What happens to your body when you stop taking weight-loss drugs l GMA

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What happens to your body when you stop taking weight-loss drugs l GMA


Doctors say rapid weight loss can cause a decline in muscle mass, a major factor when it comes to keeping the weight off, and may recommend strength training and protein consumption plans.
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49 Comments

  1. This sounds like a paid puff piece straight from the prescription drug industry. Let me tell you people something if you get on this drug and you're on it for an an amount of time and then come off of it you will have rebound issues unless you make serious lifestyle and living changes

  2. I heard most of the people who are invested in the fitness industry, such as fitness centers, traditional weight loss surgery centres, nutritionists, dieticians even supplement companies are promoting and funding anti semaglutide GLP-1 injections using fear and addressing false warnings to the public. This has cut a large client base and business since it's released. Is this possible?

  3. TO THOSE SPECIALTY NEWSCASTERS AND Y’ALL, “LATEST GMA VIEWERS, ‘DUE TO CLINICAL FASTING PRESS,’ MAY YOUR ‘GRAND CREATOR HELP AN UNRIGHTEOUS TO BECOME’ RIGHTEOUS” 😹😺

  4. I can't help but wonder if the drs promoting " lifetime use" are getting money from Big Pharma. It's typically the case. I noticed that 1 thing no one has said, these drugs have black box labels. Better check into that.

  5. Your TV doctor is terrible. Obesity isn't a condition or disability. It's a choice. You have to be mentally ready for weight loss or you will fail, no matter what you try. Educate people about eating better. The knee jerk reaction is pills. Shameful.

  6. I imagine you’d have to continually monitor your weight every week and make sure you stay within the appropriate range. It’s going to be a life long battle but anyone who has obesity is no stranger to the battle already.

  7. If it makes you suicidal (Contrave commercials mention this for example) or could kill you, or is addictive, why are we allowing it to be approved at all if it is not absolutely necessary?

  8. This is such bad advice. Stay on the medication forever? And no mention at all of changing your diet and lifestyle? Of course, some people will need more than that, but it still needs to be addressed. A pill cannot provide everything that you need. This is terrible advice.

  9. Big pharma doesn't care about you… only your wallet…. they want you sick… pay for the jab…oh you got covid anyways? Here's another jab to lesson the symptoms…. gimme a break….WAKE UP PEOPLE!!!!

  10. “With McDonald’s and ozempic, capitalism holds its proletariat in a vice: what it advances to them in one hand it takes back again with the other” – modified quote by Walter Benjamin

  11. You mean what happens to someone’s body who doesn’t learn how to eat and exercise to keep the weight off… don’t blame the drug for regain when you didn’t take the necessary steps required to learn how to keep the weight off once it’s lost. It has nothing to do with the drug. The drug is just the tool, but everyone thinks it’s a magic fix for their obesity.

  12. I agree, I don’t think it’s best if used by people who need to lose 10 or 20 pounds and have the ability to keep their metabolism up through exercise. I’m considering Ozempic and in my case I eat a whole food, diet, Mediterranean style, two meals a day with 16 hours in between. (I Idon’t eat after 6 o’clock and I don’t eat before 11 )I’m not necessarily an over eater I use portion control with my size of plate I avoid excess carbs I don’t drink juice I don’t drink milk and I do not take sugar in my tea or coffee and have had my diet cleared by a dietician. But what I do have is chronic pain which literally keeps me from most types of exercising that would be conducive to losing weight so that’s created a metabolic syndrome, and the only success I’ve ever had through diet and losing weight, is an extremely low carbohydrate (25 or less carbs of the day) ketogenic diet, but it is unsustainable or at the very least,very difficult. My problem is metabolic and hormonally based so literally only a hormone could possibly fix it. And the hope is that once I’ve lost this 30lbs I will find it easier to move and have a higher chance of keeping that weight in balance.

  13. After I’ve lost weight on a ketogenic diet, just going back to a regular diet even if it’s extremely healthy, I will gain weight again because my metabolism is not what it used to be or should be so I suspect that this is true of Ozempic and that it should be expected.

  14. People really need to work harder. Trying and failing all within a couple of days doesn't count either. Stop looking for shortcuts and easy answers. I quit smoking and drinking at the same time. Cold turkey on the alcohol. I gave up junk food/fast food almost a decade ago after years of stopping at Wendy's for a Classic Triple every night after work and spending my 20s gaming while chugging straight from a 2 liter Coca Cola almost every day for hours on end. I know it's uncomfortable (not even hard, just uncomfortable) but quitting this crap can 100% be done without drugs. Develop the healthier habits that go with the medication and save the $1000 a month for this drug you'll have to take "indefinitely" to avoid regaining 2/3 of the weight.

    4:08 They are so lying. In one breathe, "This is not a matter of willpower. It's not a matter of moving more and eating less." Next breathe: "Behavior (exercising willpower, moving more, & eating less) is always important…"

  15. Most doctors are so completely ignorant about anything else besides diagnosing and prescribing meds. They are legal drug dealers. It’s quite pathetic. You CAN absolutely reverse obesity, type 2, HBP, and many other chronic conditions by eating fewer carbs less often and incorporating fasting.

    These drugs never address the root cause of anything, cost 1000s, often have horrible side effects, and are coming from an industry that couldn’t care less about you or your well being, but, by all means, keep taking your drugs for the rest of your life. 🙄