2023年6月6日 星期二

Should teens be taking Wegovy?

Plus more health news |

Email not displaying correctly? View it in your browser.
  
What doctors say about semaglutide treatments for teenagers
By Jamie Ducharme
Health Correspondent

I often report on teen mental health. So, after the weight-loss drug Wegovy was approved for kids as young as 12 late last year, I wondered if using an appetite suppressant in this still-developing age group could raise the risk of eating disorders and other mental-health concerns.

The short answer: it’s not clear yet. There isn't much information about the long-term use of Wegovy—a semaglutide medication, like its sibling drug Ozempic—in adolescents and teenagers, so it’s not certain how it may affect growing minds and bodies over time. The data that are currently available, however, look promising. Wegovy appears to help teens with obesity lose significant weight, potentially preventing or reversing complications and improving life quality.

Some doctors did voice concerns about unintended side effects, but most felt Wegovy offered significant-enough benefits to justify its use. “If you were to think about any other condition, where a new medication could change the lives of kids who otherwise had no options, we would not be discussing whether we should use this medication or not,” says Dr. Raquel Hernandez, director of the Healthy Weight Initiative at Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital.

READ MORE

Share This Story
What Else to Read
What MDMA Taught Me About Human Connection
By Rachel Nuwer
A month or so into COVID lockdown, I had an idea. Why not take a little staycation? Why not take some MDMA, asks Rachel Nuwer.
Read More »
How to Talk to Your Kids About Gender
By Solcyre Burga
TIME spoke to experts about how what families need to know about discussing gender with their children at different stages of their youth.
Read More »
Why the Diabetes Drug Mounjaro Works So Well for Weight Loss
By Alice Park
The drug is currently being reviewed by the FDA for weight loss.
Read More »
How Heat Waves Could Have Long-Term Impacts on Your Health
By Aryn Baker
Extreme heat due to climate change could increase the risk of chronic health problems like kidney disease and obesity.
Read More »
Weight Bias Is a Problem in Health Care. Here’s What Doctors Can Do
By Elizabeth Millard
Here's what doctors can do to address their potential bias.
Read More »
AN EXPERT QUOTE

"People think of forgetting as a deficiency in memory, but it has its own virtues. It cleans out our experience of the world, and allows us to see things more fully unencumbered."

—Robert Kraft, professor of cognitive psychology at Otterbein University in Ohio

If you were forwarded this and want to sign up to receive it daily, click here.

Today's newsletter was written by Jamie Ducharme and Angela Haupt, and edited by Elijah Wolfson.

 
 
 
 
 
 

沒有留言:

張貼留言