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Studies
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meachemcrystal795
Posts: 8 Member
in Debate Club
More studies are coming out regarding what the medication is doing to bone density, depression, lack of motivation, malnutrition..etc. Hopefully those who truly do not need this MEDICATION for health benefits, are seeing that it’s pros will not out weigh the cons. It’s life changing for those who truly need it, & truly dangerous that literally anyone can get their hands on it. Seems fishy that a medication is so easily accessible & being pushed on the population so heavily.
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I meant to post this to another comment thread. Not sure how I published a new post. I now have no idea how to delete it. I apologize.0
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I think you make a really good point though. It feels as though it's being pushed on everyone and way too easily available. There are real potential side effects that can be deadly. And people ignore that.2
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What medication are you talking about? Did I miss something?0
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Yeah, I feel this needs context - which medicine in particular are we debating?
I will say that it's true that certain drugs are too readily available and are treated as a panacea while the side effects are glossed over; antidepressants for example are very pervasive, and while they're essential for many, healtcare professionals have admitted themselves that they're often too easily prescribed as the first line of medication in cases where lifestyle changes may be just as effective.
Edit: Just saw your clarification, sorry- I'll stand by my post though.
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There was a post about how Eli lily’s ozempic sales are finally on a downward slope, I meant to post to that discussion & ended up making my own post lol.0
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I do agree on the depression medication aspect as well. Doctors are trained more efficiently to treat symptoms than the true underlying causes of the issue. Thus the patient ends up managing the symptoms while the problem goes unsolved & new symptoms/side effects arise.
Example: I’ve always felt depressed & unmotivated on rainy days or in the winter & was given anti depression medication that kind of helped but I gained weight & was more irritable. I learned later that a vitamin D3-K2 solved all my issues & I felt so much better!1 -
meachemcrystal795 wrote: »More studies are coming out regarding what the medication is doing to bone density, depression, lack of motivation, malnutrition..etc. Hopefully those who truly do not need this MEDICATION for health benefits, are seeing that it’s pros will not out weigh the cons. It’s life changing for those who truly need it, & truly dangerous that literally anyone can get their hands on it. Seems fishy that a medication is so easily accessible & being pushed on the population so heavily.
I'm NOT saying that medication isn't important, but there the knee jerk reaction that medication is the answer to so many maladies before trying to address the issue through natural methods first.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 40 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition1 -
It's a very deep rabbit hole, where industry and politics are often woven together to form a bond that enriches both immensely. Skepticism is needed always imo. The United States and New Zealand are the only 2 countries that allows direct-to-consumer (DTC) advertising of prescription drugs. Novo Nordisk approves this ad
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https://youtu.be/3ac8OgBJJ_U2 -
It worries me when I offer a natural solution to my family & friends & they look at me like I’m the insane one!
Example: magnesium for headaches, insomnia
Apple Cider vinegar for constipation
Vitamin D for Depression, seasonal mood Changes, energy
Ashwaganda for anxiety
For me, I would rather try natural remedies & if they don’t work, I then go to a doctor, but my family & friends refuse to even try, they would rather pump artificial chemicals into their body because their doctor gave it to them.
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A basic problem arises when there is literally no long term studies examining "risk" for any nutritional data on outcomes in humans, and there'll never be any either. Risk implies cause-and -effect and that can't be established in human nutritional science, period. The only real science in nutrition is to look at the hard sciences of biochemistry, anatomy, anthropology and physics and doing so it becomes more abundantly clear what humans should be living in every respect, or in the least, answer the more simple questions queried by those sciences imo.0
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