They are made by Novo Nordisk, and its market value “has risen by more than a third so far this year to about $419 billion, bigger than the country’s gross domestic product of about $406 billion,” according to The Wall Street Journal. “Because the pharmaceutical industry’s exports have grown so much, it’s creating a big influx of currency into the Danish economy,” Danske Bank director Jens Naervig Pedersen tells WSJ.
Ozempic works off label for weight loss while you take it, but you have to keep taking it or you will gain it back. People are gaining even more weight once the side effects of Ozempic make them stop taking it.
I see this claim bandied about all the time but I haven’t seen any long term usage weight loss data.
Essentially no weight loss is permanent unless you maintain your weight for 2-3 years. Your fat cells never go away, merely shrink, and you only lose about 10% per year (which are replaced with new cells).
You have to maintain it for a long time to keep it up and see any changes.
The frist part is true for essentially all treatments (not just drugs) for chronic diseases. If someone changes their diet for a year, and then stops maintaining this diet, they’ll gain their weight back.
Is there any data for the second part? It sounds plausible to me, but many things are plausible but not actually true.
Ozempic works off label for weight loss while you take it, but you have to keep taking it or you will gain it back. People are gaining even more weight once the side effects of Ozempic make them stop taking it.
deleted by creator
Wegovy (same drug, same company, just different branding to Ozempic) is approved for weight control in non-diabetics: https://ec.europa.eu/health/documents/community-register/html/h1608.htm
deleted by creator
I’m painfully aware that it’s being used off label in this case, note that my OP even states as such.
I see this claim bandied about all the time but I haven’t seen any long term usage weight loss data.
Essentially no weight loss is permanent unless you maintain your weight for 2-3 years. Your fat cells never go away, merely shrink, and you only lose about 10% per year (which are replaced with new cells).
You have to maintain it for a long time to keep it up and see any changes.
The frist part is true for essentially all treatments (not just drugs) for chronic diseases. If someone changes their diet for a year, and then stops maintaining this diet, they’ll gain their weight back.
Is there any data for the second part? It sounds plausible to me, but many things are plausible but not actually true.
Removed by mod