Diamond Member Pelican Press 0 Posted January 25 Diamond Member Share Posted January 25 This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up A woman regained weight after she stopped taking semaglutide. Now she works 2 jobs to afford it. Staci Rice lost 64 pounds on a compounded form of the weight loss drug semaglutide. It was expensive so she tried to maintain her weight loss without the medication, and gained 26 pounds. Rice started a side hustle so she could go back on the medication. The This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up was a “miracle” for Staci Rice. Her cravings and “food noise” disappeared, and it help her lose 64 pounds in around eight months. But, even in its cheaper forms, the cost was a lot to bear. As Rice discovered — stopping or even cutting back on the injections often undoes the weight loss. She ended up taking a second job to afford it. When Rice reached her goal weight, she tried phasing out semaglutide (marketed as This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up ), using smaller and less frequent doses to trim costs. She gained 26 pounds, she told Business Insider. To afford to restart the drug, she launched a This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up in digital marketing alongside the 40 hours a week she worked to get her new insurance business off the ground. Rice, a 42-year-old from Georgia, restarted on a low dose to minimize costs, deciding when to start and stop without medical guidance. The cost was different depending on the provider, and she used the money from her “very stressful” jobs to pay for it. She now takes a low weekly dose (0.25 milligrams was her lowest, and her highest 2.5 milligrams). A 10-week supply sets her back $305, and she is budgeting to afford it. Compounded semaglutide is typically cheaper than branded products Semaglutide is part of the family of appetite-suppressing drugs called GLP-1s, which includes products such as Mounjaro. Rice is among users who take This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up They aren’t FDA-approved but are significantly cheaper than branded products, which can cost around $1,000 a month. In August 2024, This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up reduced the price of its GLP-1 Zepbound by almost 50% to compete with knock-offs. It now sells for $399 to $549 a month, down from $1,059. Many insurance companies cover the drugs for diabetes but not weight loss. In November, the Biden administration proposed a new rule to This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up to include GLP-1s for weight loss, but it’s unclear if President Donald Trump will follow through. But even the compounded form, which at one point cost Rice $499, was expensive. She stopped using semaglutide and gained 26 pounds Rice started taking This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up in May 2022. After she achieved her goal of losing 64 pounds, she saved up for a $18,500 “mommy makeover” (tummy tuck and breast augmentation) in April 2023, she said. GLP-1 users are encouraged to build up from a low dose to minimize This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up like nausea and constipation. At first, a $499 supply lasted Rice three months, reducing to a month as she upped the dose. After the surgery, she started injecting the medication less frequently to maintain her weight rather than lose more. In early 2024, money was tight after Rice changed jobs and semaglutide seemed like something she could cut back on. She bought the compounded drug online, so she made these changes without the guidance of a medical professional. Dr. This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up , an obesity specialist and founder of a virtual health clinic specializing in GLP-1s, told *** that it’s not advisable to change doses without consulting a doctor. “I thought that I could go less and less, and eventually, I got to where I was forgetting to take the injection,” Rice said. “I was thinking I had this, I was thinking, ‘Now I’m set. I don’t need to take the medicine anymore.'” Staci Rice in June 2023 after her ‘mommy makeover’ (left) and in November 2024.Staci Rice Rice maintained her weight for a couple of months. And although she started eating more, she presumed it wouldn’t affect her progress. But the “ This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up ” in Rice’s head — cravings for sugar and sweet treats when experiencing heightened emotions — gradually returned, and she regained 26 pounds over about six months. Rice had a small amount of medication left which she would take now and then, but it wasn’t enough to lose weight, and she couldn’t afford her previous maintenance dose. “I started to notice my clothes were getting tighter,” Rice said. Knee problems, a swollen finger, and various other aches and pains returned. Nadolsky said he’d seen clients who abruptly stopped taking GLP-1s because their insurance no longer covered them or there were This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up . However, regaining weight is the biggest risk associated with coming on and off the medicine, he said. “Obesity is a chronic disease and these medicines work by helping people manage their appetite and food noise,” he said. “The cost of these medicines must come down. And if insurance doesn’t cover them, it would be ideal that the cost would be low enough to pay out-of-pocket for them. The medicines are not a short-term fix. They are designed and used for the chronic disease of obesity.” Lars Fruergaard Jørgensen, the CEO of Novo Nordisk which makes Ozempic and Wegovy, has previously This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up insurers and middlemen for the high prices of the drugs. A side hustle to fund semaglutide Towards the end of 2024, Rice had started her side hustle. “I’m going to get back on track and I’m going to get back to where I was,” Rice said. “But I hate that I ended up spending a good amount on a mommy makeover.” Rice said she feels guilty that she put her family in a financial bind and, if she could go back in time, isn’t sure she would have had the surgery. She hopes she’ll be back at her goal weight by February, and then plans to stay on a maintenance dose long-term. She sees regaining the weight as a valuable lesson that maintainance without medication isn’t as easy as she thought. “It is a miracle medicine,” Rice said. “I’m always going to be an advocate for it.” Read the original article on This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up #woman #regained #weight #stopped #semaglutide #works #jobs #afford This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up Link to comment https://hopzone.eu/forums/topic/199133-a-woman-regained-weight-after-she-stopped-taking-semaglutide-now-she-works-2-jobs-to-afford-it/ Share on other sites More sharing options...
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