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I just saw a commercial on TV for weight loss .. and this drug called "Hydroxycut" was being marketed. the spokesman physician was a DO ... i was like, lmao ... the commercial was weird overall.
i find it ironic that DOs are endorsing weight loss pills, when that is one thing that a pill should definitely not be used for. A.T. Still would be very disappointed...
why not? if you can find a safe, effective pill then it definitely should be used
i'm not sure if "safe" and "diet pill" go together, especially since none of them are FDA approved. plus, the publicized, harmful effects of fen-phen and ephedra have not given them they best reputation. weight loss is something that should be natural and encourages a change in lifestyle - not a quick fix pill. any doctor, especially DOs, should know that.
i'm not sure if "safe" and "diet pill" go together, especially since none of them are FDA approved. plus, the publicized, harmful effects of fen-phen and ephedra have not given them they best reputation. weight loss is something that should be natural and encourages a change in lifestyle - not a quick fix pill. any doctor, especially DOs, should know that.
I saw that commercial too...like 2 years ago!
i politely disagree. i'll repeat, if a safe, effective pill is engineered, then there is no reason people should not use it. I don't buy the "it should be natural" line. That could apply to many diseases which we treat with pills. Maybe fighting off infection by the immune system "should be natural" but we still use antibiotics. Maybe lowering cholesterol by eating less meat should be natural, but we still use lipitor. Trust in scientific research, every doctor should know that.
Also, if someone was looking at the coat and noticed it was a DO, theyd be like, not shocking that a "quack" DO would be advertising and endorsing such a diet pill in what appeared to be a ridiculous commercial. It only gives DOs a worse name ...
Umm.. are you calling DO's quacks in general and that this commercial/pill is just proving your point or are you just expressing your concern that a rogue physician who happens to be a DO is selling a product that you think is not great?? Also I really don't know too many people out there that would think "not shocking that a "quack" DO would be advertising and endorsing such a diet pill." If you feel that there is some stigma against being a DO then I seriously don't know how well you are going to do in a DO school where the aim is to become one. Good luck!!
then i agree to disagree.
PS i do trust in scientific research. but has there even been funded, scientific research on these pills?
yes, there has been plenty. Has any shown good results? Not really. What I am saying is if there was a study(s) that did find a drug safe and effective, then by all means it should be considered. I am just saying I don't buy the whole "do it naturally just because it seems like that's the way it should be" way of thinking.
yes, there has been plenty. Has any shown good results? Not really. What I am saying is if there was a study(s) that did find a drug safe and effective, then by all means it should be considered. I am just saying I don't buy the whole "do it naturally just because it seems like that's the way it should be" way of thinking.
Wow, you guys truly need to work on reading comprehension.
I was referring to how the general public who may not know about DOs often may consider them to be "quack" doctors, especially the MDs .. and seeing how the DO physician was endorsing this drug that isnt even FDA or clinically proven to allow for weight loss (and the weirdness of the commercial) .. it PERPETUATES the problem ... i have nothing against DOs, if i did, I would never ever consider applying to DO schools ... think!![]()