{"id":22734,"date":"2024-01-21T20:39:59","date_gmt":"2024-01-21T15:09:59","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/farratanews.online\/how-ozempic-other-weight-loss-drugs-are-changing-medicine\/"},"modified":"2024-01-21T20:39:59","modified_gmt":"2024-01-21T15:09:59","slug":"how-ozempic-other-weight-loss-drugs-are-changing-medicine","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/farratanews.online\/how-ozempic-other-weight-loss-drugs-are-changing-medicine\/","title":{"rendered":"How Ozempic, other weight-loss drugs are “changing medicine”"},"content":{"rendered":"
[ad_1]\n<\/p>\n
Forty-four-year-old LaQuita Clark says memories of being overweight \u2013 and ridiculed \u2013 go back to middle school. “I remember sitting on the school steps with a group of my friends, and just a group of other kids walking by: ‘Oh my God, you’re so fat!’ It was very hurtful.” <\/p>\n
Over the years, Clark, a nurse in Nashville, Tennessee, tried everything from fad dieting to kickboxing. Nothing worked. “It was almost like torture, because of that relationship that I had with the food, these are things that I love,” she said. “I’m eating things that I love, and it’s giving me comfort at the moment. So, why change that?”<\/p>\n
But last June, everything changed when, diagnosed as prediabetic, Clark was prescribed Ozempic. With one small injection a week, her health improved \u2013 and something else happened. <\/p>\n