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20 votes
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US Supreme Court temporarily blocks $6 billion Purdue Pharma-Sackler bankruptcy
28 votes -
Some patients who took weight-loss drugs face disturbing side effects
33 votes -
What is your experience with switching medication and brain zaps?
I've just started switching my medication and it's been pretty bad for me. Brain zaps are very frequent and I'm crying a lot. I'm struggling. I've been trying to find out what other people's...
I've just started switching my medication and it's been pretty bad for me. Brain zaps are very frequent and I'm crying a lot. I'm struggling.
I've been trying to find out what other people's experience has been like when they switch meds. What is normal and what isn't. People who relate to brain zaps and how they deal with it. Are brain zaps even considered a real thing?
What has your experience been like?
26 votes -
How a drug maker profited by slow-walking a promising HIV therapy
21 votes -
How does the new over-the-counter birth control pill, Opill, work to prevent pregnancy?
16 votes -
First over-the-counter birth control pill gets US Food and Drug Administration approval
58 votes -
Johnson & Johnson has granted Stop TB Partnership license to produce generic bedaquiline in low and middle-income countries
33 votes -
An open letter to Johnson & Johnson regarding its strategy to extend its patent on bedaquiline leading to a predicted six million lives lost over four years
79 votes -
Most patients using weight-loss drugs like Wegovy stop within a year, data show
10 votes -
Could this drug help cure PTSD? With Rachel Nuwer - Factually
8 votes -
Golden age of medicine
18 votes -
Heat sensitivity/intolerance
So it is 80 degrees fahrenheit here today which usually would not be an issue for me but today I was too hot and sweaty. I am perimenopausal (49 years old) and I knew that could mess with heat...
So it is 80 degrees fahrenheit here today which usually would not be an issue for me but today I was too hot and sweaty. I am perimenopausal (49 years old) and I knew that could mess with heat tolerance. What I had not realized until today is that heat intolerance is also a side effect of many blood pressure medicines, antidepressants and allergy meds. And I am on all of those now.
I have just ordered some gadget that is a fan that goes around my neck and can be recharged via USB which seemed worth trying. And of course I will drink plenty of water, and try to stay in air conditioning whenever I can. Any other advice on how to deal with increased sensitivity to heat / higher heat intolerance? It is still early enough in the summer that the worst summer heat here is yet to come, so having some more tips might help me. Thanks!
26 votes -
Goodbye, Ozempic
33 votes -
Copaganda: What cop shows get wrong about Fentanyl
10 votes -
Trace amounts of antidepressants cause behavioral changes in crayfish, potentially making them more vulnerable to predators
14 votes -
How do you keep track of your medication refills?
Every person in my household takes a daily regimen of prescription medication and/or supplements. We keep ending up in situations where we run out of something because we don’t have a good way to...
Every person in my household takes a daily regimen of prescription medication and/or supplements. We keep ending up in situations where we run out of something because we don’t have a good way to keep track of our remaining supply of each thing. We need a better system for managing this!
We each use a 28-day (4 week) pill dispenser box which helps somewhat. I refill the dispensers when they are empty. The problem is, some of the medications run out in the last week of the dispenser. At the time I fill it, it’s way too early to call the pharmacy for a refill. But by the time the supply runs out I’ve forgotten about it and have to scramble to get more. I hope I’m explaining that clearly. It’s complicated because every medication runs out on a different schedule.
If you’ve got a solution to this problem please share it!
15 votes -
US medical insurers clamping down on doctors who prescribe Ozempic for weight loss
22 votes -
Alzheimer’s drug gets Food and Drug Administration panel’s backing, setting the stage for broader US use
13 votes -
MIT-founded drone company Aviant launches home delivery service Kyte in Norway
5 votes -
Lung cancer pill cuts risk of death by half, says ‘thrilling’ study
11 votes -
How Sweden and Denmark became rare bright spots for Europe's pharma industry
3 votes -
Abortion pills: An option not talked about
6 votes -
Bioluminescence helps researchers develop cancer drugs for brain
3 votes -
Incredible invention - this drone could change everything
21 votes -
Are cures for some of the world’s deadliest diseases hiding in our sewers?
7 votes -
Inside Denmark's opioid crisis – more teens are abusing opioids because they take the pills both to get high and to cope with anxiety
3 votes -
The ‘breakthrough’ obesity drugs that have stunned researchers
17 votes -
UK girl with deadly inherited condition is cured with gene therapy on NHS
9 votes -
Semaglutide weight loss injections to be made available directly from pharmacies in the UK
6 votes -
Depression has often been blamed on low levels of serotonin in the brain. That answer is insufficient, but alternatives are coming into view and changing our understanding of the disease.
9 votes -
UnitedHealthcare tried to deny coverage to a chronically ill US patient. He fought back, exposing the insurer’s inner workings.
15 votes -
Cancer mRNA vaccine completes pivotal trial
5 votes -
Millions of Alzheimer’s patients have been given hope after a new drug has been shown to slow memory decline by 27% over eighteen months. It's the biggest breakthrough in a generation.
8 votes -
US Food and Drug Administration approves most expensive drug ever, a $3.5 million-per-dose gene therapy for hemophilia B
6 votes -
The Ice Bucket Challenge wasn't just for social media. It helped fund a new ALS drug.
6 votes -
US Food and Drug Administration officials took months to inspect a critical plant in Europe, leaving Americans without shots as mpox spreads
9 votes -
Facebook, Instagram taking down posts about US abortion pills
5 votes -
I've been on the hair loss drug Dutasteride for two years now. AMA.
I'll start this post off by summarizing my hair loss experience. When I was 18, a few months shy of 19, I went to the barber and there was a miscommunication and the barber ended up buzzing my...
I'll start this post off by summarizing my hair loss experience.
When I was 18, a few months shy of 19, I went to the barber and there was a miscommunication and the barber ended up buzzing my hair off. This is the first time that I was able to see my hairline in a while and I saw that it was higher than I remembered. I was scared at first, I couldn't believe that my hairline was receding. But then I read a few things figures maybe it was just maturing, and then I eventually forgot. Actually a few months later I was back thinking to whether I was losing my hair or not. I talked to a cousin of mine and he said something about a pill that he was taking but that it had a possible side effect of erectile dysfunction. I wasn't going to take a chance on that when I wasn't even sure if I was actually balding.
The next year and a half, I stop thinking about hair loss. It's like I had my memory wiped of that moment, probably due to stress from school. The only thing that happened is that I thought to myself was "man my hair is kind of weird right now." And also I had developed a scalp issue, which I later found out was psoriasis also due to stress.
So, right before the pandemic hits in February 2020, me and my dad go have lunch at this restaurant. I take a shower and go out. My hair is still wet by the time we go to the restaurant. My dad looks up at my hair and asks "are you losing your hair?" And that's when I realized that I was indeed going bald. For the next three months, I was going through all the stages of grief. I was wildly depressed and anxious. I did some research into possible treatments. It took me a while to learn (or re-learn) about the pill known as finasteride. I then find out about a website where you can buy prescription meds without a prescription shipped over from India so I buy finasteride from there and I started treatment on May 1st 2020. I was 20 years old. I then go to the dermatologist two months later and they prescribe me Dutasteride which I have been on ever since.
My initial side effect on the drug was watery semen, which cleared up a few weeks after starting the drug. My hair has re-grown a lot. It's back to it's original thickness, and my hairline has made a rather substantial comeback. It's not all back, but enough to the point where the average person wouldn't know I'm balding anymore.
Let me know if you have any questions. I would love to post pictures, but I rather not if that's okay with everyone.
18 votes -
Dual use of artificial-intelligence-powered drug discovery
5 votes -
Moderna drops vaccine patent in ninety-two low income countries
14 votes -
Sacklers raise their offer to settle opioid lawsuits by more than $1 billion
7 votes -
The inside story of the Pfizer vaccine: A 'once-in-an-epoch windfall'
6 votes -
A major reversal on aspirin highlights a concept everyone should understand
12 votes -
Merck says research shows its COVID-19 pill works against variants
13 votes -
The Sacklers, who made billions from OxyContin, win immunity from US opioid lawsuits
10 votes -
Thoughts on SSRIs?
Hello everyone, I recently got put on some SSRI for my worsening suicidal ideation and honestly I can't believe the difference it's made. It's like a version of myself that I find hard to believe...
Hello everyone,
I recently got put on some SSRI for my worsening suicidal ideation and honestly I can't believe the difference it's made. It's like a version of myself that I find hard to believe existed, but can draw parallels with the version of me before I got depressed, etc.
I'm just curious how I should be viewing these changes in me: Are they really me without depression/anxiety or is it a more lurid exaggerated version of that?
Any other thoughts on SSRIs in general welcome! I'm interested in seeing Tildians' thoughts on them :)
18 votes -
PrEP, the HIV prevention pill, must now be totally free under almost all US insurance plans
16 votes -
Fire in the Blood (2013 documentary)
3 votes -
In the tales told by sewage, public health and privacy collide
5 votes