Addiction MIRACLE DRUG? Patients Taking Weight Loss Pill Ozempic Also Say It ENDED Their Addictions Weight Loss

Addiction MIRACLE DRUG? Patients Taking Weight Loss Pill Ozempic Also Say It ENDED Their Addictions #weightloss Weight Loss

#weightloss #weightlosspills #weightlosstea

7382 People Read – 288 People Liked You Also Like Comment

Briahna Joy Gray and Robby Soave discuss a new article on the Ozempic drug. #addiction #medication

About Rising:
Rising is a weekday morning show with bipartisan hosts that breaks the mold of morning TV by taking viewers inside the halls of Washington power like never before. The show leans into the day’s political cycle with cutting edge analysis from DC insiders who can predict what is going to happen. It also sets the day’s political agenda by breaking exclusive news with a team of scoop-driven reporters and demanding answers during interviews with the country’s most important political newsmakers.

Follow Rising on social media:

Website: Hill.TV

Facebook: facebook.com/HillTVLive/

Instagram: @HillTVLive

Twitter: @HillTVLive

20 thoughts on “Addiction MIRACLE DRUG? Patients Taking Weight Loss Pill Ozempic Also Say It ENDED Their Addictions Weight Loss”

  1. 3:50 i…a lot of meds have problems, & do not do what they claim (or worse.) just takes 10y to prove, & they still arent pulled by from the mkt. but also: sure! pl do take things everyday. nothing wrong w taking a gamble, life is risk. if it is free espec. it will make a fortune. no matr what hapns. _JC

    Reply
  2. I take this for Diabetes, and suddenly it was not available. Then my doctor put me on Manjouro and after a few months, that became unavailable. Now Ozempic is available again.

    Reply
  3. I have had Ozempic and it works exactly like that they made everything better. I quit drinking they didn’t stifle my appetite, but it did reduce it immensely. It’s a great drug.

    Reply
  4. I was on it for 3 weeks and the bloating was so bad that I couldn’t sleep. I did lose weight and my A1C did go down. Too bad about the bloating.

    Reply
  5. I LOVE listening to you guys. Its soo refreshing to hear a intellectual back and forth conversation that doesnt end in some type of personal attack drama. Thank you.

    Reply
  6. I’ve been taking Ozempic for diabetes for nearly 5 years now, give or take a few years. Its ability to curb your appetite is severely overrated, I’ve noticed next to no difference in my appetite. But I didn’t really have much of a huge appetite anyways to begin with, my diabetes was not due to severe obesity, just a sweet tooth. Now as it turns out my brother has a drug addiction that he’s been dealing with for much longer, if it means that he can get over it with the same medication that I’m using for diabetes, that would be great! But I am highly skeptical that it has any anti-addiction qualities at all.

    Reply
  7. Once again Brie once again! You always take the wrong side seriously, what the hack!! ! Idon’t understand why you can’t see that some people have problems with an experimental vaccination as opposed to some prescription that people choose to take and KNOW what the side effects are., they won’t tell us with the side effects because they DONT KNOW!!!anyway. Bray your arguments never have any water just sick of it..

    Reply
  8. All the beautiful people I know currently I believe have a diet with limited sugar and more intake of cooked organic foods and spices with limited or no chemical ingredients. Their focus is on practical matters where the imagination is in check and the rejuvenation of the unconscious in sleep gives assistance to them helping solve problems.

    Reply
  9. Not too good to be true, effective anti-addiction drugs have been available for decades. Suboxone and Naltrexone (often combined with Bupropion) are very effective treatments for substance abuse disorder. So much of what ails us is the American diet and consumer culture.

    Reply
Leave a Comment