Weight loss medication
sojcherb
Posts: 23 Member
I'd love to hear your experience being on weight loss medication. What do you take? What are the side effects? I feel that I need to consider this option after several years of trying to lose weight with minimal results. I'm 61 and am at 194 lbs and I weight train 3x/week and walk, bike or do stationery bike intervals on other days. My ability to lose weight has tanked over the past two years. I switched to MFP after many years doing WW and despite being meticulous about tracking and weighing everything that goes in my mouth I can't seem to lose. I'm eating 1700 calories a day keeping protein high (127g/day) and carbs low (100g/day) but am not making progress.
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Replies
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I don’t know how large you are but that’s a lot of calories. I eat 1270 per day and don’t eat back exercise calories. I’m 68 and lose 1 lb per week. I need 1270 to feel satisfied so 1lb per week it is.2
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Jmatievich wrote: »I don’t know how large you are but that’s a lot of calories. I eat 1270 per day and don’t eat back exercise calories. I’m 68 and lose 1 lb per week. I need 1270 to feel satisfied so 1lb per week it is.
It’s not a lot of calories - we’re all different. I lose on anything under 2000, but that also doesn’t mean everyone else will.
OP can you open your diary? It might be that you’re eating slightly more than you think (logging errors are really common, as MFP isn’t always accurate, and some measurements can vary ie 1 tablespoon peanut butter is 15g, whereas “my” tablespoon of peanut butter was closer to 30g!)
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claireychn074 wrote: »Jmatievich wrote: »I don’t know how large you are but that’s a lot of calories. I eat 1270 per day and don’t eat back exercise calories. I’m 68 and lose 1 lb per week. I need 1270 to feel satisfied so 1lb per week it is.
It’s not a lot of calories - we’re all different. I lose on anything under 2000, but that also doesn’t mean everyone else will.
OP can you open your diary? It might be that you’re eating slightly more than you think (logging errors are really common, as MFP isn’t always accurate, and some measurements can vary ie 1 tablespoon peanut butter is 15g, whereas “my” tablespoon of peanut butter was closer to 30g!)
Endorsed.
I'm female, 68, and lose weight (admittedly very slowly) on 1850 calories plus all carefully-estimated exercise calories, so 2100-2500 most days. (I'm 5'5", losing super slowly in maintenance to creep off some holiday pounds painlessly. I weighed 129.8 pounds this morning.) That's probably a high calorie extreme for our demographic.
There are other women who post here in the age range of OP and me who do need to eat a flat 1200 calories to lose weight at a slow but reasonable rate. That's more like the low calorie extreme for our demographic.
A doctor, MFP, a TDEE calculator, even a fitness tracker - they just give us a starting estimate that's the average for similar people. That's all they can do. Individuals vary. Therefore, we stick with the starting estimate for 4-6 weeks (whole menstrual cycles if that applies - usually doesn't in our demographic!) At that point, we have enough personal data to adjust our intake based on our average weekly real-world results. Conveniently, that approach also compensates somewhat for patterns of imprecise calorie estimation.
OP, I started out at close to your age (I was 59) and current weight (I was 183), did not use drugs or surgery. Weight loss is possible, but not necessarily easy every second.
I see that you've opened your diary. This is good. You look like you're getting in some good nutrition - kudos!
I do see a mix of weights, volume measures, "1 piece" kind of thing. If you're not already, one thing you can do is to weigh everything it's possible for you to weigh on your food scale, preferably in grams (more granular/precise). I'm not a person who believes that everyone must weigh every bite in order to succeed, but if someone is not losing as expected, weighing everything for a few weeks can be a great help to pin down what's actually going on. I know I had some forehead slap moments of realization when I started weighing foods. If you don't like weighing, you can stop once your other measuring/estimating methods get more calibrated base on weighing for a while.
If you need tips on how to weigh foods so it's efficient, i.e., takes less time/effort than cups/spoons measuring, take a look at the starting post in this thread (I promise that's what it's about, ignore the dumb title):
https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10498882/weighing-food-takes-too-long-and-is-obsessive#latest
Another thing you can do is take a look at your daily life (non-exercise) activity, and think whether there are ways you can increase that. That can make small, but meaningful contributions. Many MFP-ers share their ideas here:
http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10610953/neat-improvement-strategies-to-improve-weight-loss/p1
Often, as we age, our lives get gradually and subtly less physically busy. Things like the above can counteract that. The other thing that can happen is gradual, subtle muscle mass loss. You're already strength training and getting adequate protein to work on that, which is great. Other women our age could follow your good example in that! It has a slow return on investment (in calorie burn terms), but the increasing strength, which happens more quickly, has great benefits in daily life, IME.
I'm wishing you success. With patience and persistence, I'm confident you can get there!
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I’ve been on Mounjaro since November. SW 272. Current weight 202. GW 133. Had one bad time for a couple of weeks when at the 5mg dose, with queasiness when eating more than a mouthful. But other than that, it has been free of side effects. The drug has made a massive difference in the kind of cravings that led to a lifetime of binging behavior (I’m 65) and it has helped me to stop eating when I’m no longer hungry, as opposed to full. I now tend to eat smaller, healthier meals with frequent healthy snacks. Whole foods, not processed. Have pretty much eliminated meat and get protein from fish, poultry, dairy and tofu. Stopped diet sodas and foods with artificial sweeteners and can now satisfy desire for sweetness with berries. And perhaps an over-fondness for baby carrots, which are filling and a bit sweet but that I eat in really significant amounts. As weight began dropping, exercise got easier and now am on stationary bike 30 minutes every day, plus lap swimming now that pool is open for summer. Exercise increases my appetite somewhat during the day, but not enough to stop weight loss. Biggest issue with Mounjaro is regular headache getting my Rx filled due to shortages. Have never advanced to full dosage because pharmacies are often out of what I need. Indeed, right now I am struggling to get even a lower dosage than my current one for my upcoming month (currently at 10, was supposed to go to 12.5 but struggling to find even 7.5). Anyway, I’d say Mounjaro has helped me get my body to a place where I am more like average people,who must consciously exercise and watch what they eat in order to lose weight, and has taken away some of the extra obstacles I have had, like repetitive thinking about food, cravings, binge behaviors, and such. I still have to work at losing weight, but I finally feel like it’s a fair fight.6
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I’ve been on Mounjaro since November. SW 272. Current weight 202. GW 133. Had one bad time for a couple of weeks when at the 5mg dose, with queasiness when eating more than a mouthful. But other than that, it has been free of side effects. The drug has made a massive difference in the kind of cravings that led to a lifetime of binging behavior (I’m 65) and it has helped me to stop eating when I’m no longer hungry, as opposed to full. I now tend to eat smaller, healthier meals with frequent healthy snacks. Whole foods, not processed. Have pretty much eliminated meat and get protein from fish, poultry, dairy and tofu. Stopped diet sodas and foods with artificial sweeteners and can now satisfy desire for sweetness with berries. And perhaps an over-fondness for baby carrots, which are filling and a bit sweet but that I eat in really significant amounts. As weight began dropping, exercise got easier and now am on stationary bike 30 minutes every day, plus lap swimming now that pool is open for summer. Exercise increases my appetite somewhat during the day, but not enough to stop weight loss. Biggest issue with Mounjaro is regular headache getting my Rx filled due to shortages. Have never advanced to full dosage because pharmacies are often out of what I need. Indeed, right now I am struggling to get even a lower dosage than my current one for my upcoming month (currently at 10, was supposed to go to 12.5 but struggling to find even 7.5). Anyway, I’d say Mounjaro has helped me get my body to a place where I am more like average people,who must consciously exercise and watch what they eat in order to lose weight, and has taken away some of the extra obstacles I have had, like repetitive thinking about food, cravings, binge behaviors, and such. I still have to work at losing weight, but I finally feel like it’s a fair fight.
Sorry for quoting your complete instead of select sections of your post... but it sounds like you're losing and losing at a good clip and you're also making changes that MAY be able to stay with you long term (change in foods and way you consume, not eating till overfull, increasing veggies and whole foods, sweetness out of fruits etc, all of them great changes by the way which resonate with me as they reflect things I also did while losing weight on MFP. So obviously I would think they're genius changes!
Why would you seek to increase the dose because the protocol calls for a dose increase WHILE it is still working? If things change/have changed/it is not working as effectively at helping regulate your craving/binge behaviours/etc, then I could see why you would want to increase to recapture the sweet spot. But if you're already on it why would you increase the dosage just because it is "time" to increase it? From my non medical professional standpoint, I feel that would be a question I would ask my doctor!5 -
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Mounjaro and Ozempic can only be prescribed for a Type2 Diabetes diagnosis. Wegovy requires an obesity diagnosis that, at least for my insurance, meant a BMI over 40. All seem to be effective for weight loss. All are expensive at around $1200/month (without insurance.)
Also, it seems that a majority of patients who stop the drug regain a significant portion of the weight lost. The average according to one study was 60% regained in 2 years. Obviously, there was a range of results with the average being 60%. There has been no follow up that I know of on those that kept it off and what they may have done differently than those that regained.
That said, I have been on Wegovy for 4 weeks now and have had good results with minimal side effects.3 -
I'd love to hear your experience being on weight loss medication. What do you take? What are the side effects? I feel that I need to consider this option after several years of trying to lose weight with minimal results. I'm 61 and am at 194 lbs and I weight train 3x/week and walk, bike or do stationery bike intervals on other days. My ability to lose weight has tanked over the past two years. I switched to MFP after many years doing WW and despite being meticulous about tracking and weighing everything that goes in my mouth I can't seem to lose. I'm eating 1700 calories a day keeping protein high (127g/day) and carbs low (100g/day) but am not making progress.
I would start with tightening up your logging...use a food scale to weigh everything instead of "piece of this" or using volume measurements for solids. Also, make sure you're vetting the entries you're using from the database. I wasn't sure of your height but I put in your other stats and 5'5" into Sailrabbit and slightly active and that put your TDEE at 2,200 so theoretically 1700 would be a 500 calorie deficit...that also assumes that the exercise you describe is done consistently. That said, you have to keep in mind that these calculators are just estimates based on population statistics so ultimately your real world results would dictate needing to either increase or decrease calories. But also, as mentioned, human error is a pretty consistent component of calorie tracking...even among professional dieticians and the like.
As for medications, most of them suppress appetite, causing people to eat less and thus lose weight. If appetite isn't a particular issue for you then medication isn't really going to do much. Also, it is my understanding that most of these medications require a medical diagnosis of obesity and/or diagnosis of other related medical issues for these drugs to be prescribed and for insurance coverage. Without insurance, these medications are very expensive...over $1K per month.
A friend of mine was recently prescribed Ozempic...he was well over 350 Lbs at 5'11" and a host of related medical complications from his obesity. Even with insurance, he's paying quite a bit. When prescribed purely for weight loss, insurance generally doesn't cover. Side effects aside, it all seems like a pretty pricey way to go about things. For myself, it would really have to be a last resort kind of thing.
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To PAV888: I have been trying to increase the dosage per protocol for the drug, and under my physician’s supervision. At the moment, I can’t even find a lower dose, so I may discover what happens when suddenly I am off the drug entirely. Not looking forward to that and hope it does not happen.
To others: yes, this drug (Mounjaro) is usually not covered, regardless of whether one has diabetes. This is a real problem, because obesity is at its highest prevalence among people with lower incomes, who can least afford the $1100/mo price tag, even after cutting back on other expenses. I am hoping that as longer term data shows that reducing obesity reduces other costs for the co-morbidities that come with obesity, the public and private insurers will see it is in their economic self interest to cover the Rx price.2 -
I'd love to hear your experience being on weight loss medication. What do you take? What are the side effects? I feel that I need to consider this option after several years of trying to lose weight with minimal results. I'm 61 and am at 194 lbs and I weight train 3x/week and walk, bike or do stationery bike intervals on other days. My ability to lose weight has tanked over the past two years. I switched to MFP after many years doing WW and despite being meticulous about tracking and weighing everything that goes in my mouth I can't seem to lose. I'm eating 1700 calories a day keeping protein high (127g/day) and carbs low (100g/day) but am not making progress.
How tall are you?
There are mistakes that people commonly make that cause them to not lose weight that we might be able to spot if you change your Diary Sharing settings to Public: http://www.myfitnesspal.com/account/diary_settings2 -
@cwolfman13 Thank you for the feedback and your analysis definitely shed light on the difficulty that I'm having with weight loss. I am 5'6" and have been tracking and weighing carefully for about 6 weeks and have lost nothing. I even cut my calories down from 1800 to 1750 and now to 1700. I AM at a deficit and am not losing.2
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@kshama2001 my diary settings are public. I'm 5'6" tall. I have been meticulous about tracking and weighing everything, except for the last two days because it was a Jewish holiday and I couldn't record my food because I don't go online on the holiday. I went off track a bit over those two days but nothing crazy. Except for that I have been a model tracker!1
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@cwolfman13 Thank you for the feedback and your analysis definitely shed light on the difficulty that I'm having with weight loss. I am 5'6" and have been tracking and weighing carefully for about 6 weeks and have lost nothing. I even cut my calories down from 1800 to 1750 and now to 1700. I AM at a deficit and am not losing.
Unfortunately, it's our actual fat loss rate that tells us whether we're in a calorie deficit or not. If not losing weight over a multi-week period, and if no reasons for long-term water retention increases masking fat loss, then we're not in a deficit.
MFP, the so-called calorie calculators, and even fitness trackers only give us estimates based on average calorie needs for people similar to us on a few data points (the ones we enter into the app/device). But each of us is a unique individual. Most people will be close to those averages, a few may be noticeably off (high or low), and a really rare few will be surprisingly far off. That's the nature of statistical estimates. The individual may not have any idea why they're non-average, but the weight loss rate trend tells a true story, given a long enough period of monitoring results.
I'm one of the weirdos. MFP and my good brand/model fitness are off by 25-30% daily for me, compared with almost 8 years of calorie logging experience. It's rare, but it happens.
This is not to discount common issues - which may or may not apply in your case - like logging accuracy, unlogged or underlogged cheat days, overestimating activity level or exercise calories, and that sort of thing.
Bottom line, though: Not losing weight over a long time period, not in a deficit, no matter what a calculator, fitness tracker, or doctor says.
If you feel you should be losing weight, talk to your doctor about possible underlying causes, and ask for a referral to a registered dietitian to help you figure it out.3 -
I did a year on Mounjaro, lost about 40 lbs. The “coupon” ended recently, and so did my $35 monthly cost. It’s been a great jump start and I’m thrilled at what I got out of it.
The medication alone only took me so far. I’m 5’11” 30 years ago as a young Marine I was at my peak level of fitness at 205lbs. For the last 20 years I’ve drifted between 250 and 270. 270 seems to be my “set point’ for the last 15 years. Now at 61, I see how much muscle I’ve lost over the years of inactivity. And even with the medication, I’ve been at 230 for a few months.
So for me, I can’t justify the huge cost moving forward without insurance. I need to do more to get to my goal - and yes I’ve read all about the dire predictions… I’m moving to an old school conservative approach to keep things moving a few pounds a month. Adding weight lifting to my routine will be new to me… we’ll see how it goes !
Dan in Dallas4 -
I am just completing a weight loss study of Mounjaro plus an added hormone. I don't know whether I got the placebo of the hormone or not, but the Mounjaro made me lose 19 lbs in 3 months. Unfortunately my insurance (Tricare) will not allow me to continue the Mounjaro, and I don't qualify for the savings card. But the drug study gave me a chance to try it. So I lost 19 lbs and gained $19,000 in compensation. I had 1 bad effect the first dose, nausea, did not throw up, but felt crappy, it passed in a few hours and no side effects since. Now it's back to tracking, weighing everything that goes in my mouth and working out.2
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Any way you can put that $19,000 toward paying for the drug, since it’s working for you? I’m on it since November and have lost 108 pounds (toward an overall goal of losing 145 pounds). Side effects were bad for one or two weeks early in, but after that, they were gone. With weight loss, exercise became less onerous and now I am doing at least an hour a day in gym and/or pool, , plus eating no more than 1200 cal/day, usually much less. The drug has helped quell repetitive thinking about food and food cravings, which gives me the space I need to exercise ordinary self control and select healthier foods. It would be a shame if you had to give up the help the drug offers. But if you can’t put the earnings toward it, might your insurer cover Wegovy, which is approved by FDA for weight loss (even for people without diabetes)? Anyway, all best wishes for you.1
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I didn't like it. They put me on ozempic because of diabetes, I'd been weaning off insulin and other meds. Later they switched to mounjaro because ozempic became too popular and hard to get. Gave me lots of bloating, discomfort, nausea, constipation... Ozempic was bad, mounjaro was worse. I'm losing weight anyway and my diabetes is well under control now without them so I just told the dr. I'm not taking that stuff anymore.3
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I didn’t read any of the comments, however, I will tell you that none of those drugs will work long-term. The only thing that will work long-term is a diet that allows you to eat a certain way for basically the rest of your life. Anything else is strictly temporary and the weight will come right back on. Everyone thinks once the weights off the job is done, but that is when the job actually starts.0
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tomcustombuilder wrote: »I didn’t read any of the comments, however, I will tell you that none of those drugs will work long-term. The only thing that will work long-term is a diet that allows you to eat a certain way for basically the rest of your life. Anything else is strictly temporary and the weight will come right back on. Everyone thinks once the weights off the job is done, but that is when the job actually starts.
The thought / hope behind some of the more recent drug developments IS that the drugs will be taken "forever". Sort of like blood-thinners, cholesterol drugs, type 2 diabetes medication, thyroid medication, blood pressure medication, prostate medication, or even various long term mood altering medications. Not short term like antibiotics.
Whether this generation of drugs is there in terms of safety and lack of side effects, that I don't know, and given my personal inclinations I would prefer to let others find out for me!1 -
If you are not morbidly obese you probably would not need these meds. For those who are and who have spent years trying to lose weight it provides hope that weight will come off. Success breeds success in all endeavors!0
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As an add on, if I were today where I was 9.5 years ago I don't know that I wouldn't have signed up for the injectables.. it would have been a much closer call in spite of the level of unknowns I still think they represent.
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This is a loaded question ..as you can see.. all sorts of judgy opinions. My husband has two friends who went on that weight loss medication. They both lost about 40 pounds.. then stopped losing.. because they didn't implement dietary changes and exercise. They realize they will have to put in more effort to totally lose their weight.
I'd guess. .since you've been trying to lose weight and have good behaviors in place.. one of these new weightloss drugs could help you tremendously. They both said.. it is amazing how they don't keep eating and eating and don't have cravings
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Have you tried reducing your calories by 1-200 per day? My job leads to a dissapointingly low maintenance level. What MFP tells us we need is just an estimate. I cannot eat more than 1600 and stay the same size.
What makes you insist that you are certainly in a deficit?0
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