not all bugs are shallow even with all the eyes in the world.
It would be an incredible advancement if we figured out a reliable and replicatable way to just eat less food, but until then I think a drug that makes you do that is pretty decent.
Yes, obviously. Which is why sustainable weight loss takes a commitment to making a change in lifestyle.
What’s more sustainable, changing your lifestyle to maintain the weight you lost, or being beholden to taking a drug to maintain that same lifestyle change for a hope at maintenance?
We’ve tried shaming people into being healthy. Amazingly enough, it doesn’t work very well.
It could definitely use more support, but it doesn't do a ton if the structure of people's lives is being changed by other factors. (Car based commutes, long work hours, lack of exercise at their job, the cheapness of certain kinds of foods, food advertising.)
If we had a lot more political power to work on public health programs, maybe. But obesity rates are rising throughout the developed world regardless of local culture so there is a ton of work needed there.
Well-studied problem.
It makes more sense when you realize that something like sheer dieting/exercising willpower isn't why some populations are skinnier than others. Pick another country with a healthier-weight population, start placing some of them in the US, and they'll gain weight. Put them back, and it'll drop again.
If "just diet and exercise" (the advice, and individual effort to that effect) aren't what are keeping some populations skinnier, why would it cure a population with an obesity epidemic?
Just off the top of my head the food (portions, quality, etc) in the USA combined with how much people no longer can walk vs being required to drive are a huge contributor to weight gain of immigrants to the USA.
That's some pretty... charged language. But even so: the drug, clearly. People take drugs reliably as a matter of empirical fact. People likewise emphatically don't "change their lifestyles" as a general rule. If they did we wouldn't be talking about this new drug, would we?
People take drugs if they can afford them; will GLP-1’s be available dirt-cheap to the masses or limited to those fortunate enough to have health insurance.
(For comparison: Countless scores of diets are discontinued daily.)
Meanwhile: Diets have been discontinued by people of all income levels for as long as we've had diets to discontinue. Some people succeed with their diets, and some don't.
And a lot of these medications have side effects that can affect quality of life negatively in other ways. That doesn't mean they're not helpful, or shouldn't be taken. But the "no free lunch" rule usually applies, sometimes to a noticeable degree.
With regards to omeprazole, I changed my diet a bit and no longer needed the omeprazole. I don't know exactly what it was, but if you can get off of a drug because you don't need it anymore that seems ideal.
It’s possible to ignore sadness as well as hunger.
Not a doctor, but I would at least try to look into this. Best of luck!
We have decades of research showing this is more in the "excess acid production" realm of things.
It seems unlikely to extend to bariatric surgery outcomes.
> This idea that Americans are genetically pre-ordained to be fat seems like fanciful thinking.
This idea that Americans are genetically pre-ordained to lack willpower seems like fanciful thinking.
This seems like one of those "replication crisis" claims.
> That's why they could stop being fat, if only they chose to.
So they're pre-ordained not to?
I have a loved one who certainly chooses to, to the point of having had bariatric surgery; GLPs have been an important follow-up. It's really not as simple as you make it out to be.
> You don't go from 12% obesity to 40% obesity in 40 years due to a genetic shift, but rather a cultural one.
What if that cultural one is letting the processed foods industry engineer everything to be deeply addicting?
No. I'm saying it's within their power, so they aren't pre-ordained either way. You were suggesting that it's impossible for a large percentage of the population to not be obese without medical intervention, that it was comparable to excessive acid production which is a genetic anomaly and out of an individual's own control.
> What if that cultural one is letting the processed foods industry engineer everything to be deeply addicting?
Sure, the industry bears some blame and is part of the cultural issue, but even if presented with addicting substances, it is both an individual choice to consume them and a collective cultural choice not to regulate them.
Plus, cars and all "comforts" eating into your physical activities?
The timing is just about right to blame it on Reagan, either the theory that neoliberalism leads to "structured stress" or than some environmental chemical got approved in that time frame.
The idea that it being genetic or not should matter is odd? Who cares why people are fat? They inarguably are fat and will by all available evidence be skinnier and healthier on a glp drug.
I fail to see the need for additional analysis or consideration?
Digging into the root cause or petitioning to tweak the food supply to reduce HFCS are admirable, but entirely orthogonal to the questions: "will taking ozempic et al make an overweight person's life better?" and "will making ozempic et al widely available improve America as a whole?"
Having 40% of your population on a lifetime drug seems like it could cause significant issues in the long-term, especially if there are unforeseen longterm side effects. Medical intervention seems like it should be a last resort, not something half the population is subscribed to by default, so if the problem can be addressed by other means, it really should be.
Look up what percentage of people take antidepressants. Why don't they just try being happy?
Look up what percentage of people regularly take OTC pain killers, Benadryl, etc. Why don't they just tough it out?
You are only picking on GLP-1s which happen to treat obesity among other illnesses. All of the other medications I listed are treating conditions with non-pharmaceutical interventions, but you haven't stated a problem with a huge percentage of the population using them.
If your problem is with chronic medication use, this isn't the one to pick on. It is insanely effective.
> not something half the population is subscribed to by default, so if the problem can be addressed by other means, it really should be.
What makes you think that these people haven't tried other options. What makes you think this is the default option, and not a later option? Do you think they are unaware of diet and exercise? Do you think that they choose to be fat? Do you think that people that can get PHDs doing world changing science, climb mountains, run Fortune 500 companies, hell - run marathons, are just too undisciplined or stupid to lose weight?
If there's a genuine chemical imbalance that needs correcting, whether that's causing obesity or depression it certainly warrants medical intervention. That should only account for a couple of % of people, however. If 40% of your population is on antidepressants, in other words 40% of your population is chronically depressed, that points to much, much deeper root issues pervading society, and I do not in fact think it's a great idea to "solve" that by drugging up half the population on antidepressants for life either.
> Look up what percentage of people regularly take OTC pain killers, Benadryl, etc. Why don't they just tough it out?
It's funny you mention this because American doctors will in fact tell people who literally need painkillers to function to tough it out, after overcorrecting for a period where they were handing out chronic medication like candy and causing more problems than they solved.
> If your problem is with chronic medication use, this isn't the one to pick on. It is insanely effective.
My problem is with the scale of chronic medication use. Chronic medication is life-saving as a targeted intervention for people who genuinely need it, and I have no problems with that. Using it as a population-wide bandaid for every societal issue instead of fixing root causes is bound to end poorly, though. What happens when 50% of the population is on some cocktail of GLPs, stimulants, painkillers, sleep meds, and antidepressants simultaneously because it was deemed easier and more instantly gratifying to prescribe chronic medication for everything than addressing any actual causes?
> Do you think they are unaware of diet and exercise? Do you think that they choose to be fat?
I think they are perfectly aware of diet and exercise and mostly choose not to bother because it has become culturally accepted to disregard one's own health for the joy of a Big Mac and a Coca Cola or 15. It is worth noting that the obesity rate for Asian Americans is only 16%, despite being exposed to the same environment and food industry. Did eg. caucasian American genetics take a nosedive in 40 years, or did they just normalise being self-indulgent to an unhealthy degree? I think one of those explanations is more likely than the other, even if it's not something they'd like to hear.
GLP-1s have been used widely for 20+ years now.
I don't get this weird thing people do where they act like their bodies don't follow the laws of conservation of energy.
However, not all calories are the same, metabolism is dynamic, and the brain is complex and exerts a powerful influence over behavior.
Increasing exercise will make you hungrier and most people are simply unable to resist this and end up not losing weight. It is why there is a common saying that "you cannot outrun your fork." Restricting calories generally is difficult in today's environment with plentiful calorie dense food everywhere. People don't cook as much as they used to and restaurant meals have more calories than ever.
AFAIK GLP-1 drugs work because they calm the minds desire to eat which is baked in deeply from millions of years of our ancestors struggling to get sufficient food.
You can’t really exercise enough to offset the food you can eat in a day, even if you somehow were able to dedicate all your time to exercising you would still have to limit your food intake.
Add to that the fact that exercise is mind numbingly boring and you have to conclude it is not a practical solution at all.
It's odd how people act as tho there's a "moral argument" against using a tool to help reach the goal. It feels a lot like the argument that "morals are from religion", as if you need god to know that murder isn't really a productive activity (unless you work in a slaughterhouse).
I wish American money could go back to having "mind your business" printed on it instead of "in god we trust", it was a huge loss to all of us when that garbage was passed. It was also a huge loss when everyone just decided to go along with saying "taxpayer money" instead of saying "public funds/money", but slippery psychological slopes are everywhere.
More importantly: I don’t want to eat less. I want to eat more. There is so much amazing food.
This is not true. There are plenty of activities that a healthy, enthusiastic person can do for quite a few hours per day that burn calories rapidly, and it takes serious effort to eat enough to offset the calorie usage. Think distance running, skiing, cycling, rowing, etc.
Sometimes people go to extreme technological measures to optimize their ability to consume calories (see recent record-setting marathon results). Sometimes people rely on extremely calorie-dense foods (butter, nuts, etc) so they can carry meals with them that are not wildly calorie-deficient for their long, unsupported travels.
When people are burning calories at this rate, they are probably not doing it for exercise — they’re probably either doing it because it’s fun or it’s part of an adventure.
I’m suspect that, if someone is overweight but in good enough shape to cross-country ski for six hours a day, then even if their body tends toward telling them to eat too much, they could probably lose weight by doing so for many days in a row.
People racing the Tour Divide, a 2700 mile solo unsupported bikepacking race through the Rocky Mountains, lose weight when riding their bikes 18 hours a day for 2-3+ weeks straight. They describe being unable to choke down enough food even though what they are eating is very calorie dense. Hotdogs, burritos, burgers, pizza, a pound of gummies every day, chocolate milk and ice cream when resupplying, McDonalds where they fill their hydration bladders with PowerAde, anything they can get their hands on quickly when they arrive at a small mountain town which frequently has nothing more than a gas station.
https://www.facebook.com/groups/tourdivide/posts/24754803527...
Obviously not a practical solution as you say but they do exercise enough to offset the food when eating as much as they can.
It’s not practical in the least for the average office worker to outrun the fork. It’s just silly advice and pointless to even bring up. When it takes an hour or more of treadmill work to cancel a single donut you don’t need to think about it any longer than that.
You exercise for health. Not to lose weight. Until you are at the margins and can consistently create an extra 100-200 calorie deficit by walking for an hour every evening or whatever.
My three gym days a week don’t do much for the scale. Those are for physical and mental health. The weight part is in the kitchen.
That doesn't make it an easy thing to do.
Fat people are aware of diet and exercise. They aren't stupid.
Until you have been chronically obese, or helped someone that is chronically obese, you don't understand that it is a deeply rooted subconscious issue, not a physics issue.
Fat people don't want to be fat, anymore than depressed people want to be sad. But something in their minds or bodies makes it non-optional. Pharmaceutical interventions change that thing.
When people - in their millions - say that this is the only effective thing, you could, I dunno, believe them. Or at least believe the pharmacological/medical science, which is, to circle back, all just physics.
There is usually no free lunch when it comes to pharma, and extrapolating long term or lifetime dependence as being equivalent to short term interventions is an unsupported leap.
So I'm not sure your first sentence is universally accurate.
For many people food is one of the few things in life that gives them some form of joy. I won’t ever take any drug that will take that away from me. Life is depressing enough as is.
What we need is a weight loss drug that lets you eat unlimited amounts of food, preferably even suppressing the feeling of fullness, without gaining weight.
They don’t stop eating, just overeating. Getting joy from food is different from self medicating with overconsumption. (For the record, I love food. I also don’t have an issue maintaining a healthy weight and physique.)
I am on GLP-1 (Zepbound). I have done Weight Watchers multiple times. I'd lose the weight for a little bit, then it would come back. The reason was _I was hungry all the time_. It's not sustainable. As someone else in WW told me: "The easy bit is losing the weight. The hard part is continuing to eat that way your whole life."
It's simply a faulty hunger sensor in my body. It was not what I was eating, simply how much.
GLP-1s fix the sensor. It's really simple. Nothing else to it.
I still enjoy food (although my palette has turned away from anything greasy, which is for the better anyway), but I can finally understand why someone would eat half a plate of something and say "I'm good" and actually mean it rather than trying to diet/starve themselves.
I was able to drink an Italian soda this week and not feel like "oh God I'm drinking my calories I'm going to be punished for this on the scales later".
I'm pretty sure when food goes right through me that I'm not getting any of those calories. Otoh, I have some idea of what types of foods (and how much) will trigger and the foreknowledge of that certainly reduces the joy of eating some foods I otherwise enjoy.
I still have trouble with calorie balance, but although I enjoy many kinds of ice cream, I have no problem going into an ice cream shop with friends and not ordering anything, even if I'm hungry. A 'single' scoop is way beyond my limit, and if I order a scoop, I won't order a scoop, take two bites and toss the rest, I'll eat the whole thing, so it's not worth it.
When I was doing bike commuting with real hills, I could eat anything, but now I work from home and can't convince myself to put that much time in the saddle just to eat whatever.
This is the problem to be addressed, not hoping for a miracle drug that will let you chuck down 5,000 calories a day and be healthy, imho.
Sure, I don’t get the instant giant dopamine spikes from binge eating $30 worth of Taco Bell or a couple large pizzas. Once in a while I do miss that, but I can still do it now that I’m a few years into the weight staying off. It’s just not worth how shit I feel the next couple days afterward.
But healthy Whole Foods? What was once kind of meh for me is now something I look forward to and explore. Both going out to foodie type spots, and cooking at home. Both gourmet and basic. Just tasting the nuances and everything in some well prepared veggies or whatnot is great and not something I used to appreciate.
I also don’t constantly feel like crap with stomach issues either. I suppose there is less “addictive” type vice enjoyment in my life in some way, but the tradeoff has been life changing. I certainly still get plenty of joy from many of my meals when I feel the need!
Totally transformative.
Woe is them I guess for their chemical dependence.
Until starting tirzepitide I always thought about food, now I don't. Had depressive issues since I was a teenager as well. I took Wellbutrin for 20 years and had an interruption in the last six weeks due to an insurance issue. Payed for the tirzepetide out of pocket, take that once a week, my depression is manageable without the Wellbutrin for the first time in my life. I'm still going thru depression, but that's due to my husbands death in early March. If I wasn't taking my weekly shot I would easily be morbidly obese and probably suicidal. The cost isn't an issue either, I would spend more on food that I'm not buying or eating each month than it costs to buy the medication.
Just because something might not be interesting to someone doesn't mean it has no value. I have no interest in sports, but that doesn't mean they shouldn't exist. I could argue they shouldn't be as prominent in society but that's a different argument.
If you have struggled with your weight, depression, have early warning signs of cardiac problems and a range of other conditions it can be worth considering semaglutide or terzepitide. As long as you stick to the lowest dose that's effective the side effects are minimal to non existent. Categorically dismissing these drugs is as silly as refusing pain meds because "god designed us to experience pain".
There's metabolism, food density, food availability, psychology, culture, economics, etc in play, but it's important not to lie to ourselves that the proximal cause of obesity isn't from over consumption.
I dislike the rejection of evidence. These drugs solve a problem. Preaching personal responsibility does not. In that way it almost reminds me of drug prohibition and abstinence-only rhetoric.
Yes. Specifically, how basal metabolism is not a consciously-controlled rate that modifies itself against diet and exercise to the point that in some people with serious metabolic syndrome it may be impossible for them to lose weight through diet and exercise without suffering nutritional shortfalls.
Also, the clinical evidence around what works for people losing weight and getting healthier and what doesn’t. Like, I get we have a powerful fast-food and sugary-drinks lobby in America, but wow is it wild seeing people get uppity about third parties’ private healthcare decisions like this.
The average person does not understand how weight loss works; many people do not know the concept of maintenance calories, and don't know how calorie surplus or deficit works.
Simply putting them on drugs for life isn't a solution. The average person does not have metabolic syndrome, yet the average person is increasingly becoming obese or perhaps already is obese in many countries.
Plenty of people are on drugs for life for a variety of things that have less health impact than being overweight.
That said, 2026 US GLP-1 healthcare sales projections run between 60 and 100 billion [1]. it will be interesting to see if these miricle drugs can really provide that much benefit/offset that much cost.
For comparison, Medicare part D is ~150 billion in its entirety. https://evolvancemarketresearch.com/reports/glp-1-weight-los...
The payment part is almost entirely pushing against GLP-1 agonists. Nobody has a long-term financial stake in patient costs to care that lifetime costs will likely be lower; insurers are just looking at the next couple years against expected churn. Another cost of tying health insurance to employment.
Why I ate too much is uninteresting to me. I also don’t have some moral hang up over it. Give me that easy button all day long so I can focus on shit in my life that actually matters.
If it makes someone feel better about themselves to believe in woo-woo science that violates the laws of physics and ascribe magical properties to GLPs, why do you care?
Why we should not care about putting people on drug who do can benefit from making lifestyle changes, being less sedentary and leaning about maintenance calories and how calorie surplus and deficit works?
if there is no resistance, simply prescribing GLPs to average person may become a new normal.
Why is it a problem if there's wider access to these drugs? So far, afaik, there's been no long term major adverse effects, and especially I've seen no reports of adverse effects that extend beyond use of the drug (as has been the case with previously popular weight loss drugs that could injure people's hearts).
We're 5 years since fda approval specifically for weight loss and 9 years since fda approval for type 2 diabetes. That's a pretty good amount of time to find serious problems, although certainly many withdrawn drugs were on the market for longer, ex wikipedia says Ranitidine was the biggest selling prescription drug in 1987, but was found to be problematic in 2019 (apparently a new formulation is available as of late 2025!)
Sure, there are other ways to work on weight, just like there are other ways to work on allergies and exercises some people say are effective for vision problems. But we don't force people to give up pets or move somewhere that has fewer triggering allergens, we let them take allergy pills; we let people use eyeglasses or contact lenses or have their eyeballs adjusted so they can see; etc. There's a tool that's effective for many people, why not use it?
Because it's useless advice that doesn't work in practice. As witnessed by decades of failure, with the only thing turning the tide on the obesity epidemic on a population scale being GLP-1 drugs.
> if there is no resistance, simply prescribing GLPs to average person may become a new normal.
Probably not ideal, but until Western society decides to change from the ground up it's better than the alternative which showed literally nothing but failure. One is something that works, the other is something that will take multiple generations to correct.
I think you are looking at research on obese people but applying it to average people who are simply overweight.
I'm not someone who needs to take GLP-1 receptor agonists, but if I had any issues with weight then I'd have no issue taking them life-long. The long-term health benefits are already strong enough to make it a no-brainer. If you are overweight and a GLP-1 drug helps you lose that weight, you will very likely live a longer, healthier and happier life by taking the drug.
All that said -- this article was discussing a new paper in Cell Host & Microbe (high-impact Cell Press stable journal), https://www.cell.com/cell-host-microbe/fulltext/S1931-3128(2... . And the point of that paper is that, at least in mice, the anti-depressive effect of GLP-1 receptor agonists was related to a change in gut microbiota, and not to activation of the GPL-1 receptor. It's work in mice only, so whether or not this holds in humans is unclear, but the researchers showed this worked in mice lacking the GLP-1 receptor and via fecal microbiota transplantation of bacteria from the guts of mice taking GLP-1s.
So, if all you cared about were the mental health benefits of taking GLP-1s, then potentially you could gain these by simply changing your gut flora, without taking a GLP-1 drug at all. That might sit much better with you, by the sounds of it.
When a treatment can’t fail and can only be failed, it’s big red flag for me.
The underlying issue is physiological food cravings, not some personal failing or lack of willpower, and GLP-1 absolutely addresses those "underlying issues". That it isn't some one and done pill is hardly a realistic expectation as that would require probably genetic and epigenetic reprogramming.
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3052625/
Not unlike if you shatter your legs, your recovery may be long and incomplete.
Funny I just shot myself with a Zepbound autoinjector for the first time! My primary care doc told me he thought I was a good candidate a year ago but that he had trouble getting insurance to pay for it, it took me a year to get in with a specialist, insurance approved it right away, and now I am supposed to keep a food an exercise log.
I am well in the obese BMI range but I've been active my whole life (e.g. I can't see how people can get through the day without going to the gym or something) so I have a high lean mass and don't look that fat with my clothes on. I've struggled for years with various conditions associated with "metabolic syndrome" and I'm on numerous maintenance medications already and may be able to delete some of them.
I am currently around 250 lbs which has been my usual for the past 20 years or so. Had some luck with Zone, ketogentic and bean plan diets but couldn't stay on any of them indefinitely. Got my weight down to about 208 lb in six months when I quit taking antidepressants at my doctor's suggestion (never went back), had something like a manic episode where I manifested an "evil twin" who was vain highly motivated [1] and worked out like... a maniac and I also discovered I had TMJ dysfunction and took load off my jaw by throwing comically random food (cashews, seaweed, celery, potatoes, carrots, pork, ...) into a pot and grinding it with an immersion blended. Not sustainable, not least because my evil twin's antics got me kicked out of the gym.
[1] as-a-fox one axiom is that "I never push on a string" and have a hierarchy of goals, non-goal goals and non-goals; my non-goal goals are his OKRs
You have to change your food regimen completely (higher fiber, more protein, less sugar, less carbs, less fat), and that's tough to do when you're surrounded by options that aren't...
I think the real problem is that the symptom we're trying to treat is "overweight", and it's actually a two-stage problem... Fix the hunger response... and only then work on fixing the weight... Fixinig the latter without fixing the former means you'll always gain the weight back, fixing the former doesn't guarantee you lose weight (and is only temporary, if you're using drugs for it)... You have to go after both problems.
Aisles and aisles of sugar drinks and colorful sugar packaging.
The way society leaves it up to people to make their own decisions creates the problem at scale.
Society essentially has to take weekly injections to avoid the temptation of coca cola.
Maybe it's well-known, but I read the starvation response Wikipedia page[0] and didn't grok it.
[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Starvation_response
Think about how we describe contraceptives, medically speaking: a failure rate is tracked and promoted that’s the in the wild rate of failure, not the ideal-use rate of failure (which can be effectively zero!). The diet and exercise equivalent of a contraceptive couldn’t be sold, because its failure rate would be way higher than its success rate.
So “we” (people who’ve paid attention to the science on it) know it doesn’t work (on a population level), like for-sure definitely does not work, but a person reads this assertion of fact and goes “but wait it worked for me, this person must be dumb or something” but that’s not it. It’s two different perspectives on what it means for it to “work”.
Last I checked, researchers in the specific area of high-touch weight interventions were excited that they finally had a tool that might more-than-barely work… in glp-1 agonists.
Informing people that they can avoid pregnancy and STDs if they’d just stop fucking each other doesn’t work at scale either.
However, all the evidence is that the vast majority of people fail at changing their habits in ways that produce lasting weight loss, so it does not generally work as advice for reducing your weight.
So you're technically right, but it is irrelevant, because we don't know how to actually get people to change habits with any meaningful rate of success.
At this point it is downright harmful and wildly unethical to recommend it when we now have a far more successful option.
Source? I thought it was 2/3rds of the weight regained, which is still a substantial long-term loss.
What we now call food addiction is exactly what kept our ancestors alive during famines.
In my case I just weight myself daily, track the weight and scale my food consumption with the current trend. If I'm gaining weight I'll skip a meal.
It takes a while to figure out what works for you but I can tell you that making small lifestyle changes to maintain your weight is fairly easy compared to figuring out how to lose 10 kg.
Without calorie deficit, you'll not lose much weight by lifting alone.
You can use the drug to loose weight while trying to understand the underlying problem.
Now that we know obesity can be controlled via medication, and it'll cost $foo over the lifetime of the patient, the next step is to optimize. If there is a treatment involving ultrasonic brain surgery that costs less than $foo, the expectation is for the market to find that. Ultrasonic brain surgery is in its infancy, but it's already showing utility for Alzheimer's and addiction. The real question is if the pharma companies are going to be able to keep it from going mainstream because it's less profitable for them.
I will slowly gain about 10-15lbs a year due to excess calories if I try to maintain weight at < overweight BMI. GLP-1 drugs have been great to take that edge off.
I've read experiences from people on illicit substances that claimed they helped them quit.
It would be beat if this carried over to things like caffeine/nicotine/thc/etc.
Unfortunately after twelve weeks I had to stop because I felt a lot of nausea and tenderness in my upper abdomen, and was worried it might be pancreatitis developing. I'm not sure why it would happen at such a low dose but the symptoms reduced pretty quickly as it wore off.
I may go back on later with a dose spread over a longer period with the hypothesis that the drug has a longer half life in my body and what I experienced was a gradual build up. Considering I lost 15 pounds over 3 months as well, I believe this to be very plausible.
Turns out rapid weight loss can cause gallstones, especially if you're genetically predisposed to them. I had one that ended up stuck in the bile duct, causing acute pancreatitis. I had to get my gallbladder removed shortly after and hundreds of stones were found.
I would consider getting an ultrasound since the stones don't just go away when you stop taking the drug.
(Gallbladder removal aside I had no lasting issues and kept the weight off.)
It's quite hard to maintain over time is all, I have a lot of social occasions where healthy choices are not really available, and from experience I know that over time I'll slowly drift back towards an unhealthy eating pattern. The modern world is just geared that way, unfortunately.
I tried them and my health got massively worse and I couldn’t eat at all, on a sub minimum dose.
I put them just under antibiotics. In terms of quality of life years given back at a population scale.
Grey market references stuff like HIMS where you are getting a real doctor to write you a prescription and a shady compounding pharmacy takes those Chinese black market peptides, compounds them, and ships them to your door.
Black market is just going direct to the source in China and getting them for yourself without a prescription.
I wrote the insurance company a detailed letter (helped by AI) containing evidence for the benefits of Zepbound over Wegovy and Zepbound over nothing, as well as documented the benefits I already experienced taking the medication. They approved coverage based on this pushback, and I just paid $25 for 3 months' supply.
Might be a potential avenue for some folks...
Even after all that it comes down to like $50 a month at the highest dose.
They desperately need to restore status, and one easy option is, in effect, "oh you're still ugly on the inside."
By way of analogy, it has the same underlying motivation as the various sumptuary laws that arose in response to the mass-manufacture of silk.
> The Elizabethan Restrictions: In 1574, Queen Elizabeth I passed strict sumptuary laws to curb "unprecedented social mobility". The Crown decreed that no woman could wear silk cloaks unless her husband was at least a knight, and restricted fabrics mixed with gold or silver to Earls and above.
> Income Thresholds: In 14th-century England, if an esquire or merchant wanted to wear silk, they had to legally prove they made at least £100 a year. If they didn't meet the financial threshold, wearing the fabric was a criminal offense.
The answer is getting into a regular schedule with resistance weight training. Obviously not all that many people will pull it off, but if you can pull it off you can stave off the worst of the side effects in many cases.
Also worth mentioning GLP1's are known to cause anhedonia. So there's that...
I do notice it makes it harder for me to get up and do certain harder, outdoor chores.
What was the downside of washing hands before surgery?
I suppose the counterargument would be that modern life is different from the evolutionary environment, and so it's possible for a change to be beneficial now that wasn't beneficial then. But it would still be good to understand better the mechanism of the effect of Ozempic on things like addiction.
That’s not how evolution works.
We evolved in an environment where every bit of food took hours of effort and food preservation was impossible, so the only logical thing to do with extra food was feast and store up as much fat as possible for lean times. We're still many generations away from evolving to compensate for the discovery of fire, let alone everything that came after that.
Typically, if something "works", there often appear to be side effects. A free lunch is rare.
https://www.uclahealth.org/news/article/understanding-medica...
Unless it’s literally a deficit. There isn’t a downside to treating vitamin C deficiency with vitamin C.
Of course we already manipulate brain chemistry in other more direct ways with antidepressants so perhaps any unwanted second-order effects could be minor in comparison to the profile of existing antidepressants .
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7105351/
I've been watching developments on how GLP1s seem to go beyond just hunger/insulin response, even how they may affect symptoms of polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS), which is difficult on women who have it:
https://academic.oup.com/ejendo/article/194/3/S25/8488941
While exercise has many positive effects, which I'd argue are more important than the weight loss, the latter is the primary reason many people exercise and likely to stop when given the weight loss by other means.
Is there any source on this? The precise opposite has happened in my experience. I was an early evangelist for these drugs, and have many dozens of people who I talk to regularly who have since taken them over the years. I cannot think of a single person who went from regular exercise to reducing or eliminating it after taking the drug. Exactly zero.
I can think of well over a dozen folks who started regular exercise for the first time in their lives after losing 50 or more pounds.
Certainly many who did not change their habits either way. But overall this matches with what the trainers in my gym report. They were initially worried GLP-1s would reduce their client base, but the exact opposite has happened for them. It's brought an entirely new demographic into play and business is booming.
> which I'd argue are more important than the weight loss,
You would be making an argument contrary to most established science on the topic. Exercise is important and quite beneficial to health. Obesity is far worse. Not many obese people working out regularly to start with though, so I don't think this point holds much water to begin with. We are not a nation full of obese gym rats.
That said, exercise has a direct impact on metabolic health which is pretty necessary to maintain a healthy weight.
1. They make you stop eating, which for most of human history kills you.
2. They are a life-long treatment and kind of expensive unless you go gray market.
3. Gastrointestinal issues especially when titrating up.
2. Not necessary here either if dietary habits are permanently altered, which can happen more easily after several months on GLPs.
3. Perhaps!
Mostly it's nausea and gastrointestinal distress side effects. These tend to cool down over time, but it'll put a ceiling on how big a dose you can tolerate. Some people can't tolerate a dose at any level.
https://theconversation.com/how-childhood-infections-requiri...
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/a-single-course-o...
Eating junk food, especially sweetened food is a drug. You can do a withdrawal and get the reduction of food noise reported with semaglutide without getting dependent on another drug with so far unknown long-term effects.
I LOVE food. Eating out and family dinner were always important to me. I was very worried that I would lose my pleasure in this.
I haven't.
But now I can just eat 1/2 slice of pie. Or 1 scoop of ice cream, etc etc. I don't have the crazy urge to EAT IT ALL.
Also I loved drinking. I actually still love drinking. But I get done at 2.5 drinks. And once a week.
It adds up. Makes you wonder what free will is.Variance in GLPs are naturally occuring. I find the people who say "I forgot to eat" relatable now. Our bodies were not designed for abundance. At least not mine.
(Never tried them myself, but very intrigued by them.)
It stopped me cold and has gotten me almost back down at the lowest I was at after my diet so far and I keep losing at a slower pace but basically without effort.
In terms of pleasure, I'd say mostly no with some caveats. I have fewer snacks, and drink less coke, and I enjoyed both. I don't find chocolate or baked goods as enticing any more, but it's not stopped me from enjoying them on occasion.
It's more that it's stopped me from wanting them as often. I find it easier to tell myself not to grab a snack when I'm already full in particular. Before I might overeat to the point of discomfort.
So when I now actively choose to enjoy those things, I'm more likely to actually enjoy the whole experience.
I'd say the exception is probably coke, which I do find less enjoyable.
Outside of eating, I drink less, but do have occasional beers. I enjoy them.
And my relationships are not less fulfilling, and I don't find my life and work less interesting. All in all, the only thing I don't like is the occasional "egg" burps I get from it.
I had to conscientiously try and find new "fun" things in my life to replace food, which used to be my treat/highlight of my life lol.
I notice a little less joy, pizza used to make me soooo happy lol. Now even if I have pizza- which I still totally can, I just accommodate for it, but it's just like... okay, whatever here's some pizza, cool. I can have 1 or 2 slices and feel fine and not go hog on the entire thing and have it be this amazing fantastic binge.
That's the best way I can describe it. I could basically always eat before and now I just...don't feel like it lol.
I will say, they are rough when you first start out on them. During the 1st 6-8 weeks I had several instances of maaaaaybe five seconds of warning between feeling nauseated and vomiting.
It settles down after a couple months and it was never bad enough to be a dealbreaker, but it's a fun time.
For me the pros outweigh the cons, I don't obsess over food constantly, my belt size went down and my watch band closed a few notches and even my dental hygienist mentioned last week my face was thinner. Overall it's a huge win.
I pay out of pocket $450 a month for it and it's worth it. The money I saw from no more online shopping habit and no more doordashing or drinking probably breaks even.
I know people who have had miraculous benefits from psych meds. No downside. Using them for years. Or if there is a downside it’s massively outweighed by the upside.
Yes. Why not? A body is a complex biomechanical system, that can be influenced by certain chemicals. Some of them can solve the underlying problem.
Why everything has to be a morality play?
> Why should we believe GLP-1 class drugs are any different?
Why are they any different from, say, antiretroviral drugs? Or from something like statins?
I started the GLP-1 drugs with liraglutide, a predecessor of Ozempic. It works similarly but its half-life is just several hours, so you had to get a daily injection. It has been in use for two decades by now with great results.