๐งต Scibros we did it
Anonymous at Fri, 26 Jul 2024 01:39:47 UTC No. 16296789
Is this not the biggest pharma breakthrough of the century?
https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126
Anonymous at Fri, 26 Jul 2024 01:45:10 UTC No. 16296798
>>16296789
It cost like $800 per shot. There's a tablet for it too called Rybelsus thats also $800 per tablet. When can be drive this down to $1 per tablet/shot?
Anonymous at Fri, 26 Jul 2024 02:21:36 UTC No. 16296818
>>16296798
A version is released for horses that is available to the general public.
Anonymous at Fri, 26 Jul 2024 02:23:55 UTC No. 16296822
>>16296798
Earliest someone can make a generic is like 2030.
Anonymous at Fri, 26 Jul 2024 02:31:25 UTC No. 16296829
>>16296789
It'll be nice if it's this good but every time a miracle drug comes out there ends up being some sort of side effect like
>unfortunately it seems a single use will initiate a bone loss that only takes place two decades later which doesn't stop until your entire skeleton dissolves
Anonymous at Fri, 26 Jul 2024 02:40:37 UTC No. 16296836
>>16296829
>two decades
They'll have a cure for boneitis by then
Anonymous at Fri, 26 Jul 2024 02:50:05 UTC No. 16296845
>>16296789
wow, reducing hunger will cause people to eat less, which makes them lose weight, which actually causes all those benefits? who could've guessed not being fat is healthy?
also after a few months/years of downregulating satiation sensitivity, the drugs stop working and you get fat again. and after stopping the drugs, you'll get fatter than before you started.
just eat better food and move more to lose weight...
Anonymous at Fri, 26 Jul 2024 03:26:37 UTC No. 16296875
>>16296845
except you build the habit of not eating as much.
and when you stop taking the drug, it's not like you suddenly start eating more. for months you've been eating a certain way.
do you think overeating is a genetic curse? or is it a result of choices people make? your statement is contradictory, in either case.
Anonymous at Fri, 26 Jul 2024 07:57:11 UTC No. 16297056
>>16296789
>>16296845
Yeah not being fat is healthier who knew... Same "mircale drug" if you have a strong will.
Anonymous at Fri, 26 Jul 2024 08:39:37 UTC No. 16297074
>>16296875
Not eating much doesn't cause the massive metabolism boost that drugs do.
Anonymous at Fri, 26 Jul 2024 08:51:15 UTC No. 16297079
If I correctly remember, times in which you can forget everything and sin, because you can buy something that makes it not matter are not considered very nice periods of human race.
Anonymous at Fri, 26 Jul 2024 09:30:48 UTC No. 16297104
>>16296789
>https://www.science.org/doi/10.112
Sponsored by... "Big Pharma"
"D.J.D. is supported by operating grants from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, a Banting and Best Diabetes Centre Chair in Incretin Biology, and a Sinai Health Novo Nordisk Foundation Fund in Regulatory Peptides."
A "press release" or "perspective" article touting a "new wonder drug" without any accompanying scientific experiment, trial, or clinical outcome data is not scientific nor good for several reasons:
Lack of empirical evidence: Scientific research relies on empirical evidence obtained through rigorous experimentation, data collection, and analysis. A press release or "perspective article" without clinical data or trial results lacks the foundation of scientific inquiry.
Biased reporting: When funding comes from producers and beneficiaries of the "wonder drug," it creates a significant conflict of interest.
This bias can lead to selective reporting, exaggeration, or misrepresentation of the drug's effectiveness, which undermines the integrity of the information presented.
Marketing Technique: Buzzwords and Overcomplexification:
PR and marketing strategists often employ the following tactics to create a smoke-and-mirrors effect.
>Faux-expertise: Using statements or quotes from non-experts or pseudo-experts to create the illusion of credibility.
>Misleading headlines: Crafting headlines that are sensational, misleading, or tangentially related to the actual content.
Using buzzwords and jargon to create a description that sounds scientifically compelling, even if the underlying mechanism is dubious.
For example, instead of saying:
"GLP-1 protects the ischemic heart in normotensive nondiabetic animals to a greater extent than achieved with weight loss."
You could say:
"GLP-1 helps reduce the risk of heart attacks in animals, even when they don't have high blood pressure or diabetes, more effectively than weight loss alone."
Anonymous at Sat, 27 Jul 2024 02:29:37 UTC No. 16298298
>>16296798
It's already less than $100 per month from compounding pharmacies.
Anonymous at Sat, 27 Jul 2024 02:30:20 UTC No. 16298299
>>16298298
it's even cheaper if you establish a contact on alibaba. i buy it by the kilo.
Anonymous at Sat, 27 Jul 2024 02:49:35 UTC No. 16298322
>>16296829
Wait until after the patent runs out and then you'll start seeing hundreds of class action lawsuits about it causing cancer and eating brain tissue
Anonymous at Sat, 27 Jul 2024 02:53:15 UTC No. 16298329
I was born with deformed kidneys and have not been able to do a lot of things as a result like joining the military. Feels bad that I couldn't have just been born in like 2035 when Ozempic 2.5 eliminates Kidney disease.
Anonymous at Sat, 27 Jul 2024 10:29:08 UTC No. 16298730
The world cannot be True
Anonymous at Sat, 27 Jul 2024 11:10:11 UTC No. 16298760
>>16298299
do you throw ozempic parties?
Anonymous at Sat, 27 Jul 2024 11:20:31 UTC No. 16298772
>>16296798
This is the moment you realize India was your biggest ally. Apologize and $1 drugs will be yours