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Say What?: Commercials That Made Us Scratch Our Heads


Lola16

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On 2/28/2025 at 9:12 AM, proserpina65 said:

I haven't seen that one, but generally as long as someone stays on the drug, they usually keep off the weight.  Although diabetes drugs aren't meant for weight loss.

Not that you'd know that from the commercials.

One reason pharmaceutical ads should be banned - people without diabetes bug their doctors for diabetes drugs because the ads tell them they can help them lose buckets of weight.  The doctors either refuse to prescribe the unnecessary and expensive drug and lose the patient, or succumb to the pressure even though they know better in order to keep the patient.

Edited by Ancaster
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8 hours ago, chessiegal said:

You don't need to bug your doctor for glp-1 drugs. Look at all the ads for weight loss programs that provide glp-1 medication, including Weight Watchers. 

No, that's true, but you need to pay a lot more for them. Even if you have good health insurance with prescription drug coverage, most plans don't cover weight loss medication as medically necessary. Which is ridiculous because these drugs do work and end up being beneficial. If you can tolerate them, GLP-1 drugs reduce cardiovascular disease, kidney problems and substance addictions. But sometimes, insurance companies will say, "Oh, you lost the weight, you've lowered your A1C, you don't qualify for diabetes control drugs any more", so the patient loses access to the medication! Insurance companies are the worst.

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My sister in law is on Mounjaro and has lost a lot of weight. Better still, she's off ALL other diabetes meds. She's got great insurance, so they let her stay on Mounjaro.

My doc put me on it and I got violently ill from it. It's taken more than the reported 4 weeks to purge it from my system. My appetite is having a horrible rebound - I'm constantly hungry.

I hate those ads that make it seem "shoot this up and everything is hunky-dory."

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In one of the T-Mobile ads with Zach Braff and Donald Faison at the opera (trying to watch basketball on a broken phone), Faison ends up chewing gum and reveals that he found it under his seat.  I think Braff's reaction is supposed to be disgust (understandably), but his response is weird in that in kind of comes across like he's jealous that he didn't find the gum and get to chew it himself.

16 hours ago, Red Bridey said:

No, that's true, but you need to pay a lot more for them. Even if you have good health insurance with prescription drug coverage, most plans don't cover weight loss medication as medically necessary. Which is ridiculous because these drugs do work and end up being beneficial. If you can tolerate them, GLP-1 drugs reduce cardiovascular disease, kidney problems and substance addictions. But sometimes, insurance companies will say, "Oh, you lost the weight, you've lowered your A1C, you don't qualify for diabetes control drugs any more", so the patient loses access to the medication! Insurance companies are the worst.

My old insurance company wouldn't even pay for Chantix to help me stop smoking and nobody can say that's not beneficial to them in the long term. But they (Ins) actually want people to die rather than pay for preventative care because it works out cheaper & therefore better for them in the long run.

I will say that they (Ins) are not all the same & some will actually pay for things that are preventative, the one I have now via Mrs. Shrek paid for the Chantix & I had stopped well before the end of the third month after over 40 years of smoking. The other thing is the price, I could have got Chantix myself, but the cost was $900 a month which is ridiculous. 

Insurance & drug companies are out of control in the USA but they're only going to get worse now. What's a few million $ in backhanders, it's a small price to pay for years of no controls.

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14 hours ago, Browncoat said:

Boomers + calcium supplements.

Plus any other maintenance medication older people start to take on a daily basis. Working in pharmacy taught me that just about every prescription medication carries the side effects of constipation and diarrhea. Which one you get depends on your body, and a lucky few get both. 

Also, most Americans do not get nearly enough fiber in their diet.

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