I am hoping I won’t have to stay on it forever- but I also gained the weight in what I think is an unusual way. When I hit menopause, I gained about 40 lbs within a couple of years, without changing my eating habits or activity. And then I stopped gaining, still without really changing my eating habits or activity. So I’m hoping that once I lose enough weight I’ll be able to stop the Trulicity and keep my weight stable, just like I’ve always been able to except that couple of years.
My experience? Yes. Although I did see a big drop the first week or two (thought mostly to be water weight) my drop was remarkably consistent over time. The graph in excel is a nearly straight line until I hit maintenance. I would ask to have your doctor consider Zepbound too. It’s a generation newer than Wegovy and works in two ways to Wegovy’s one.
Unlike me, my wife started on Wegovy and found that she had significant trouble with side effects relative to the slow weight loss she saw. Things improved (fewer side effects, more weight loss) when she switched to Zepbound.
If you have your prescription sent to Lilly Direct, the vials up to the 10mg size are $499. It’s still a lot, but it’s still less than half of the pharmacy price.
Computing of tirzepatide and semaglutide was allowed for a brief while as the manufacturers, Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk respectively, were formally unable to keep up with demand. The FDA has determined that the shortage window has closed, so after a grace period tirzepatide compounding ended March 19th and semaglutide compounding will end April 22nd.
I’ve seen insured folks with the right coverage pay just the $25 or $30 copay. Would be nice. I haven’t formally done the math, but now that I essentially don’t drink, rarely go to restaurants any longer, and do a much better job grocery shopping, I would be surprised if the cost is neutral for me.
For the vials, yes, standard injections stuff is needed. They ask when I order if I want syringes included for some small fee and I say no since I bought a huge box a while back. But they end up sending them anyway. It must be an automatic move for the people packing the boxes.
Canada has UHC but not Universal Pharma Care. My work benefits cover Ozempic for diabetes but not weight loss, so I pay CAD$10 for a ninety day supply. Full price is $250/month for the .5mg dose,
Didn’t Canada start a seniors drug plan for all recently? ( expat Canuck )
I started on Ozempc but then no supply so switched to Lira.
Indigestion, occasional runs on both. Successful weight loss 55 lb and drifting very slowly lower. Not trying to lose more - just happens. No food “noise”.
There is some provincial coverage for seniors and younger people as well as people on assistance in Ontario (varies across the country). The national pharmacare is in its infancy and just covers contraceptives and first line diabetes drugs and only in provinces with a deal with the Feds.
I had assumed it would be killed in its infancy under the Conservatives, but it might just make it if the Liberals win.
Latest word is election day is on April 28th. I suspect that the NDP caucus after the election will be able to dine at any restaurant in Ottawa without calling ahead to make a reservation.
Hehe …Libs circling the wagons for sure with a possible majority at stake…and what a shift in fortunes!
Trying to get my mail in vote sorted today …was not even up as an election on the expat site yesterday.
I’ve been on Metformin since February 2024, and I’ve lost 60+ lbs so far. I was “dieting” to a certain extent, but mostly eating more fresh fruit/veg, cutting out my bad habits (ice cream and the small amount of fast food I used to eat), and also dropping a lot of the processed/packaged foods I depended on. It was a lot less difficult than I expected.
I still get cravings, but not as strongly. I have some health issues that have prevented me from doing much strenuous exercise, but I expect I’ll do better once I can incorporate that into my life style.
I don’t have noticeable side effects (although I will have if digestive issues if I eat too much fatty food at once – good disincentive!), and my pcp has also said they keep finding more benefits other than weight loss. My cardiologist agrees.
Interesting. Is this why if I have a migraine, eating really seems to help? Sadly, my migraines have not gone away with Metformin.
Sorry for continuing the highjack, but what does this mean?