The Dr. Hyman Show - Encore: The Shocking Truth About Ozempic & The Effects It Has On The Body | Calley Means & Dr. Tyna Moore
Episode Date: December 25, 2024Like most things in life, when it comes to optimizing metabolic health, a nuanced perspective can help. Rather than viewing it as a black-and-white issue, we can take into consideration the big-pictur...e social context we’re facing that encourages ultra-processed foods, obesity, and lifelong medication as well as the micro-level of what people are experiencing as individuals and understanding how to help them when all else fails. Today I’m thrilled to sit down with Dr. Tyna Moore and Calley Means for a grounded discussion that explores both sides of the spectrum, and everything in between. In this episode, we discuss: The controversial discussion of GLP-1 agonists like Ozempic, weighing the pros and cons of these new drugs in treating obesity and metabolic crises (3:34) Challenging the notion of treating obesity with drugs like Ozempic (10:35) An unsettling revelation about the push for using Ozempic in children (12:04) Digging deeper into GLP-1 research and some of the benefits (32:51) Why are children being born metabolically challenged? (41:11) Dr. Moore’s approach to using peptides with her patients and for her own crippling pain, and what they’ve seen (45:19) How our current healthcare system lacks policies and support for behavior change (1:27) While there are always differing views, we know for sure that our food and drug policies aren’t serving the best interests of creating sustainable, empowered health for the masses. I hope you’ll tune in to hear more from this comprehensive and lively discussion. View Show Notes From This Episode Get Free Weekly Health Tips from Dr. Hyman Sign Up for Dr. Hyman’s Weekly Longevity Journal This episode is brought to you by Rupa Health, BIOptimizers, Pique, and Big Bold Health. Streamline your lab orders with Rupa Health. Access more than 3,500 specialty lab tests and register for a FREE live demo at RupaHealth.com. Don’t let stress take over your holidays. Try Magnesium Breakthrough from BiOptimizers. Head to Bioptimizers.com/Hyman and use code HYMAN10 to save 10%. Head over to PiqueLife.com/Hyman20 and get up to 20% off + a complimentary beaker and rechargeable frother. Big Bold Health is offering my listeners 30% off their first order of HTB Rejuvenate Superfood. Head to Bigboldhealth.com and use code DrHyman30.
Transcript
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Hey everyone, it's Dr. Mark Hyman. Thank you so much for being a loyal listener to The Doctor's
Pharmacy. For the holidays, I've decided to give my team a little break to rest up and prepare
for more content and the new year ahead. So The Doctor's Pharmacy will be replaying some older
episodes for the next two weeks. But don't worry, we'll be back with more content and brand new
episodes starting Tuesday, December 31st. So for now, here are some of my favorite past episodes
of The Doctor's Pharmacy and see you next year. pressure, blood pressure's down. I personally take it because I have psoriatic arthritis and I have crippling pain from tip to toe. It doesn't matter how clean of a life I live. It doesn't matter how
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you'll get discounts, free gifts, and a guaranteed supply each month. So just to give you a little
more detail on our guest today, Dr. Tina Moore has nearly three decades of experience in the medical field.
She's a leading holistic expert in regenerative medicine and resilient metabolic health.
She fixed people who are metabolically busted.
She's trained in alternative science and medicine as a naturopathic doctor and chiropractor.
And she's a podcast host, a speaker, kettlebell devotee, a mother, an advocate for health
autonomy.
She's got a great podcast called The Dr. Tinaina show she's passionate about making people actually better and callie means who's
been on the podcast before as the founder of true med a company that enables tax-free spending on
food and exercise he's also the co-author with his sister dr casey means of good energy the
surprising connection between metabolism and limitless health which is available right now
earlier in his career callie was a consultant for food and pharma companies
and is now exposing those practices that they use to weaponize our institutions of trust.
In the past year, he's met with 50 members of Congress
and presidential candidates advocating policies
to combat the corruption of pharma and food industries.
He's a graduate of Stanford and Harvard Business School.
And this podcast is going to be a doozy.
It's a bit long, but I encourage you to stay with us the whole time.
We get into all of it from the macro, what is causing our obesity epidemic, our metabolic
crisis, and what we can do about it from the social and political level, but also on the
micro.
What about that person sitting in our office or struggling with weight and struggling with
being obese and not knowing how to get out of that pickle?
And what is the right way to do it?
What are the pros and cons of these new drugs, GLP-1 agonists? Are their side effects real?
Do they have benefits beyond weight loss? Should we be using them? How should we be using them?
Are the regular pharmacological approaches wrong? Is there another way using microdosing or
compounded pharmaceutical versions of these peptides that might be actually safer and better
used with a 360 approach for lifestyle? So we're going to get all of these andides that might be actually safer and better used with a 360 approach for
lifestyle. So we're going to get all of these and you're going to be in a very robust, sometimes
heated discussion about Ozempic and the GLP-1 agonist. So stay with us for the whole thing.
And I know you'll love it. Let's dive in right now. All right. Welcome Tina and welcome Callie.
It's great to have you both on the show. Pumped a beer. Thank you. Okay. So this is such a rich
topic and it's so deep. And I spent probably 15
hours preparing for this podcast, my reading, everything that both of you written, reading
study after study, after study, looking at the data very carefully. And I can honestly say that
after not just reading the headlines, but between the lines, reading the research, I've come to
understand that this is a very nuanced conversation. It's not just good or bad. It's not just, we
should do it or we shouldn't do it. It's really about understanding, one, the bigger
social context in which this is happening. The bigger social context is we are facing a metabolic
health and obesity crisis that's never been seen before in the history of humanity. There's over
a billion people who are obese, up to 2 billion people who are overweight in the world. We have
in America, it's even worse. We have 42% obese, we have 75% overweight, and 93.2% metabolic and healthy, meaning they're on the spectrum of some poor metabolic dysfunction, which is making them on their way towards prediabetes and type 2 diabetes.
And the costs are staggering. $1.3 trillion in direct costs. And probably 80% of that is for chronic disease, mostly caused by our food and primarily driven
by this phenomenon of insulin resistance, which is part of what Ozempic and these drugs
purport to fix.
So as we start to think about how do we solve this problem, I've been thinking about it
from the very macro view, which is how do we deal with the food environment, the toxic
food environment that's caused us to be in this situation? This is not a genetic problem.
There may be genetics that load the gun, but the environment pulls the trigger. And the environment
has changed in the last 50 years so dramatically that it's led to an abundance of toxic food,
ultra-processed food, high starch and sugar in our diet, ingredients we've never had before
that are destroying our microbiome, that are destroying our nutritional resilience,
that are causing poor metabolic health,
and are really at the root of so much of what's going on.
So I focused on policy issues.
I wrote my book, Food Fix, which was an attempt to kind of lay out why this is happening.
Because I realized I couldn't cure diabetes in my office.
It's cured on the farm.
It's cured in the factory where they make the food.
It's cured in the grocery store, in the kitchen.
That's where diabetes is cured.
And ultimately, I realized I had to go upstream to deal with the root causes, which is our
bigger food system.
And we're going to get to talk about that with Callie, because he's been talking about
and thinking about it for a long time.
And I think his new book, Good Energy, addresses a lot of these issues around metabolic health.
It's his sister, Casey Means, who's been on the show.
No, I often get them confused.
Callie, Casey is...
I don't know what their parents are thinking, but I think I've sorted it
out. And Tina has a very different perspective, which is really around the micro, not the macro,
which is how do we deal with individuals struggling with metabolic dysfunction who
tried everything, done everything, hit the wall, can't make it work, struggle, white knuckle,
and just can't get their bodies back into a state of
good metabolic health.
And we're going to talk about how she does that, why it's different than the traditional
approaches to the use of these drugs, and why we need to rethink how we're doing this.
So this is going to be a very interesting conversation.
I'm really excited to dive in.
And so first, we're going to start with the macro and start with Callie, because I want
you to set the stage for the situation we're in around our poor metabolic health and obesity and what this is doing to us as a society, economically, socially, politically, even in terms of our social divisions and conflict, all driven by the effect of these things on our physical and mental health.
So can you kind of unpack for us, Callie, how you see the current state of affairs in the realm of weight and obesity? I really just read an article this morning and said,
it's not okay to say someone's obese. You have to say they're someone with obesity.
I get it, but we've got to have to sort of take a hard look at this. And so tell us from your
perspective, how should we be thinking about this problem at a macro level?
Thank you so much for convening this conversation. Dr. Teen has had a huge impact on me and I really And so tell us from your perspective, how should we be thinking about this problem at a macro level?
Thank you so much for convening this conversation.
Dr. Dean has had a huge impact on me.
And I really think this is important to have a long-form, nuanced conversation that goes over the micro and the macro.
And as you said, I've been really focused on the macro.
I think there's some really important macro considerations that patients need to know before thinking about Ozempic.
And that is that this is really about the median American and the median American child. 94% of the country is metabolically dysfunctional.
Something has happened all at once, as you point out so well in Food Fix. Just looking at kids,
20 to 25% of young adults having fatty liver disease, 50% of young adults being overweight or obese. By some counts, 33% of young adults having prediabetes.
It's a moral stain on our country where I think through very observable and very definable
situations we're poisoning our kids. We're poisoning them chiefly by food, the rise of
ultra processed food, which was close to 0% a hundred years ago, and now up to 70% of
a child's diet by some counts.
It all started with like what, Crisco in 1911?
Yeah, and it started with good intentions after World War II to kind of feed the world
and make ultra processed food, but it's been weaponized.
And food companies now are one of the largest employers of scientists to weaponize our food
against us.
And I can't go to a playground with my two-year-old without seeing almost every kid there drinking
Coke, drinking sugary drinks.
So fundamentally, this is a question about what is the solve for this metabolic health
crisis and the different branches on that crisis of the diabetes crisis, the heart disease
crisis, the obesity crisis.
And I think my main point is that the medicalization siloing of chronic disease has been an utter
failure.
Yeah.
Now, I'm not saying a doctor shouldn't prescribe a statin or metformin if
that's the case and that's the determination, but the overall default to isolating and medicalizing
a chronic condition has been bad. The world would be a better place if we actually didn't go this
route of seeing heart disease as a statin deficiency, seeing diabetes as a metformin
deficiency, seeing high blood pressure as a inhibitor deficiency, seeing depression as an SSRI deficiency.
My argument, I actually think the data is clear on this, if those drugs were-
You mean depression is not a Prozac deficiency?
Yeah, exactly.
And my argument, I think the data is clear on this, if you actually took those drugs
off the table, if they didn't exist, and the medical system actually asked what's the root
cause of these conditions, what should we spend $4.5 trillion on actually solving these
conditions, it would actually go to the things you talk about, about core lifestyle habits.
And the issue and what the obesity epidemic represents with 80% of American adults now
being overweight or obese is that we really have a dirty tank. We have a fundamentally
lost our way in crony capitalism and rigging the system and basically poisoning the American
people. And is that an ozempic deficiency? Should we do more of the same in the really the most
pronounced chronic condition for the median American, for the median child? Should we be
prescribing the ozempic? And I really think when you reel that back, the answer is no, right? I'm
not talking about a 400 pound, extremely diabetic person. That's between the patient and the doctor.
But when the American Academy of Pediatrics is saying that the average 12 year old should
be on Ozempic, when this is being pushed on six year olds who have an obesity crisis,
that gets over 20% of kids in the US have childhood obesity.
And in Japan, it's 3% to 4%, right?
We have unique dynamics happening in America and it completely takes our eye off the ball
to say that's an Ozempic deficiency.
Novo Nordics right now is the 12th most valuable company in the world.
It's the most valuable company in Europe.
It's the biggest contributor to GDP in Denmark, the country that-
But interestingly, their revenue and profits aren't coming from Europe.
This is not the standard-
Is it true they don't allow Zempic to be sold in Denmark?
Is that true?
It's not the standard of care.
First off, in Denmark, it's under $100 and they are making all their money off Americans where they charge $1,600 to $1,800.
A month.
They're taking advantage of Americans, but it's not the standard of care in Denmark. I was in
Denmark last year. They have sound food policies. People are biking, walking around. And actually,
if you have obesity, the doctor is able to prescribe exercise and a keto diet that's
subsidized by the government. Ozempic is not the standard of care for obesity.
When you actually look at the stock analysis, 80 to 90% of profit expectations are coming
from the United States.
Yeah, of course.
They're taking advantage of the United States.
So we have a dirty fish tank, right?
The problem is not an ozempic deficiency.
The problem is when are we going to say we're going to stop poisoning kids? They're talking about using this in kids, but we're filling the schools with
ultra processed junk food that these kids are eating for lunch and that the school lunch
program is so messed up that these kids aren't getting healthy nutritious food that's helping
them be metabolically healthy or mentally healthy.
Right.
So then we look at, okay, what do you use this for?
The instructions on Ozempic is as a lifetime drug. It actually is a warning. So let's just look at what Novo Nordic says. They said this is not like a in my career I helped pay by pharma companies, this is a subsidiary of pharma
companies, this Danish company is one of the top contributors to it.
They're saying that a 12 year old, it should be the first line of defense.
It shouldn't be after dietary interventions fail.
It says if a 12 year old gains a little bit of weight, put them on this drug for life.
So the American Academy of Pediatrics doesn't have first line therapy as lifestyle?
They're saying that they need urgent, quick interventions on surgery and Ozempic and not
after dietary interventions fail.
That's what the recent press release and guidance from the American Academy of Pediatrics said.
Well, that seems pretty messed up.
The American Academy of Pediatrics has not spoken out about Coca-Cola machines in pediatric
wards and classrooms.
They've not spoken out about the fact that 10% of food stamp funding goes to Coca-Cola.
They've not spoken out about the fact that 10% of food stamp funding goes to Coca-Cola. They've not spoken out about our agriculture subsidies, but they have said that if your
12 year old gains a little bit of weight, they need to be on this injection for the
rest of their life.
Now, what's the problem with this, right?
As we know from your work, that if you're not taking the opportunity to train that child
on metabolically healthy items, to train them on exercise, to train them on healthy food, to train them on having awe and curiosity for what they're putting in
their body, they're going to continue to rack up comorbidities.
If somebody is anorexic, their LDL levels are probably going to go down right away,
but that's not a sustainable long-term strategy.
That's essentially what Ozempic does.
It's a crash course calorie deficit.
Not train that child for any type of our curiosity or lifestyle change
that's needed.
Even if they're eating and on this drug for life, right, they're fundamentally still sedentary
like our kids are and still putting ultra processed food, which is going to lead to
other metabolic healthy items.
So what doctors are saying now is that, and I think you've said this, that you have to
exercise.
You have to, and actually Novo Nordics is even admitting this. They're that you have to exercise you have to and actually Novo Nordic's is even admitting this
They're saying you have to see when they're studying that they lose
Right, they're saying that that it's a huge disaster
If you take this drug and don't exercise four to five times a week with weight training and shift to a non ultra processed food
High protein diet my message is this yeah, let's start with that first
Let's start with steering the
trillions of dollars of incentives of our medical system to doing that first before we're drugging
into it. Because it's a contradiction. Because what's actually happening is you have doctors
at Harvard and the American Academy of Pediatrics saying the reverse. They're saying that obesity is
now genetic. They have to define obesity as genetic in order to get taxpayer funding for this drug.
You actually have the leading obesity researcher at Harvard, Dr. Fatima Cody Stanford, saying
throw willpower, throw diet, throw exercise out the window.
So on the one hand, you actually have doctors arguing that this is a genetic condition and
basically a drug deficiency.
Isn't she conflicted a little bit?
And she's paid.
So we can get into the corruption.
So when we have a dirty tank, when you have this massive
societal issue, the biggest branch of the tree of metabolic dysfunction, when are we going to say
that our healthcare policy needs to go towards metabolically healthy habits? In this case,
Ozempic is a problem for two ways. Number one, it's a distraction. It's once again saying the
cure is in the medication.
We're telling 50% of 12 year olds who are overweight or obese, you're okay.
The doctors aren't saying that the kid has to work out four times a week and shift their
diet.
That's not what anyone is saying.
There's no phys ed in schools anymore.
You're saying you're saved now from this drug.
That's why I think this prom is one of the biggest issues in the country.
Ozimbic is a disaster if the drug was perfect, because it's giving the wrong message when
it's not the solve to the problem, and there's a massive opportunity cost where for $1,500
to $1,800 a month, we could change our agriculture system to regenerative ag.
We could give every obese child in the country a card to buy organic whole food.
So it's a disaster from that perspective.
It's also medically extremely problematic.
This actually, to my estimation, you tell me, I think it's actually the highest and most pronounced side effects of any drug widely approved in modern American history. 80% of people on this drug have nausea and 30% have extreme vomiting.
It has a black box warning, which we should take seriously.
If we take the other studies seriously, we should take that very seriously, a black box
warning for thyroid cancer.
And the issues are so pronounced for mental health because it's disrupting our microbiome,
which produces 95% of our serotonin.
The EU, which is actually much more quizzical about this drug, is launching a massive investigation
for suicidal ideation.
I looked at that data and I think some, there's some questions about it.
Well, this is short-term data.
Well, this is exactly the point actually.
This is extremely short-term indicators.
They approved this drug on a 68-week rig study to prove for 12-year-olds for life.
The research, if it's showing any leading indicators that NovoNorax has to admit, that's
a serious problem because these are, all their studies are funded by NovoNordic
and VeryRush.
So if there's any indicator whatsoever which necessitates that black box warning, the other
thing I'll say is, let's just back up and go to what I've learned from you, which is
that what is our body telling us?
If 80% of the people have nausea, 30% are throwing up, that's telling us that this drug
is producing some unknown metabolic issues throughout our
body and really has some interconnected problems that we fully don't even understand.
That's what it tells me.
I think it's true.
There are a lot of side effects if you take it in a way that actually is prescribed currently.
But there are other ways of using the drug.
We're going to talk about with Tina that mitigate a lot of the side effects, that avoid a lot
of the problems you're talking about and that aren't using the product that's from the pharmaceutical industry.
It's from compounding pharmacies, which is kind of a left field thing that people don't know about.
But what's really striking is you can get these drugs for $20 a month if you get them from compounding pharmacies
and at doses that are far lower that may be
effective without a lot of the complications and side effects and combined with a lifestyle.
You know, it made me think about the MAPS work, which is psychedelic research. And probably this
year, MDMA therapy with psychotherapy is going to be proved. So it's bundled. You can't get MDMA
without also having psychotherapy. You shouldn't be able to get Ozempic or any peptide like that that's driving this problem
without actually having a bundled service of aggressive lifestyle change, including
dietary and exercise training and services.
Well, I think the MAPS and what's happening with MDMA approval is one of the most important
events in the country and probably for another podcast.
I just say, and I'm excited about this nuanced conversation, but working for the pharma companies, I do think this nod to exercise and healthy eating, it is a joke. Like the pharma
companies are laughing about that, right? They know, right? Fundamentally, we're incentivizing
the American people with trillions of dollars to eat poison
and then be drugged.
The largest industry in the country, every lever of it makes money on interventions on
people that are sick and there's a high incentive for people to stay sick.
And that's been the history of the post-World War II chronic disease complex.
So what we have to do is clean the tank.
What do you mean by clean the tank?
We have an ability today to take the $4.5 trillion that we spend on healthcare, and
when somebody comes in with obesity, or when a child comes into obesity, for the standard
of care to be actually incentivizing and medically recommending diet and exercise, as we're already
admitting that has to be done on Ozempic already.
My point is this, every patient should know this. Ozempic, everyone agrees that
this drug is highly problematic unless you do four to five days a week of intense straight
training and shift your diet to non-alcohol processed food, high protein. Do that first.
And by cleaning the tank, and this is what TrueMed's doing, this is what we're lobbying for,
we can steer medical dollars. It's the incentives that are damaging us in this country.
Again, in Japan, look at the obesity rates, look at the childhood obesity rates, look
at the diabetes rates. This is a unique problem based on the incentives of America that we
can fix, but it's not shoving an injection into 50% of US children.
Let's look at this from a different perspective because I think all the things you're saying
are accurate.
And I think we need to look at this from the perspective of the paradox between an incredibly
toxic food environment.
Because you're saying eat better exercise, but if 67% of kids' diets is ultra processed
food, some estimates by some studies show it's 73%.
And we live in a toxic nutritional landscape where
it's almost impossible to do the right thing. We live in a society that fosters sedentary lifestyle,
that has no incentives in school for healthy eating or for movement for kids. We have to
change the structural phenomena that are driving this. Paul Farmer talked about structural violence.
What are the social, political, and economic conditions that drive disease?
That has to be dealt with.
But at the same, and that's what we're doing, that's what you're doing in Washington,
that's what I'm doing in Washington with the Food Fix campaign,
is trying to change the policies that are driving this from marketing of junk food to kids
to subsidizing the commodity crop that are turning into junk food
to food stamps that are paying for junk food.
I mean, the list goes on and on.
They're paying for nutrition services in in medicine for changing Medicare reimbursement, changing
all the things that we know need to be changed to actually drive a bigger societal systemic change.
But there is a paradox here because we are already metabolically, as you say, busted Tina.
And when you have someone who's metabolically screwed up from being in this toxic soup of
processed food and junk food and sugar and starch that has caused them to become metabolically
obese and metabolically busted, it's really hard to kind of get people out of that. It's like
they're stuck. One of my professors, Sidney Baker, who's one of the, I think, most brilliant
scientific minds in medicine in the 20th century and 21st century said, you know, sometimes you need a hundred horses to get people who are really stuck unstuck.
So when you have these really chronically ill patients with multiple
dysfunctions, metabolically inflammatory issues, gut issues, immune issues,
it takes a lot of effort to pull them out of the mud. And sometimes you need a whole
team of a hundred horses. And so the question is, how do we both deal with the things you're talking about, which
is the corruption of pharma and the corruption of medicine? And this has happened, by the way,
you talk a lot about this, Callie, how $27 million spent by Ozempic company manufacturer,
Novonordis, to fund doctors and other others who are promoting this drug. So there's a lot
of corruption in the system. They're funding the NAACP, so they come out in favor of Osempix and they say it's systemic racism if you don't
prescribe it. But at the same time, we have to deal with all the corruption from the pharma
industry and from internally in medicine, how things are done. We have to also accept that
we're in this incredible crisis where people are struggling and they can't get better, even if they want to and they try.
I would just say we have to solve that.
We have to assess that crisis.
It's the biggest issue we face.
The fact that we're getting sicker, more depressed, more infertile at an increasing rate is the
biggest issue in the country.
It is, 100%.
And nobody would look at that issue and say that we should keep letting that happen
and then jab 50% of 12-year-olds with the drug.
There's no evidence that this helps kickstart.
This is a lifetime drug, but as many doctors have noted, the second you go off a crash
course diet, this is an injectable kind of calorie deficit crash course diet.
The data is very clear.
The second you go off this drug, you gain the weight back.
You have to get to the root cause.
You have to get people exercising and food. There's nothing without that. True, that can work. But for some people,
it still doesn't. And as a doctor seeing patients, you know, with all the best intentions,
people struggle. Even if they know what to do, even if they're educated, even if they're doing
it, I've seen people struggle. And so the question is, is there a way to think about this class of
drugs differently? Is there a way to think about it, not from the pharma point of view, which is lifelong drugs, which is high doses, which is
pharmaceutical injections that cost $1,700 a month that nobody can afford, that's going to bankrupt
society. Is there another way to actually think about using these drugs to help people who really
struggle? And what are the pros and cons and what is the science behind it and how does this work?
And I think this, I would love sort of Tina, do you start by talking and we're going to
get into all the details because I see you like in your chair waiting to get going and
I'm going to get you like, oh, come in a minute.
Because I think Kelly laid out beautifully how we're in a really screwed up political
system, a corporate corruption system with pharma, how they operate and how they fund
things like the promotion of these drugs at wide scale through co-opting professional societies
like the American Academy of Pediatrics by funding, you know, Harvard and other institutions
to do the studies, which they get huge amounts of money from. I mean, there's so much corruption
in the system, but there is another way to think about helping people
who really struggle with their weight
and with the metabolic consequences.
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use the code DrMark30. Again, that's bigboldhealth.com. And as I was sort of reading your
stuff, Tina, and thinking about what your perspective is, we talked briefly yesterday
on the phone. It really brought up the question of
why are so many people having trouble? And is there something that is regulating the appetite
that's so dysregulated, the GLP-1? And we're going to talk about what is GLP-1? What does it do in
the body? How does it work? Because I think this is important for me to understand. We're going to
get a little sciencey here. But if you understand that maybe, I mean, just maybe like we have a crisis
of hyperinsulinemia, we also may have a crisis of low GLP-1, which is a peptide in the body
naturally occurring that helps to regulate appetite. Why are people unable to control
their appetite? Why are people so stuck in knowing what to do and not being able to do it. Is there merit here to this
concept that maybe because of factors that we're going to talk about that have come recently in
the last 50, 60 years that have influenced our biology, that have made us low in GLP-1,
that's driving us to overeat and overconsume and accelerate this obesity crisis. So Tina,
why don't you start by helping us?
And we're going to let you kind of wind up and hit a home run here.
But why don't you start by telling us, like, what is GLP-1?
What does it do?
Why is it important in the body?
And how does it work?
Because I don't think most people understand what this is about.
And then we can get into the idea of, well, maybe there is something going on really with this GLP-1
deficiency concept. And we'll talk about why. I mean, I just read a paper yesterday that
the GLP-1 deficiency is really common in people with fatty liver disease.
Now, fatty liver disease is a consequence of our high sugar starch diet and ultra processed
food.
It affects probably 90 million Americans, which is a precursor to heart disease and
cancer and diabetes and a whole bunch of other stuff.
Even kids as young as 15 are needing liver transplants from fatty liver disease.
So we know that at least in fatty liver disease, there is a GLP-1 deficiency.
So let's talk about what is it, unpack it, what does it do, and then let's talk about
this concept of GLP-1 deficiency.
Sure.
So thank you for having me.
Of course.
I'm a huge fan of your work too, Callie.
I think we're all saying-
I just want to say, we don't have to read everything, but we actually like each other
and we're all friends.
So this is good.
This is good.
This is like what America's missing is nuanced conversations that take different perspectives
and actually come up with a place where we can all learn from each other and actually be open to each other's ideas and have a conversation that isn't just black and white.
Well, the first thing I thought when I got invited onto this podcast was, well, I totally agree with those guys. So what, you know, what am I going to do here? But I do have some nuanced information I want to share. So my background is I have been in medicine
either working in the field or in practice for nearly 30 years. I've been in naturopathic
medicine for 16 years. I was honored to have an incredible mentor for decades who was an
amazing naturopathic physician and a very busy practice. And he taught me early on way back in
the 90s all about metabolic health, in the 90s, all about metabolic
health, all about insulin resistance, all about type 2 diabetes. That was back when syndrome X
was coming on the scene, which is prediabetes, metabolic syndrome.
We didn't even have metabolic syndrome as a diagnosis at the time.
And so that's right when I dropped into his world. He taught me about keeping your waist
circumference low. He taught me about his world. He taught me about keeping your waist circumference low.
He taught me about fatty liver.
He taught me about strength training over cardio.
He taught me all the things.
My whole platform is about metabolic health and doing all the things.
And all the things being, you know, mitigate your stress, get your sleep in, protect it,
strength train, build muscle, high protein, low carb, get good healthy fats, get sunlight, circadian rhythm, all
the things.
Don't forget the vegetables.
Yes, of course.
I know, you like your vegetables, and I try.
This whole thing blew up this last summer with this Ozempic, and I thought, well, these
have been around for 20 years, these GLP-1 agonists, so why all of a sudden-
But Ozempic was just approved in 2017.
Yes. But why all of a sudden with the backlash? And it really raised some flags for me. So I
started researching and my background is in regenerative medicine. So regenerative
musculoskeletal medicine. I help people rebuild their joints naturally with natural substances,
stem cells, PRP. I've been doing that for a long, long time. And so the first thing I did was research GLP-1 and its regenerative properties.
I always look up things according to what my brain knows.
My brain understands pain.
I understand regeneration and neuroinflammation.
All of those things always interest me greatly.
And I found so many studies showing impacts on some of the older versions of GLP-1s and
the current versions impacting neuroP-1s and the current versions,
impacting neuroinflammation very positively. I found data supporting its potential use in Alzheimer's and Parkinson's. I found data showing regenerative properties in joints,
in cartilage, in ligaments. And I mean, the list goes on and on. I found data showing
used early, because it actually heals the pancreas,
it can reverse type one diabetes if used early
and started early, semaclutide specifically.
And I thought, this is not at all what I'm hearing.
Like this is not lining up at all with what I'm hearing.
So of course I got super interested.
I did a podcast.
The feedback was incredible.
I had people from all over the world messaging me,
telling me, I do all the things you say. I do all the things you preach. I mean, I was severely,
severely censored during COVID for telling people to go outside in the sun, lift weights and eat
meat. I mean- God, how radical you are.
I was deplatformed for the work I was pushing back then. So-
Clearly that's misinformation, right? Eating healthy and
exercising and being the sunlight, God forbid. The hashtag sunlight was banned in 2020 off of
Instagram. So I have been on this journey of sort of bucking the norm for a long time. And I thought,
okay, I'm not, what I'm finding is not lining up with what I'm hearing from everybody. And then of
course, all the health influencers had to come out against it. And everybody was really quite hot on my tails about it. I was getting a lot of hate
for even mentioning that there might be other impacts that they have on the body. It's regenerative,
it's healing, and it's anti-inflammatory throughout the body. There's GLP-1 receptors
throughout the entire body, including the brain. It's not just made in the gut. It's a steroid,
or I'm sorry, it's not a steroid. It's a peptide signaling hormone. Yeah.
As for people background, peptides are things that our bodies make and they're the communication
networks. And there's tens of thousands of these molecules and insulin is one of them.
Yep.
And people are using peptides like thymus and alpha-1 or BP-157 for sports injuries.
These are things that are available. Some of them are in a prescription like Ozempic.
There are other ones like Bylesi, which is a prescription for sexual arousal in women and men.
So there's a lot of things out there that are used in traditional medicine.
Over 70 of these peptides have been approved.
And they're things that the body uses naturally.
So they're not things that are pharmacological agents.
They're actually things that the body has and uses as part of its normal physiology.
So GLP-1 is that. And so when we say GLP-1 agonist, which is what these class of drugs
are, it means they work to stimulate the GLP-1 receptors to have the effects of GLP-1.
Correct. However, semaclutide and terzapatide are actually very closely, well,
terzapatide is a little bit different.
That's one jar for people listening.
Yeah. Semaclutide is almost bioidentical to GLP-1.
It's simply got as little tinkering on one of the amino acids to keep the half-life longer.
So GLP-1 that is produced naturally in the body.
It's produced by the L cells of our gut.
It's also produced in the brain, in the medulla.
If it's produced in the brain, I immediately thought, well, it must have use in the brain.
And it sure does.
It actually has impact on neuroinflammation beyond appetite signaling, beyond any of that.
We've got it sort of in this box of being, it slows gastric motility.
It decreases appetite by slowing gastric motility.
Very sort of basic kindergarten version.
And then in the brain, it inhibits appetite.
And that's how people have got it.
Well, I start looking into it and I'm like, this is a signaling peptide hormone. Why would we macro dose a hormone? You'd feel awful if you were cranking high levels of thyroid or testosterone
or estrogen. And those are sex steroid hormones, but still hormones.
High doses of insulin, which was one of the first peptides ever
synthesized and has been around for a long time.
Right. You die if you took high doses, too high of a dose. So I got to thinking,
why don't we just dose physio? I do bioidentical hormone replacement by dosing physiologic doses,
which are much, much lower even than some of the standard dosing. So I've
always been a fan of starting people very slow and low on any hormone. And I ramp them up and
I titrate them up until they get tissue saturation and until their symptoms resolve. And then that's
the dose. And then I test to make sure I'm not causing them any harm. And that's how I manage
patients on hormones. We've got leptin and ghrelin. Those are peptide signaling hormones.
Turns out leptin and ghrelin, so leptin for the audience listening, is secreted by your fat. It
goes to your brain. It tells your brain you're full. It tells your brain it's basically the thermostat of the
brain. It lets the body know energy status, right? Ghrelin is secreted by the stomach and it goes to
the brain and tells you you're hungry. I always think grr, ghrelin, right? That's how I remember
the two. Ghrelin and leptin don't work if GLP-1 isn't present. The receptors actually don't even
come to the cellular surface. So I was like, this is very interesting.
Then I started...
So ghrelin doesn't work
because ghrelin seems to make you hungry.
So people are hungry even when they're overweight
and maybe GLP-1 deficient.
The receptor signaling of,
and this was just in rats,
but the receptor signaling of the whole orchestra
of how these work together,
it's much more nuanced, I think, than we understand.
The orchestra doesn't work if GLP-1 isn't there. So then I thought, I wonder if we have GLP-1 deficiency. I wonder if that's a thing, right? It is. Mechanistically, it's a thing in those with
fatty liver, those who are obese, and those with type 2 diabetes. And then I thought,
is this a chicken or egg? Is it due to the chronic insulin resistance and the damage to the vagal nerve and
on and on and the leaky gut and the damage to the gut mucosa and the damage to the microbiome? Is
that what is inducing the GLP-1 deficiency? Even environmental toxins, who knows, right?
Then I started talking to my friends who were like the nerdy genetic people. They love their
genetic mutations. And they started telling me that there's SNPs,
that code for GLP-1,
and that they're seeing deficiency in those,
or they're seeing mutations in those SNPs
in a lot of people.
And in fact, one of my friends runs a diabetes clinic,
has done so for decades, functional medicine, diabetes.
And he said that 95% of the patients he's seeing
have this genetic SNP mutation.
So-
And does that mean like 75% of the people who are overweight in America have this genetic SNP mutation. So...
And does that mean like 75% of the people who are overweight in America have this
mutation or is it something else?
I don't know. So what's happening is...
It seems unlikely that's true.
Do they all get that?
It seems like probably a larger portion of maybe the severely obese might have that, right?
What were you going to say, Kelly?
Well, we talk a lot, the genetic arguments
brought up a lot and obviously it's, did genetics change in the last 50 years as obesity has
absolutely taken over our country? But gene expression changes, right? So I think that's
the thing that happens. Yeah, gene expression changes.
Every genetic changes. I mean, I think it's, genes are complicated. There was Darwin, which is,
you know, genes changed by natural selection over millennia.
And then was Lamarck, who said traits can be passed from generation to generation.
And Lamarck was kind of dismissed, and Darwin won the day.
But the truth is they're both right, because Darwin is about gene changes, and Lamarck is really talking about epigenetic changes, which can happen from generation to generation.
And I think one of the things we're seeing now is generations of kids who are born to obese parents.
And the consequences of that,
the epigenetic changes in the womb
that happen from the environment that the baby is bathed in,
from processed food and sugar and starch
and lack of exercise and stress
and all the things, environmental toxins,
all of that is programming these children.
And we know this data from many, many epigenetic studies.
It's programming these children to be obese, have heart disease, have diabetes,
end up with cancer and many other problems.
And they're kind of screwed before they were even born.
So these kids come into the world and then they're more likely to be obese
or more likely to have these programmed epigenetic changes
that maybe are affecting
the expression of the genes.
So genes don't change, but the expression changes.
And that's an important point.
And I agree, Kelly.
But they could change if that child is provided a whole food diet.
That's right.
Epigenetic changes can be reversed.
Is exposed to sunlight.
So we have an Orwellian situation where we have such a crisis in America that children
are in utero
developing metabolic dysfunction because we're being, our food is so toxic and we've had a
sedentary lifestyle and aren't looking at the sunlight and being, you know, sleeping,
dysregulated sleeping, chronic stress with our phones. So we have such a bad metabolic health
environment that we have an epidemic of kids being born, you know, born with metabolic dysfunction. So it is
societally vital. There's nothing more important than this.
So we have an opportunity. It's not a both and. Are we going to, as a matter of public
policy and as a matter of focus in that country, change that dynamic of changing our USDA guidelines
to say that that two year old-old shouldn't be eating sugar.
100% of this.
When you go the route of Ozempic,
when you go the route that this is so bad
that we need to jab those children at six,
that's a different route.
That's a different prioritization.
I'm not so sure. It's not both hands.
I'm up for giving kids six years old to Ozempic.
No.
That's another conversation.
I think that's a little extreme. But if we agree with the idea, if we actually agree with the science and that this
drug is good and should be used as a standard of care, why not? I don't think any drug is good or
bad. You're thinking from public policy, social. I'm a doctor. Tina's a doctor. We're both thinking
about the patient we see in our office who's stuck as you know what, and how do we help them?
And I've had patients who have lost 200 pounds,
150 pounds, 110 pounds, 116 pounds, 138 pounds, just using food as medicine. But it's tough for
them. They can do it. But the question is, is there something else that could be done in a way
that actually is like Tina was saying, is physiologic, that doesn't use this kind of
heavy-handed pharmacologic approach to actually help people with fixing some of the metabolic
and biochemical things that are going on. And I think this is an open question. I think we need
more data on this, but I think what you're saying, Tina, is really interesting, that there are
effects of this natural peptide that are different than just regulating weight.
Absolutely.
And they may be working through other mechanisms.
You know, I had a patient once say to me recently,
can I just take Phentermine?
And that's basically an appetite suppressant.
Crack.
It's basically, yeah, it's basically speed or crack.
And basically, yeah, it's like crackheads are so skinny
because they don't want to eat because they're appetite suppressed.
But it's basically speed.
And I said, no, no, no.
This is really not good because it's going to cause you to be anxious, palpitations,
and have all these issues of sleep.
And I think it's not a good idea.
But then we talked about Ozempic maybe being a solution because it can be done in a way that is different, that works physiologically, and works on some of these other pathways
that I think people aren't aware of.
Like the neuroinflammation is a big one. And I think what we're seeing is sometimes
decreased suicide rates. We're seeing decreased depression. We're seeing a lot of other things
with these drugs. And I think, well, how is that happening? And what's probably happening in my
view is people are eating less of the crap because they don't want it. And so their brain and their
body inflammation is going down. And maybe some of the effects of the GLP-1 drugs are anti-inflammatory by mechanism.
They are.
And they are.
And so if that's true, then the neuroinflammation crisis, and again, I've talked a lot about
this on the podcast and written a whole book about it called The Ultramind Solution, is
our brains are on fire.
And our brains on fire lead to depression, anxiety, suicide, aggression, you know, societal
division, Alzheimer's, Parkinson's.
I mean, the list goes on and on.
Anything that affects the brain is about inflammation.
So these drugs may modulate that.
It's fascinating.
So they're being studied for Alzheimer's and many other things.
Now, I think the idea that we should just like fall in love with this drug and it's
great for everybody and we should put it in the water.
I don't think Tina or anybody I think who is smart about this thinks that. But for the select patient,
given in a way that can actually regulate some of these pathways, I'm not so sure
it should be thrown out. It's like any tool. It's like any tool we have in medicine. It's
for the right person at the right time, the right dose. Who is the right person,
just generically? I'm just curious. Well, that's a great question.
Let me finish what I was trying to tell you guys.
I started using this in patients
and I have only one who is using it for weight loss.
Everybody else is on it for a different reason.
And I'm using it at a fifth of the starting dose,
compounded, droplets.
And when I started doing this,
my colleagues who listened to my podcast all
started also microdosing GLP-1s in their clinics. And we've all reported back to each other,
and we're seeing phenomenal results in all different kinds of conditions that leads me
to believe that we may actually be able to do away with a lot of the lifestyle pharmaceuticals
that people are using. So people are on other drugs for life, such as high
blood pressure meds or statin drugs. These peptides have been shown to heal heart tissue
and to reverse heart failure. So I've got one patient on it for high blood pressure,
tiny little dose, high blood pressure, blood pressure's down. I personally take it because
I have psoriatic arthritis and I have crippling pain from tip to toe. It doesn't matter how clean of a life I live.
It doesn't matter how clean my fish tank is.
Menopause hit me.
The brain fog was real and the pain came with it.
And I knew it was due to neuroinflammation.
So tiny little doses mitigates my autoimmune conditions like nothing I've ever used without
any side effects.
None of the people I'm using it on, none of the people, none of the patients that my colleagues are using it on are having any side effects.
You keep the dose low.
The nausea, the vomiting, the terrible side effects, the muscle loss, that is all a dosing and management issue.
And brand names start in a pre-filled pen.
I don't use them.
They're too high of a dose.
We are monodosing at high doses, monotherapy, a hormone.
And that's why we're seeing these horrific side effects, which I completely agree with.
I've listened to your argument on different podcasts, and I'm like, I totally agree with them.
I totally agree with what's happening there.
But we wouldn't throw out thyroid if all the doctors were overdosing their patients on thyroid.
It's a management and dosing issue on the doctor's part.
And then how compliant are patients, right?
So why is pharma starting the dose so high?
I mean, the injection first dose is 0.5 milligrams and it goes to one and two.
You're talking about using 0.1 or 0.08 as a start, which is a fifth of that.
Tiny.
Because they're dealing with severely metabolically busted people already.
And the people I'm dealing with are doing all the things and are generally metabolically healthy.
But what if you had someone who was?
The median American is metabolic.
What would you do if you had someone come in who was like 350 pounds?
Or the average American.
So you give them a leg up.
I have a license to prescribe.
So I prescribe things to give people a leg up.
I do use Prozac as needed at very low doses.
And the way that I have been taught by my mentor is when a patient comes in and here's their pharmacological profile
and here's their lifestyle, you lower this as much as humanly possible or get them off is the goal.
The reason I became a naturopathic physician in the state of Oregon, so I prescribe is to get
people off drugs. And then you bring up their lifestyle. You have to have a license to put
them on and to take them off. You bring up their lifestyle. You have to have a license to put them on and to take them off, right? You bring up their lifestyle, right?
And so you hopefully get this as low as possible,
but I'm not opposed to keeping people on tiny little doses.
This is not the first drug I micro-dosed.
I micro-dosed Prozac in patients.
I micro-dosed statins.
I micro-dosed all kinds of drugs to give them,
you get a different mechanism of action
when you use things at tiny little dosages
than when you macro-dose them.
Macro-dosing a drug gives you a different
pharmacologic impact on the body. And do they work at that low dose for people?
Yeah. What if they're, for your patients who are not really doing it for weight issues,
I understand. Everybody lost weight. But what about for people who are like 300 pounds,
did you start with the same dose? So I have one patient who is morbidly obese. He's well over
300 something pounds and can't move in so much pain. He can't move.
He sleeps in a lazy boy, spends all day in a lazy boy, doesn't get up, doesn't move.
Cognition's off, has had too many strokes.
I don't even have him at the starting dose yet.
And it's been months and he is very happily, very slowly shedding the weight.
Yeah, the starting dose, the pharmacologic starting dose.
Yes.
So I've got him at a fraction of that and his cognition has improved.
The cognitive impacts have been huge. I've seen it eradicate depression. I've seen it reverse PCOS.
I've seen people walk straight into fertility after decades of infertility issues from PCOS,
or just decades of PCOS. And this is all at micro doses. I'm talking droplets.
So this compound, which our body makes, maybe is deficient because of why?
Why is it because of epigenetic programming?
Is it because of our microbiome changing?
Is it because of toxins in the environment?
I think all of it.
You know, the mess of toxic soup we live in.
I mean, we live in a toxic soup period.
Epigenetically, like you said, mothers, the data around maternal diabetes and metabolic inflammation in the offspring.
Do you know Pottinger's cats?
Did you guys ever hear about Pottinger's cats?
So Pottinger in the 30s took cats and he fed them. He was a veterinarian.
He fed them cooked meat and pasteurized milk.
That's all he did was change it.
And within one to three generations, they were completely infertile.
Their intestines were
inflamed and boggy. Their livers were enlarged and fatty, infiltrate. And it took him multiple
generations with optimal cat diet, which is raw milk and raw meat, multiple generations to reverse
them back to a fertile, healthy animal. So I'm 50. I watched all of this happen. I've seen it.
I remember when there was like one kid in school who truly had a glandular problem,
who was overweight.
I've watched this.
Erica, my class.
Yes.
I've watched this whole thing unfold.
I've watched food change.
I've been battling against it too for a long, long time.
But we're in a pickle.
And I think I am actually a few generations into potting, or at least one into the Pottinger's
cats.
My parents, the boomers, had the convenience foods.
Crisco oil came into play.
And here we are.
And my daughter-
My son's margarine.
That was what I lived on when I was a kid.
Yeah, me too.
And Wonder Bread and bologna.
But my daughter's 24 next week.
And her generation is a mess.
It's a mess.
Because of the pharmaceutical industrial complex and
treating everything in silos. I totally agree. But this is treating obesity in silos. I'm not
talking about treating obesity. Kelly, do you see a world in where it's not either or? There may be
a role for using these drugs in patients to help along with an intensive lifestyle intervention
and a functional medicine approach to correct some of the problems that may have been driving
the GLP-1 deficiency and not have them on it forever?
Let me give my high level of respect on that and then go into certain patient archetypes
and cases.
I'm really skeptical.
And I think viewers and listeners just need to make up their own mind.
I'm very skeptical at the billing of this drug as a miracle drug for all chronic conditions.
There has never, by my account in American history, been a chronic disease pharmaceutical
product that's lowered rates of the chronic disease it's ostensibly trying to treat.
More statins, more heart disease, more metformin, more diabetes, more SSRIs, more depression.
You can go down the list.
But it's not a drug.
But because people don't change their lifestyle.
Exactly.
It's a moral hazard.
I talk about my mom a lot, right?
My mom was on five different medications, different medications when she was diagnosed with cancer.
She would have certainly been on Ozempic.
She had trouble losing the baby weight and was never obese, but obese after she had me.
And she was on the statin, on the metformin.
And there's a choice a doctor has.
They can follow your work.
And when the person has an elevated waistline or has elevated cholesterol or has
elevated blood sugar, they can open your book and talk about how they have to go on a path
of curiosity and a path of metabolic health to get their biomarkers and get their underlying
metabolic health more under control.
And that cannot be injected and it cannot be pilled.
And frankly, I would argue that it's very clear from the data and experience that putting the savior
in a lifetime chronic disease treatment
has been a total failure because inevitably what happens.
I agree, in a perfect world,
we'd have a healthy environment in the country
where we had all the defaults being healthy,
where there wasn't processed food,
where people were moving naturally,
where we had lower stress,
or we weren't having being sleep deprived,
where we weren't exposed to a load of environmental toxins.
I want that world.
Right.
100%.
We don't live in that world.
What's our goal?
And I see patients, for example, who have had complications from conditions.
For example, we're doing clearly heart scans, looking at AI interpreted coronary angiograms.
And we're seeing people with lots of plaque and dangerous plaque and risk plaque.
And those people I will put on medication. It's not the solution to someone who's younger who
doesn't have a solution to problem to prevent it. But there may be a time for medications in
people's lives that actually can be used in a way that helps reverse the problem.
And as I said at the beginning, I'm not concerned with that patient. I'm not concerned with that
age case. I'm concerned with the average person listening. I'm concerned with the average American who's overweight or obese.
I'm concerned with the average American teen right now who's overweight or obese.
I'm concerned with that person.
I'm not concerned with the person on the edge cases.
Is this the treatment for obesity?
And all you need to do is look at JP Morgan, their stock analysis for the Novo Nordic stock.
They project an increase in obesity over the coming 10 years. They project as this drug is prescribed widely and approved and government funded, they assume
that obesity is going to go up.
You just have to ask why that is.
Yeah, why is that?
One more quick thing, and I think this really helps bring it-
Why would they say that?
Because there's never been a chronic disease drug, and this is a drug, in history
that has lowered rates of the chronic diseases trying to treat.
It is a moral hazard.
Obesity is not an ozempic deficiency.
Alzheimer's heart disease isn't an ozempic deficiency.
The message of this drug, whether you do it a low dose or high dose, quite frankly, because
if you start at a low dose, you have to take it for life in order to maintain it.
Do you?
No, you don't.
You absolutely have to take it for life unless you dramatically change your lifestyle habits
in which case the drug isn't necessary.
I think we're on the same page here
because I don't think anybody believes
that you can use a drug without lifestyle change.
And sometimes people need a bridge.
For example, some people need like a leg up
who are just so stuck.
And I am humbled as a doctor
because it's one thing to have a philosophy
based on a really a very pure idea of what we
should be doing.
But the reality is there are real people with real issues who struggle.
And even with their best efforts, they can't succeed.
And so that's a problem I see.
And it may be because of the things that are not within their control.
In other words, there may be things that are going on biologically with the drastic
change in our microbiome and environmental toxins, which I think are the two
biggest things going on, that make it hard for people to actually correct those things without
some help. Mark, respect. Your books and your teachings have changed my life and we're on this
path. And I just have to say, we need to be clear to the American people, people listening to this,
if they're facing metabolic dysfunction, try not eating ultra processed food.
Try cutting that from your diet.
Have you had a patient in front of you who's dealing with chronic mold or SERS or severe trauma and adverse childhood events and it doesn't work?
So I want to go through two patient archetypes, okay?
If you are the median American who is on a couple chronic disease medications and overweight or slightly obese, right?
Let's go through this.
If you go on Ozempic at whatever dose, right, it's only going to work and you can only go
off of it if you radically change your lifestyle habits.
So we're all in agreement with that.
You can only go off of it unless you radically change.
Right.
I just want to make sure we're all aligned on that.
100%.
So there's no point in really taking it unless you're going to radically change your habits
for life.
Not a crash course, not a jumpstart, but actually really have almost a spiritual reset in your
life to change your habits.
Agreed.
Okay.
If you go off of it, if you just do it and go off of it and don't change your habits,
you're going to gain the weight back.
Correct.
So if you're going, if we need a massive, and I'm talking for the median person listening,
if we need a massive, almost revolutionist country where we have to change our metabolic
habits, whether we're taking the drug or not, why not start with that?
Why do we need this drug?
I agree.
Is there any evidence that it gives a kickstart?
I agree.
If we have a society where all that's possible, great. We just don't.
What is the evidence that the drug helps if we're not changing our habits?
It gives you the ability. Well, first of all, lose five to 10% of your body weight and see
what happens. You start moving more. You feel better. You have less pain. You're more inclined.
Most people that I'm seeing on it don't actually want to start changing things significantly
until about the two-month mark.
And all of a sudden, they start talking about, hey, doc, what should I do for exercise?
What should I be doing beyond walking?
The hedonic urge to eat the junk is gone.
It comes back when you go off of it, does it not?
Not always.
It actually is having a regenerative impact.
There is a long-term regenerative impact and a healing impact from the peptides. And we have the data on it. I'm
not sure what data you're looking at, but the data I'm looking at is not showing exactly the same
thing. And I would say Cali is pep just to understand pharmacology versus physiology. So
someone has a thyroid dysfunction. They have low thyroid hormone. We give them thyroid hormone for
life. Now, some people can get off it if you change a lot of things.
And some people can't.
Some people can't. If you take a pharmacologic substance, it's working in ways that are
inhibiting, blocking, or somehow interfering with normal physiology.
Peptides are things that our body uses to regulate its function. I personally use peptides for my
own health. I use peptides in
my patients for all sorts of different things from tissue repair to hormonal support to immune
support to anxiety and brain health. And they're quite effective. And I don't shy away from using
those in the right patient in the right way. So as a class of compounds, they're different than
pharmacologic compounds, even though they've been co-opted by the pharmaceutical industry.
Now, the FDA is trying to shut down the use of peptides because they're so effective and
they're physiologic.
So I always think of something when I treat somebody, is this nature-made or man-made?
If it's nature-made, I tend to think that it's working with the body rather than against
the body.
And the question is, if you give something like vitamin D, which is nature made
at massive doses, it's going to cause a lot of harm. But if you give vitamin D to those who are
deficient in it and a physiologic dose, it may actually help them function better.
So I'm always kind of thinking about medicine in that perspective. I've worked, for example, with a woman who has struggled for a long time, for decades
with weight.
And she tried, she tried, she knew what to do.
She'd been the victim of terrible trauma when she was younger.
She saw her mother literally stabbed to death in front of her by her stepfather.
She was kidnapped and thrown in a car.
She was raised by an abusive
aunt. I mean, I saw the amount of trauma she had and she pulled herself up by her bootstraps and
she was very successful, but she struggled with her weight around this. This is what we call
adverse childhood events. And for her, you know, I think she tried this medication and it really
helped her to kind of get back to a level where she could get off the 50, 60, 70, 80 pounds that she needed to get off.
And so, you know, it's humbling as a doctor to know, you know, when you can't get people to do the right thing for some reason, whether it's their trauma, whether it's their emotional state,
whether it's their brain functioning or their brain inflammation, sometimes these compounds
can be helpful. So I kind of like to kind of not just do all good, all bad and go, I think we all
agree that the way that the pharmaceutical industry is doing this is bad. I don't think any of us have
any argument about that. I don't think any of us have an argument that, you know, pharma shouldn't
be deriving all the research. It shouldn't be deriving all the marketing. It shouldn't be
deriving all the co-opting of the research institutions, the professional associations,
physicians promoting it, you know, the government lobbyists.
They're trying to get proof for Medicare.
I'm like, well, gee, for Medicare Part D, which is the drug benefit,
the total benefit for everybody on all drugs in all America is $145 billion.
If just the obese people in Medicare got this, it would be, I think, $267 billion,
which is more than all the rest of the drug benefit put
together. So that is not a solution. We're working, for example, in Washington to try to get
food as medicine covered. We're going to get there, but it's a decade-long fight. In the meantime,
we're heading into some crazy period of metabolic disaster in America that we need to do something.
So I would like to kind of go back to Tina and talk to Tina about her approach with her patients. Cause I, I, I, I was, to be honest, I was pretty skeptical. I was
like, I don't know. I think I've described it maybe one or two times in very select patients
who really had to get the weight off. They were, had Alzheimer's or they had something really
serious and I, and I used it very carefully, but, but I really had a, a very similar perspective to you, Callie, that this is something that
we should really not be using, that lifestyle works better, that if you look, for example,
the studies of gastric bypass, which is the other treatment, which is, by the way, far
cheaper if you're paying retail for these things.
If you give someone a gastric bypass and then you have someone eat the same diet as if they
had a gastric bypass, there was no difference in the outcomes. So to paraphrase Bill Clinton,
it's the food's stupid, right? And I was like, wait a minute, if people just did a study,
and they've never done this study because I looked to see if there was a study done.
Was there a study comparing diet, aggressive diet intervention, the same diet people would
eat on a GLP-1
agonist with a GLP-1 agonist and looked at all these effects.
Would neuroinflammation go down?
Would fatty liver improve?
Would heart failure reverse?
I think it would.
I don't know how the study would work, but I had a patient like this.
She was 66 years old.
She had heart failure, fatty liver.
She had diabetes.
She had all these problems.
We didn't use Zympic.
We just used food.
And she was off all her medications in three months. She lost 43 pounds in three months, 116 pounds in a
year. And she got reversal of all these inflammatory things. So would she have been
helped even more with a Zempic? I don't know. So this is a question I have. And I kind of want to
talk through how you use this with your patients, because it's a very different approach than I
think we're talking about with what's happening wide scale in the country. It's like, you go to
the doctor, you give them Ozempic. Now you can buy it online. You can go to Ozempic websites,
and they talk to you for five minutes. They give you the drug, and it's like a prescription meal
that I think should be illegal. But I think in the right patient, in the right way, tell us what
you're seeing. Well, first of all, I don't use anything in isolation.
So the foundations are always the foundations, right?
Diet, lifestyle, exercise, sun, all of those are always critical.
Sometimes people aren't ready to implement all of those things.
And it's quite a bit overwhelming, as you've seen with your patients.
You've got to start with one thing.
I also never use peptides in isolation.
I like to use a multitude of them with patients.
I also usually bring in some bioidentical hormone replacement as needed, depending on
their age and their condition.
This is just about one tool in a comprehensive tool belt.
When done that way, I found that you can keep the dose significantly low, and then I cycle
it.
Just like a hormone.
So not on it for life.
No.
On and off.
On and off.
Just like I do a hormone.
So that off period may be one week out of the month.
It may be a month out of every quarter.
It may be go off for a period of time and go back on when you need it.
And do they gain the weight back when they do that?
Not if they're metabolically optimized.
So I really think that peptides in general work best in folks who are metabolically optimized. So I'm not defending this for strictly weight loss. I'm using it as an
adjunctive tool in a comprehensive toolbox to get people that leg up so that they have the energy,
they start to drop the weight, they start to do all the things, or they do better at doing all
the things, right? It might be the patient is doing all the things, but they've got a crazy sugar addiction or who knows, who knows what it is.
Again, mold exposure, Lyme disease, it could be a myriad of things that's keeping their glucose
elevated. They are doing everything perfectly and their blood sugar is still elevated. I've
seen patients like that. You're like, how is this? How are we still dealing with this elevated
hemoglobin A1C? You're lean, you're fit, you're doing everything right. You're eating like a
saint. A touch, just a little touch of something. I't it's not always a glp1 but there's something that
they need and when we give that we give what the body needs it responds in favor and they improve
and i'd like to say most women i know on bioidentical hormone replacement will tell you
we don't mind taking it for the rest of our lives. I don't plan on getting off thyroid. I have no desire to get off thyroid.
I have no plan of getting off of my estrogen.
I have no desire to.
Well, let's talk about this because I think what's in the literature and concerns me is
some of the side effects, right?
And I think, Kelly, maybe that's what you're about to say.
So I hear you on the metabolically optimized person, but for somebody like more than 50%
of American adults, by some measures up to 60% have prediabetes.
I think 80% or so don't know it.
Most people listening have indicators of metabolic dysfunction.
Generically, if it's better for metabolically functional people, which is a very small percentage
of the country, what's the high level protocols?
What she was saying was peptides work better in metabolic...
All peptides.
They work in everyone.
But they work best when you're in the, you can keep the dosage low when folks are generally
healthy.
Now, GLP.
So if you're having insulin, if someone's very insulin resistant and type 2 diabetic,
they need a lot of insulin to lower their blood sugar.
But if someone's insulin sensitive, they need a tiny bit of insulin, right?
So somebody that is metabolic dysfunction will need a good deal more?
Not necessarily.
It depends on when they start implementing lifestyle changes.
Some people need some help getting there.
And the other piece is that I don't think people need to be on them for life at high...
I certainly don't think people need to be high dose the way that they're being dosed.
I think that was just the way the studies were ran.
We're also dealing with a population when we're talking about diabetes and obesity who
are already prone to pancreatitis. They're already dealing with a population when we're talking about diabetes and obesity who are
already prone to pancreatitis. They're already prone to thyroid cancer. They're already prone
to gastroparesis. I mean, the number one risk factor for gastroparesis is type 2 diabetes.
And the number one risk factor for thyroid cancer generally is diabetes and obesity. So
you have two times the risk. So I'm talking about intervention because these peptides actually, they don't act
as just a band-aid, Kelly. They heal your metabolism. They heal your pancreas. They
heal your liver. They heal your metabolism. That's an interesting concept because like,
for example, I use BP-157 when I have like a, and I work out and I get a little strain of muscle,
I just pop it in there and it's better. So it regenerates tissue or repairs tissue. I had a,
a guy who was an elite athlete,
and he pulled a muscle on his calf,
and he couldn't do all the things he had to do.
I just popped a peptide in there.
Someone else said,
Dennis Elbow, I popped a BP-157 GHK peptide in there,
and I did maybe a couple of times,
and it resolved the problem.
Now, I think GLP-1 agonists may be a little bit different.
I don't know.
But they do have a regenerative capacity.
That's what these peptides are meant to do in the body.
So they're different than drugs.
And I think that the pharmaceutical approach is concerning to me because it doesn't include
a holistic approach.
And you and I do that, obviously.
And there are some doctors around the country who are focused on that.
But most of the people getting these drugs are just getting them.
True.
And then they have some significant issues.
So at the dose that we're seeing that people are getting, there's very high rates of nausea,
very high rates of diarrhea, constipation, like 20%, 25%, probably 67% of nausea.
It tends to go away after a little bit, but it still is a problem.
And 80% discontinue them after, I think, a couple of years or a year or two, which is
an interesting phenomenon, whether it's cost or side effects or maybe I don't know what.
And then there's the risk of
some of these other issues. Now, the absolute number is small because these are rare conditions.
But when you look at the data, published data, there's 450% increased risk in bowel obstruction
and 900% increased risk in pancreatitis. They seem not that trivial. And if you scale it out
on the population and the incidence of this, it might be if,
you know, I don't know, 100 million people are taking it, it might be 500,000 people
with it, which is not trivial.
So how do you think about these side effects?
How do you see these being different in the patients that you use the microdosing as you
call microdosing?
I wouldn't call it microdosing.
I'd call it low dose.
Yeah, it's low dose.
Microdose is like micro.
But low dose, I think you're using low dose, which is I think an interesting concept. And by the way, people, you cannot get low dose through
the drug companies. You have to go through compounding pharmacies. And we're going to
talk about that and the challenge with that, but there's a way to get it and do it, but it's tricky
and you need to be with the right practitioner. But given these side effects, and you talk about
what you think about these.
Are they as bad as we think?
Are they just in the people who are on high doses?
Do you see this in the population who are using smaller doses as you're talking about?
I'm not seeing it in any of my patients.
The study that you're referencing, you're right, it was a small, I mean, I think it
was like seven out of 600 and something got the bowel obstruction, you know, seven people, which looks terrible as a hazard ratio, but.
Right.
And when you scale it out, yes, I agree. But I think we're talking management and dosing
being the problem. And when you overdose somebody on a peptide or anything, I mean,
when I take too much BPC-157, I swell up and I get swollen throughout my body.
I get edema. So overdosing somebody on a GLP-1 is, I think, is what's happening. And then we're
taking already brittle, they're metabolically brittle, their vagus nerve is damaged already,
their muscle tissue is already pathologic and full of fatty infiltrate. And then we're slamming them.
Rib eye, wagyu rib eye.
Yeah. And then we're slamming them with monotherapy, high dose GLP-1s.
I think it's a disaster.
So for listeners, if they listen to this and go to their doctor and get the prescription of it,
they're saying often that is an overdose.
Yes.
It's actually very dangerous.
I don't think it's very dangerous.
I think in the wrong person it could be.
Yeah, it tends to have more side effects.
Yes, you're going to get more side effects.
And the gastroparesis is not permanent, regardless of what the clickbait headlines are telling
us.
You mean when your stomach kind of stops working, if you stop the drug, it'll come
back to its normal.
Yeah, it comes back online.
The thyroid cancer is correlative at best.
Yeah, it's been in rats, right?
It's been in rats.
That black box warning is in rats that we're giving like-
Cancer that doesn't even occur in humans.
So you're saying you're downplaying that black box warning?
No, it's in rats.
But you're saying that's not something to worry about?
There's literally no human cases showing causative.
I will just say for the FDA, which is 75% funded by pharma, which is basically a subsidiary
of pharma, for them to take the step of putting a black box warning means there's pretty scary
data in my opinion on the thyroid cancer.
Well, I was going to finish.
They took the rat and they gave him 100 times the human dose.
And they got a very rare form of medullary thyroid cancer that rats develop spontaneously.
And the control group also got a high rate of medullary thyroid cancer.
But you're saying just for listeners.
No, I'm talking about what the Cleveland Clinic is showing for the actual data.
But you're saying just for listeners, should they be concerned about thyroid issues, hormonal
issues leading up to thyroid cancer?
They should talk to their doctor.
And if they have a history of medullary thyroid cancer in their family, they should absolutely,
that's a doctor-patient relationship discussion.
I'm not defending Ozempic.
And I'm not defending it at high doses for weight loss.
I'm talking about nuance.
We're not throwing out the baby with the bathwater.
I think that's an important point, Tina.
I think we have to do it in the right way, in the right context for the right patient. I always say,
you know, there's a Buddhist concept called the right medicine. What is the right medicine for
this person? Is it a motherectomy if they're 50 years old living with their mother that's
driving them crazy? Or, you know, or do they need exercise? Or do they need the right
nutrient they're deficient in? Or do they need to have some support for their metabolism? And I
think,
you know, it's conversation is hard because we're threading a very tight needle here,
which is at scale in the population, the way it's being done now, I think is problematic.
But is there another alternative to think about this that we can basically encourage people to
think about that includes an aggressive lifestyle intervention with some peptide support, which I
use across many, many other peptides. I use many peptides in my practice for just general therapeutic
treatments that support the body's own endogenous functioning, which is what I love about peptides.
I love things that nature made, not that, or God made, not that man made, because they tend to be
more problematic. That doesn't mean that these don't have side effects when you use them in huge doses. It looks like vitamin D, right? So one of the things that
also is a problem is muscle loss. And there's a lot of the data that is very clear on this. There's
been DEXA scans in some of the studies showing significant weight loss. But the truth is,
if you just lose weight without exercising and eating protein, you're going to have the same
result. It's the same percentage on a low-calorie diet. Right. So if you calorie restrict and you
don't eat protein and you don't strength train, you are going to lose muscle and you'll lose
muscle and fat at about 50% each. And when you gain the weight back, you gain back all fat.
And so you script your metabolism if you do the weight cycling, which is a real problem. So how
do you address some of the concerns? Because aside from the protein increase needs, when people are on
these drugs, they tend to have suppressed apocyte. So they don't want to eat as much protein and they
don't want to eat as much food. And then they may be even at risk for nutrient deficiencies.
So how do you deal with those kinds of issues? Well, first off, I think that's a dosing issue.
If you pull back the dosage low enough, people have an appetite and they continue to eat regularly. And interestingly, I've got
people eating, claiming to eat the same amount of calories and still having visceral fat loss.
And they're tracking themselves. So there's something changing there. We have data to show
that it decreases visceral fat while maintaining and actually inducing muscle protein synthesis.
GLP-1s induce muscle protein synthesis through various signaling pathways
and through perfusion, blood perfusion, and delivery of amino acids.
It's folks going on a severely calorically restricted diet that is causing the muscle loss.
The doctors are cranking the dose too high too fast.
They're being ramped up way too fast.
It's crushing their appetite. They're going into an anorexic state and they are
indeed losing everything. And just like you said, they're going to end up way worse off
at the end of this terrible journey. And so I don't disagree with that. I always say that
strength training is non-negotiable and I've said that for decades. Strength training is
non-negotiable, period. If you want to live a long, healthy life and be metabolically
optimized and survive the zombie apocalypse, you have to strength train.
Getting people to the gym is tough, right?
It really is.
And so we can blame the doctors.
We can blame the pharmaceutical industry.
But I'm talking to the patients because you and I both know that compliance is an issue with patients.
And they don't always do what we want them to do.
And they don't always do what we need them to do.
So my patients understand the prescription ends if you don't strength train.
I will pull this out.
Like, we will no longer be dispensing this.
So strength training, optimizing.
They need to have their Fitbit or their Apple Watch or their Oura Ring data pumped directly to you so you can see.
Well, I can tell by touching them.
I'm a chiropractor.
I can tell by their muscle integrity just by putting my hands on them, whether they're, you know, good musculature or fatty, flaccid muscle.
It's not a bad idea, right?
It's not a bad idea to support people
and have them track and be accountable
as they're doing this because-
That's helpful.
Yeah.
It sounds like we're all in agreement.
And I just want to like tailor,
like the person I have in my head
is the median American who is on the fence about Ozempic,
who's hearing the PR that there should be the standard of care
for somebody that's overweight or obese.
And I want to be clear kind of what we're all agreeing on here, which is that Ozempic
at the recommended dose, at the dose you would get from your doctor if you go get it, is
essentially an injectable crash diet.
That's not all it is.
There's a ton of regeneration and healing happening from the peptides.
That's right.
I think it's important to talk about what we call pleiotropic effects in medicine,
which is the multiple kinds of effects
on the body from one compound that's in the body.
Well, if we're going to talk about
the interconnectedness of the body,
you know, I think we should look at the 80% of people,
you know, having serious side effects.
And you mentioned mental health,
but the data has pronounced impact in mental health issues.
That's not correct.
Well, there's an EU investigation into suicidal ideation.
And they came back and said it was not an issue.
They have not.
They have not.
There's a serious investigation going on in EU that is not resolved.
It impacts...
The drug...
Tell me if this is...
The drug is basically gut dysfunction.
It messes with our gut where 95% of our serotonin is made.
If we're going to talk about-
It actually shifts your microbiome into a favorable microbiome and out of a pathologic
microbiome.
If we're going to talk about the interconnectivity of the body and the interconnectivity of this
drug, I think we would all agree there's much more we don't understand about how this drug
impacts the myriad of metabolic dynamics going on
with the body that understand.
Yeah, I mean, I think there's mixed data, right?
I think, you know, there's some data that show that there was a study looking at antidepressant
effects of GLP-1 receptor agonists.
It was a meta-analysis with 2,000 people, five randomized trials, one prospective court
study and it was about 24 to 60 weeks.
And they found that actually it reduced depression in adults and both adults
and adults with type two diabetes. So there's also studies that show that maybe it's not.
They're not all. I've got a question. So this drug, we're saying it's a miracle drug that
makes you not want to eat, that makes you not want to gamble, that makes you not want to have
sex. In some cases there's reports of. it basically decreases it seems like desires. So are you worried that there is an impact
this drug has on our dopamine or serotonin levels?
It actually improves dopamine signaling.
By making us not want to engage in the activities that bring us joy?
No, it impacts the HPA axis and imparts a dopamine allergic effect.
So you're saying flatly that a drug...
It's not a drug.
It's a peptide, and they're overdosing people on it,
and that's why they're having terrible side effects. And also, when people lose a tremendous amount of weight too fast,
they get depressed and suicidal.
So you're not concerned about unknown impacts to our dopamine or serotonin
from a drug that, by all reports,
makes us want to do less of the things that bring us joy?
Well, just eating.
No, no.
There's studies coming out.
I'm not seeing any appetite suppression.
It's being used as a gambling cessation and an alcohol cessation that's good though yeah that's awesome but it's literally making us not want to do almost everything
that's what the drug maybe i'm just saying that doesn't indicate i'm not hearing that from people
there's an interesting conversation here about dopamine because i think we have dysregulated
dopamine and i do genetic testing
with my patients and we see polymorphisms or variations in DR dopamine receptors, DRD2
receptors, which affect pleasure. So some people may need a lot of a substance, whether it's alcohol
or sugar or gambling to actually feel pleasure. And so there are people who are at risk for increased obesity that's based on this sort of low hedonic drive to pleasure.
And I think the question is,
do these drugs modify that in some way?
Do they actually not do it in a bad way,
but maybe they do it in a good way?
Because I think if there's something
that can actually help people reduce their addiction
and reduce that drive and actually have pleasure
from things that are just things that and actually have pleasure from things that
are just things that we all get pleasure from, that would be better.
I'm just trying to use common sense here, right?
I'm not saying it's a bad thing that people are eating a little bit less, that gambling
less, engaging alcohol less, engaging in drug use less.
But if this drug is basically across the board making people want to do less of things, that
to me demonstrates potential concerns,
unknown concerns with impact on our dopamine levels.
I think that's a serious concern.
My joke always is that there's a study
in the New England Journal years ago that said
we should start to use these new drugs
as soon as they come out before the side effects develop.
So we don't know if it's gonna happen
five, 10, 15 years, we really don't.
Well, we have 20 years of data on GLP-1s,
just not semaclutide and terzapatide.
And we weren't hearing all of this, these huge mainstream media headlines before that
with exenatide that's been around for 20 years and loraclutide.
Yeah. I mean, there's mixed data on the suicide thing. And some of it's population data. The
clinical trials don't show that. There's big, horrid studies of 240,000 people,
1.6 million patients with diabetes prescribed with Zempik, 240,000 on Wigobi. And there's a
lower incidence of suicidal thoughts in patients. And so I think, you know, I don't think we know.
We just have to keep tracking it. I think you're right. It's good to be concerned. And we do need
to do post-market surveillance of what's going on with these drugs and how they impact people's health. But that's sort of,
you know, like I'm sitting here, honestly, like kind of in the middle and also confused because
part of me is like, God, wouldn't it be great to have a leg up? Because I've been treating people
with obesity and overweight issues for 30 years. And it's tough. It's really tough for them. They
really struggle. They wanted the right thing and they're highly motivated patients. And it's tough. It's really tough for them. They really struggle.
They wanted the right thing and they're highly motivated patients and it's still tough. And so I wonder, you know, this is not a miracle drug. I don't think Tina would say it's a miracle drug.
I think, you know, like any compound, it has a role. And, and so is there a role? How do we use
it? Does it make sense to actually think about this differently from how the traditional pharmacological medical approach is doing something? And
just not dismiss it wholesale as a part of an overall solution. So I think in the perfect
world, we'd totally fix our food system. We would get rid of all the junk. I mean,
I had this crazy idea that if we actually gave Ozempic everybody's overweight, all of a sudden people would stop eating junk food
and the industry would collapse and everything would be great.
In fact, the CEO of Novo Nordisk who makes Ozempic
was getting calls from people in the fast food
and junk food industry really concerned about this.
McDonald's is concerned about this
because it's cutting into their stomach share,
we call it stomach share, which I think is a good thing.
Yeah, the CEO of Cheez-Its, the fact that there is a CEO of Cheez-Its cracks me up.
But the CEO of Cheez-Its said, we will keep an eye on this.
And they're actually doing a detour and coming up with potentially supplements to offset
their snack sales because they're down.
The joint replacement companies are concerned.
Dialysis clinic companies are concerned.
You know, there's a lot of big companies that are concerned
about this as well. So I feel like, and here's just a total out in left field. I actually think
big pharma is concerned. I think the big pharma companies who don't hold a patent on a GLP-1
agonist are very concerned because they happen to be the ones who hold the patents on the popular statin drugs and blood pressure drugs that every American ends up on for life.
So I really wonder if big pharma isn't actually, you know, depends, you know, war of the big
pharma companies.
I don't know.
I'm speculating, but I've been-
They're thrilled because comorbidities are going to go up.
Comorbidities are going to go up.
Are they though?
Yeah, because-
If we do it right.
If we do it how we're doing it now, but if we do it right.
This is why it's zero-sum and why it's so important.
Coma breeders are going to go up because that happens literally with every chronic disease
drug in the history of modern America.
They would be literally the first to not be correlated with increased chronic disease.
Here's why.
Because if you are saying, and I want to understand where you're,
because you're saying it's a good thing. It seems like that the standard of care,
that the high dose is actually going to lead to a lot of reduction in comorbidities.
That's the track we're on. We're on the track with a very high dose,
being open season for the majority of the American people. And if the standard of care when a child is overweight is to prescribe
them this drug and not talk to them about your books.
Right. 100% of the reason.
But we're saying-
Can I interject here?
We're saying that, we're saying that Hickory Bridge is going to go down at scale as this
drug is widely prescribed. That's what we're on the verge of doing. I am worried about-
I think we're giving doctors a little less credit than they deserve. I'm-
Well, we might disagree on that.
I'm not a, well, I purposely did not become an MD because I wouldn't do it.
I purposely became a naturopathic doctor because I didn't actually have to.
I wanted to go to naturopathic school.
I didn't go.
I wasn't going to go work for the evil empire from the get-go.
So I have been watching every single webinar piece of information that every single medical platform has put out.
Medscape, every single one.
On this topic.
On this topic. I have been doing nothing but consuming information about this.
And in every case, the doctors, the obesity doctors, obesity specialists mean well.
They all talk, especially I watched a whole one on childhood obesity and they were like,
we don't want to be injecting children. We can talk about children exercising more and children eating better and children doing all the things.
Really, the issue is their parents.
Getting their parents.
It's the parents, it's the schools, it's the whole environment.
Parents aren't trying to poison their children.
Actually, most children who suffer from obesity have obese parents.
Okay.
So we have a situation where 80%-
I wasn't finished.
Sorry.
Go ahead.
In all of these webinars, they specifically double down on lifestyle.
They specifically double down on lifestyle.
And I'm not bought out by big pharma.
I'm not a fan of the allopathic medical community, but I have been watching everything from all
sides that I can get my hands on to see where this nuanced conversation is.
And in every case, they are talking that we have to be implementing
lifestyle strategies for adults and children and the other part of the conversation that
...
That's true, Tina, but there is no incentives to do that.
I understand that.
Can I...
If there were, I agree with you, it would be amazing if we all start with that.
But the doctors are saying it.
At least they're trying.
Don't look at what they say, look at what they do.
They don't know.
They don't know.
They're not in the system that allows them to do it.
Every doctor I know would want their patient to exercise and eat more and do...
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
I've talked to Harvard obesity doctors off the record where they said they didn't get
into this to see kids be obese, but also that they would be laid off and their entire department
would be laid off if they don't have more obese children.
And they do understand those incentives. Every obesity doctor...
I don't know. I think they'd be happy to be out of a job for that. They do some
find something else to do.
But a person at an obesity clinic who has payroll, who has loans underwritten
on their new center that requires more children to be obese, let me just, let me back up.
Sure, there are perverse incentives but I would push back a little bit on doctors
kind of being evil in that way.
I think they're stuck.
I don't think they got into this for kids to be obese but it is just a statement of
economic fact that they need more obese children in order to have a job.
Yeah, maybe.
But I think if you talk to most physicians who are dealing with this, they would love
to sort of magically snap their fingers and have some place to send their patients to an intensive immersive lifestyle change program.
I know that's true. And there's, we were, when I was in Washington in 2008 and nine during,
during the Obamacare, uh, you know, development of the legislation, I was really working hard
to insert in the legislation, something called the take back your health act, where we basically got
the government to pay for intensive lifestyle change with a multidisciplinary team over a long period of time to create
sustained behavioral change.
Because we know how to change behavior.
And what you're talking about is behavior change.
But we don't have any mechanism in our health care system to support behavior change.
And that's really the problem.
We don't pay for it.
We don't incentivize it.
We don't have it.
No one has how to do it. I met with Kathleen Sebelius, who was the head of health and human services really the problem. We don't pay for it. We don't incentivize it. We don't have it. No one has how to do it.
I mean, I met with Kathleen Sibelius, who was the head of health and human services
at the time.
And I proposed this idea to her during this time.
She says, this is a great idea, but who's going to know how to do it?
Because doctors aren't trained to do it.
They don't know how to do it.
They know anything about nutrition.
I'm like, you're right.
But let me tell you something.
When somebody invented angioplasty and you reimbursed it, you didn't have to worry if
they were going to figure out how to do it.
If you paid them $10,000 to do that, they'd freaking learn how to do that.
And I think we're in the same situation.
It's all about perverse financial incentives.
Yeah, let me just double click on that because I think obviously doctors get in this for
the right reason.
I really do think they're stuck.
But the raw economic fact is that there's been no more profitable invention in the history
of modern American capitalism than a sick child.
A sick child is the most profitable entity in the world because that child is not learning
metabolically healthy habits and they're continuing to rack up comorbidity.
So imagine a high school, right?
Well, long term they'll be the most profitable.
Imagine a high school.
Well, but they're not going to die right away.
They're going to suffer.
Because diabetes is very profitable.
So imagine a high school right now.
You've had a doubling of prescriptions for SSRI, statins, and metformin among high schoolers.
A doubling in less than the past decade.
So those drugs are being prescribed like candy.
You have diabetes and prediabetes epidemic.
You have a high cholesterol epidemic.
You have a depression epidemic.
You have a high blood pressure epidemic.
And you have an obesity epidemic in high schools.
And those kids are the most profitable patients in America because if you can get to them
and say that the high cholesterol is a statin deficiency and the high blood sugar is a metformin
deficiency and the obesity is an ozempic deficiency, they're not learning metabolic healthy habits.
It's about the money.
Okay, so are doctors evil people?
No.
Are they complicit in this dynamic knowingly?
Absolutely.
That is a profitable...
If you take that kid, if you take a 12-year-old, and I want to talk to every parent listening
right now, it is open season very soon on your 12-year-old to give them Ozempic.
You're going to be pushed.
You're going to be shoved studies down your face.
You're going to be saying you're anti-science if you don't give this kid...
You're going to have to sign. I think you're right. I mean, I think you're right. I, you're gonna be saying you're anti-science if you don't give this case- you're gonna be- you're gonna have to sign-
I think you're right.
I think you're right.
They're gonna pressure you to say you're going against the American Academy of Pediatrics.
They're gonna pressure you to jab your 12 year old.
That is going to happen.
It's gonna be open season.
Do you know why this happens, Kelly?
It's because doctors are stuck in a system that's like a black box and what they don't
realize is that most of their education is
pharmaceutical driven i i was sitting on a trail of one skiing at a resort and and this woman was
next to me so what do you do i'm in i'm in you know i'm in um um you know uh pharmaceutical
education i'm like what do you do she's like why we put on continuing medical education conferences
for doctors so you know there really is a corruption of our medical education system.
My daughter's in medical school now.
I see it.
There's a corruption in the research infrastructure
and how it's done.
And we don't fund the right types of research
to support lifestyle intervention.
So we have a very screwed up system.
And doctors don't necessarily know they're in it.
It's like the matrix.
What do you think is going to happen for a 12-year-old
if they're prescribed Ozempic
and not given lifestyle interventions? It's a disaster.
What's going to happen if they don't, though?
Let's talk about both sides.
So should that marginal 12-year-old who's on the borderline of obesity, do you think
are they going to embark on a path of metabolic health and curiosity?
Are they going to continue to eat ultra-processed food, continue to poison their cells even
if it's 80% less?
Well, that's the problem.
That's the problem with those...
That's when I got into metabolic health was when I was 12.
I think though what Tina was saying before is really key.
If you link the prescription of these drugs to certain behaviors and track them...
But that's a cultural, that's a monumental cultural change that would have violent opposition
because the second as a standard of care for medicine, you start talking
to a kid.
Remember, that kid is the most profitable entity in America being sick.
So there's going to be huge violent opposition to instead of prescribing them a statin and
Ozembic to give them the blood sugar solution or one of your books, and talk to them about
exercise and incentivize them to eat a healthy diet.
That would immediately take millions of children off the chronic disease treadmill that's fueling
the largest and the fastest growing industry in the country.
I don't know.
I'm not sure I agree with you because I said to the CEO of Cleveland Clinic once, I said,
well we're at the World Equinox Forum, Toby Cosgrove, and I said, listen Toby, and I was
kind of joking, I said, how would you like me to empty out half your hospitals and cut
your bypasses and angioplasty in half? And he said, that would you like me to empty out half your hospitals and cut your bypasses and angioplasty in half?
And he said, that would be a great idea.
I said, but what you're making $8 billion a year, what if you're making 4 billion?
He says, we'll figure it out.
We'll figure out what the right thing to do is.
So not everybody obviously is like that in medicine, but I do think that the people in
medicine generally want to do the right thing.
And they don't, if they could like get rid of all obese kids, I think they would do it.
Now there are businesses and private
equity in medicine now I mean it's like it is it the why isn't the American
Academy of Pediatrics talking about diet why because they're funded by pharma in
the food industry that's why isn't why is the you know why isn't the American
Diabetes Association talking reason same reason but but but these those are the
doctors no they're not they're the professional associations who set the
standard of care that who doctors have to follow.
Who set the standard of care, true.
But doctors aren't necessarily...
Why aren't doctors speaking up?
Some are.
Some are.
You are.
I mean, there's a few.
I've been in this a long time and it's really challenging.
It's really...
It's easier said than done because you could put all of these perfect world scenarios in
front of a 12-year-old and if their parents are not going to comply with it, that kid's stuck.
That kid's stuck in that household having to deal with what's made for dinner for them
by their mom and dad.
And most cases of childhood obesity are coming, are stemming from obese parents.
There's a whole overhaul that we have to do that is so much more nuanced than just changing
public policy.
I'm going to work with Tina for a minute on this because I think what you're doing is
so unique and I think we can learn from it because you're not practicing metabolic medicine
in the same way that most endocrinologists are or doctors are who are prescribing Ozempic
or similar drugs.
And you're including a very different set of things that you look at, that you treat,
and that you manage. And you're
not finding the same complications, side effects, weight regain, muscle loss, stomach issues,
gastroparesis, nausea, vomiting. You found a way through to do this in a way, in a very different
way that I think is worth talking about. Because we all agree that the traditional pharmacologic
approach is a bad idea.
And I agree getting a 12-year-old in a Zympic and just sending them on their way for the rest of their life is a bad idea.
What is the right idea?
If we can create a blue ocean and say, okay, what would be the perfect use of these peptides in the world to deal with a really serious crisis that we all agree is happening, which is a metabolic crisis. So in a real world
scenario, in a perfect world with a blue ocean, how would we create a 360 treatment approach,
which you've done, to help people regain their metabolic health when they're metabolically
busted, which is anywhere arguably between 42 and 93% of Americans?
I always start by giving them something to add and not something to
take away. I don't take away the ultra refined carbohydrates right off the bat. People will
fight. Damn, you're nice. I'm like, get off that stiff. Well, they will fight for their addictions.
People will argue for their addictions. They tried to tax soda in New York and people flipped out and
rioted. People will not let go of their addictions. But if you can get them to acclimate to a new
normal and you can get them to stack some wins and get some little dopamine hits on their own,
you start to see change. So I get people walking. I get people increasing their protein. When you
increase your protein, you become less hungry. You stop eating as much garbage. It's a slow,
incremental step up. When they start to feel stronger and
their joints feel more stable, we start to get them strength training. I do start to educate
them about the evils of ultra refined carbohydrates. I educate, it's tattooed on my wrist,
Osseri. I educate my patients so that they understand why they're making these changes.
I have them read good books. I have them own the information because when they own it, they're empowered. Even with best efforts, sometimes we need a little hormone, depending on
their age. We might need some probiotic support for a short time. I'm not a big fan of doing that
long-term. We might need to obviously address nutritional deficiencies. It's a comprehensive,
holistic way of getting the body back to homeostasis. And when the body comes back to homeostasis,
weight starts to fall off.
Right, and so that's part one.
Part two, something that no one's talking about,
that obesity experts know well,
is that getting weight off is actually the easy part.
Keeping weight off is incredibly difficult.
So what do we do there?
And I think that this-
That's important because what we were saying before
was that these are perceived as lifelong drugs, but maybe they're not if we use them properly.
We got to get leptin signaling corrected. We got to get ghrelin signaling. There's leptin
resistance in the brain. There's cortisol. There's all kinds of issues. And so I look at a person
comprehensively. I don't look at them as a condition. They come in and they say, I have this,
this, and this. I'm like, okay, whoop-dee-doo. I'm interested in you. Mark, let's see what's
going on with Mark. How do we get Mark back to homeostasis?
And things start to fall into place that way.
It's a slow, steady process.
I realize not everybody has access to doctors like you and I,
and I realize that not everybody knows how to practice the way we do
or even wants to practice because it takes time,
and it's arduous, and it's complicated,
and it's like trying to hit a moving target, right?
But I'm trying to pull people back to center
so when they know better, they do better. They can educate their families. That trickles down. I catch my daughter
schooling her friends on things. I catch my husband teaching the work crew about nutrition
in his own blue collared way. So we teach and we educate. And that's all I'm really trying to do
about these peptides is like, yes, I understand that monotherapy, high dose, the way it's being
handled, jabbing 12 year olds with it, not the solution. Not long-term, not sustainable,
not a good idea. But there's nuance here. And I do think they have a place. And so I will use
them as needed per the individual. I don't know if that person's going to need it forever. I don't
know how metabolically busted they are. I don't know how quickly they're going to respond. And
I don't mind. If they feel fine taking a tiny little dose of this and cycling it for a long period of time.
I am there to treat them and serve them.
I'm not there to impart my policy changes on them for a worldview and say, well, Ozempic's bad, therefore you can't have it.
That's not my job.
In a sense, what you're talking about is taking someone who's metabolically busted, as you call it, to what I call metabolically resilient. So when I take a patient who's type two diabetic, who's on 100
units of insulin, I'm like, no, you can't have any sugar. Of course. You probably can't have any
fruit for now. You can't have any flour. Like this is just a hard no. Okay. If you want to get
reversing your diabetes, you just need a, like Benjamin Franklin said,
you need a pound of cure, not an ounce of prevention.
And then when we get them metabolically resilient, then yeah, you can add that stuff back and
you can try to have a little, see how it affects you, have some more fruit.
You want to have sugar or dessert once in a while?
Okay, if it's the end of a meal, you know, become more metabolically resilient.
And what you're talking about is shifting people from metabolically busted to metabolically
resilient and using a holistic approach that may include peptides, right?
Correct.
But didn't you say your patients weren't metabolically busted?
Not all of them.
They work better in people who are using them to optimize.
If we're just using peptides to optimize or we're using a little TRT or a little bioidentical
hormone replacement in someone who's generally optimized, it's a much lower, easier process.
Like your dad, for example. You mentioned your dad on the podcast. He's got diabetic. He's
a mess. 100 pounds overweight. What would you do for him?
My dad, doesn't matter what I teach him, he's not going to change his eating habits. He's got
a serious addiction. And so I told him, I was like, hey, dad, you've got one foot in the grave. You're in your early 80s. You're on your way out. His toes are purple.
I mean, he's looking at toe amputation here in a hot second. He won't walk anywhere. He won't do
anything. I said, I am going to crank the dose up on you. I'm going to get this weight off. But you
know what? Cranking the dose up in my world does not match what the allopathic system is doing.
We're still going very slow and low. And my dad's actually talking now and he's
got hope. And it's the first time at Christmas, this Christmas was the first past one that we
actually had a conversation. My dad was involved instead of just being checked out and glazed over.
So he, and he has hope. I bought him a vest, like a puffy vest. I said, so you can wear them on your
walks. Cause he can't get a jacket on. Cause he's so heavy. He doesn't want to go outside and be
seen. He's embarrassed. And so I bought him a puffy vest and it didn't quite fit. And he looked at me and
he goes, I'm hopeful this is going to fit me soon. And like, I have my dad back and he's still on a
baby dose. It's a little bit higher than the starting dose, but it's still a baby dose and
so be it. And if he has to take it forever, so be it. It's working. It's working great. And it's slow and low.
And the weight, he's so heavy, he can't get on a traditional scale.
So we don't even know what his weight is.
But his doctor was so impressed. His doctor said, let her manage that.
Let her keep going. And you know what I do when I go over?
I drop little dietary tidbits.
And I'm like, hey, maybe you shouldn't be sucking this down all day, dad.
It's not so good for you. But he's actually, his lights are on and he's listening.
So I had to do something because for three decades,
I watched him decline and I couldn't do anything.
And I'm shocked he's still alive.
So I was like, you know what?
We're throwing in the Ozempic.
We're going to see what happens.
And it's been a game changer.
I mean, I'm really curious about what we call these sort of non-weight loss effects.
And I've been reading some papers around Ozempic or not Ozempic papers around GLP-1 agonists and longevity.
And I'm saying I'm really interested in longevity. I'm like, wow, this is really interesting. It
reduces inflammation. It reduces oxidative stress, improves mitochondrial function. It
helps neuroinflammation. All the things that we know cause aging. Now, I do have a thought,
if you just lost weight, would that be enough? I don't know. But it's interesting.
And I think there's really interesting mechanisms that we're kind of just learning about.
And I think, like you're right, we can't throw the baby out with a bathwater.
And I think one of the challenges is that people can't get therapy in the way that we're talking about easily.
And I just want to dive into that for a minute.
And this is this whole world of compounded peptides. So for those who are not listening, there's
prescription drugs you can get at the drugstore that are FDA approved and that are brand name
usually or generic versions of those. There's all kinds of compounds, whether it's B vitamins or
whether it's glutathione or other things that we use in medicine that have to be made by non-traditional pharmacists called compounding pharmacies. And they produce
things like peptides or intravenous nutrition or different formulations of hormones that you
might like that you might not get a prescription like a cream or a gel. So compounding is tricky
because compounded drugs are not well regulated.
And so you have to know what you're doing.
You have to find the right pharmacy.
You have to make sure they have proper testing for the dosage, the purity, the potency.
And the FDA has come out really hard against these.
Now, maybe because they're just in good shape, I don't know.
But basically, I've been using these compounded peptides for a long time.
And I find them extremely effective for myself personally, for my patients, for all sorts of different
reasons.
And semaglutide is just a peptide.
And what's really striking is you can get it for literally pennies a day.
And instead of costing you $20,000 a year,
it might cost you a few hundred dollars a year.
In fact, a study came out just last week in JAMA
talking about the price of these GLP-1 drugs
maybe going between 75 cents a month to $72 a month.
Even in Canada, it's $300 a month.
Here, it's like $1,700, $1,800 a month. Even in Canada, it's $300 a month. And here it's like $1,700, $1,800 a month.
So these compounded things are not easy to get. They're not easy to use. You have to mix them up
yourself. You have to draw them up like a doctor with putting water in the bottle and sterile and
then drawing it up and then injecting it yourself with a needle. It's like a diabetic. Diabetics do.
They take an insulin bottle and they pull up the insulin and they, but now they have insulin pumps and different things.
They don't have to do that anymore, but it's kind of a little bit tricky to use it, right? And then
you have to find a doctor who knows what they're doing. So can you speak to this sort of,
this version of peptides you're using, the compounded peptides and why you use those,
why they're different and how you kind of navigate this tricky world?
Well, I've always used compounding pharmacies since I graduated and got a license. And I
didn't realize that most doctors didn't, to be honest with you at first. That was my bubble
of privilege. But I have found that semaclutide and terzepatide when compounded
are always coming pre-mixed. So you don't have to reconstitute them like some of the other
peptides. They're coming mixed up with clear instructions on the label and then patients are to draw them up
i have heard that we're seeing problems people presenting to the er because they're taking too
much these peptides not a like the pre-filled syringes like the ozempic is a pre-filled syringe
you can't screw it up right you can't hit the button it goes in those can't change the dose
it is what it is if you drop too much and you don't know what you're doing right i think it's
supposed to be 100 units but it should be 10 units you're kind of screwed right so that comes down to
doctor education with the patient in the office and being careful of that and i realize like you
said there's you know internet telemed doctors you can just get it sent to you but even in those
cases the patients i know who are using those, some are going that route
and they're finding it to be just fine.
No one's run into any problems.
When people want the fast route, I think they might start piggybacking.
We heard about that woman who died in Australia.
She actually was using two separate types of peptides.
Neither were prescribed or maybe one was prescribed and one she got off the internet and she piggybacked
them and she ended up dead.
So there are problems and you can get in trouble fast for sure.
Just even the slightest little bit too much and you might start seeing some nausea, you
might start seeing some stomach aches.
So we don't want that.
But I don't think that compounding pharmacies are the danger the FDA is making them out
to be.
I've been watching the smear campaign lately and it's incredible. They really are on the bender. They don't want
these peptides getting released without them being, and I'm sure that is something to do with
big pharma, we can speculate, but I don't see any problem with it. And you can play with a dose.
That's why I like compounding. We can play with the hormone dose, we can play with all the doses,
and we can... The whole point of compounding to me is that you individualize the medication for the patient
in front of you.
We're in total alignment here.
We were just talking before we came on that a report said Ozempic costs about $5 to make.
They're charging Americans and American taxpayers in many cases, and more soon, around $1,800
a month.
And then Germany's paying like $60 a month.
So the margins on this product are astounding.
That's a scandal.
And there's definitely a war.
Just to be clear, like I'm not anti-drug.
I'm kind of a libertarian.
Like I think people should have access to biohack
and take whatever drugs they want.
There's definitely a pronounced thing here.
The reason this is getting so much attention
is because there's so much profit
that can be made from basically
taking advantage of the American taxpayer,
which is where the opportunity cost really comes in
because those hundreds of billions of dollars
could go to actually fixing our food supply.
So it's kind of at a high level,
just to kind of summarize.
We kind of agree that we have a toxic food environment
that's driving this, that we have
a world in which our microbiome has been completely destroyed, that affects our metabolism
weight, that there is a flood of obesogens in the environment that are contributing to our
metabolic dysfunction, that 95% of Americans are somehow screwed up in their metabolic health,
and that our current solutions don't work. We're also in agreement that we should be fixing our food system so kids are eating
healthy stuff in schools and that people aren't exposed to a food carnival everywhere they
go of junk food and that people are actually in a medical system that can support nutrition
education, that supports intensive lifestyle therapies, that funds all those things.
And you and I are working on that in Washington, Cali,
and we're working hard.
But again, it's like ending slavery or civil rights
or women's rights.
It's going to take a minute.
In the meantime, we're seeing a crisis
of poor metabolic health,
and our current solutions aren't working.
Now, is the Ozempic revolution the solution?
I don't think so.
Is the smart use of peptides in the right patients a potential solution done in a different
way with a 360 view of lifestyle change and lower doses that mitigate the side effects
that can be done in a way that don't lead to rebound weight gain, that don't lead to
the muscle loss, that increase protein at a gram per pound, that make you hit the gym and pump iron four
times a week, that are included with aggressive lifestyle, behavioral change, support, and
coaching.
I think there's a role for it.
But I don't think it's how it's being done now.
And I think we all kind of agree with that.
Did I miss anything?
A couple quick reactions is, and this is just my perspective from digging into this
issue a lot.
I think that if you're extremely obese and diabetic, in your case with your father, that
seems to make sense.
It's like no complaints there if you really have lost your way, which is the edge case
of folks.
If you want 10 pounds off for the summer, no.
Well, I will say the one case I think is promising is PCOS.
I mean, people don't realize PCOS is insulin resistance, essentially, in a metabolic dysfunction.
If you do a crash diet, you're actually gonna increase your fertility, most likely, and
reduce the symptoms of PCOS.
So for a targeted, basically crash diet to improve your insulin resistance quickly, I
don't think it's a long-term solve, but I do actually get that.
Again, if you do a big calorie deficit diet and get your insulin resistance under control
or fasting, you will improve PCOS.
So I do get that.
I think the key thing is the average American.
The average American, we're facing a toxic environment and we have to, as a matter of
public policy, get the average American practicing
habits that are combating all of these threats to our metabolic health.
And I think we are being lied to that this is a long-term solve for that, which is the
most pronounced use case.
If you are a patient in the kind of middle America-
The mantra of the medical establishment is that this is a lifetime drug.
Yeah, for the majority of the American people, which is why this is the most valuable company
in Europe.
Although it's interesting that about, you know, 50 to 75% of people quit after a couple
of years.
Yeah, yeah.
I don't know if it's the cost or the side effects or what.
So that speaks to that I do believe...
I actually believe the drug is going to be recalled because of the side effects.
It's actually extremely pronounced side effects that we talked about.
And I actually think the drug's a disaster. I'm going to be recalled that
even in the absence of that, it's not the long-term solution for the median American.
If you are a patient, and particularly if you're a parent, I would be very skeptical
when your doctor inevitably tells you that this is a long-term solution, the lifetime solution
for dealing with metabolic dysfunction. And my big point is, if not now, when?
This is zero sum.
Are we going to spend $1,800 per person per month on an injection?
Or are we finally going to ask, in the midst of a situation where we're mass poisoning
children in utero from metabolic dysfunction, are we going to actually change way and follow what you
have been putting the stake in?
I mean, I hope so.
That time is right now.
We should not.
We should be very impatient for that.
And that's why Ozempic is important, Mark.
I'm in a curious, open-minded, but skeptical kind of moment around these GLP-1 agonists.
And I'm doing a lot of work in researching what they do, how they work,
the complications, the side effects, but also the beneficial effects. And I think the thing about peptides is so fascinating is, and Tina, you hit on this, is they're regenerative. They
help to regenerate and repair. So it's a miracle to me. I could take an Advil and ensure my whatever
won't hurt for that night, but the next day, it's going to freaking hurt.
If I take a shot of a peptide, I'm like, damn, that isentendinitis went away.
And now I can lift weights again.
And I'm like, that was pretty cool.
And so I'm like, these are really different in their biological actions.
And so they become drugs not because they're patentable,
but because the delivery system is patentable.
So what's patentable is a little auto injector, not the actual compound.
That's why you can get it in a compounding pharmacy for pennies.
Right.
I just want to say that since I released these podcasts on my podcast, I've gotten hundreds.
Are you lovers and haters?
Well, I've gotten hundreds of messages from people.
What have you heard?
And I have a, I don't have the size of audience you do, but I have a sizable audience.
And I have so many people writing me saying, I'm writing you through tears.
Like that exact quote, I'm writing you through tears.
Thank you so much for shedding light on this.
I have been on these peptides.
I do all the things.
I follow you.
I mean, I know the average American doesn't have access to doctors like us, but they do
have, there's so much free education on the internet now.
There is, yeah.
And they are combing through it.
They're implementing, they're doing all the things and they just couldn't get over that hump.
And they started GLP-1 agonist and it got them over that hump.
And they are crying in gratitude.
Hundreds of people messaging me constantly.
They're also telling me that they don't tell their husbands they're on it because they're getting shamed.
The pharmacist is giving them side eye.
Their family comes down on them at every holiday meal because these peptides are being so vilified so I'm
team patient and I'm team whoever's sitting in front of me like you said and
I'm gonna do whatever I need to do to get that person what they need to get
that leg up because what I'm finding and what my followers are reporting what my
patients are reporting is that once they start on these peptides and they start to take effect and they start to get that
decrease in neuroinflammation and they start to lose a few pounds, they want to move.
And they want to eat right. And they suddenly have energy because it is impacting the HPA axis. And
they're suddenly wanting to actually cook the meals instead of going out for fast food or order
in. They're starting to implement the strategies that they need to be doing that they just didn't have the energy or the gumption to do before.
I don't know what it is that gets people to implement. That has been the one crux of my
practice. I cannot figure out why some people implement and some people don't, but some people
just need a leg up. I want to be clear too. I thought it was very important for me to put some,
frankly, doubt in a listener's head and put some of these macro concerns and, frankly, systemic concerns as folks determine whether to use the standard pharma-prescribed Ozempic for themselves or their children.
But we're in total agreement with Dr. Tina.
I think we need to get to a world—I really believe the American people will make the right decision if they're not corrupted by bad incentives and bad information. I think it is, you know, perfect. It is,
it is a scandal that these drugs cost so much. It's a scandal.
You just want to pull off the medical industrial complex.
Yeah, it's a scandal. It's a scandal that they're being pushed in our throats.
The agricultural food industry complex.
Yeah. But, you know, I'm with you on that. I wrote a book about it. I get it.
Yeah. It's very important.
And I think I don't know much about the regenerative aspects of it.
I think that's very promising.
It's not blanket either or. I think obviously the systemic, I think, ramming these drugs into our arms is a problem.
But I really do think we need to get to where back to this was a biohack.
As you mentioned, this is a biohacking kind of.
This has been around for decades, these peptides where people have been experimenting.
I think that's great.
And I think people should be able to experiment.
And I just think the societal solution for obesity, it's a really problematic with this
drug.
Well, Callie, I agree.
And I thank you for working on this issue so diligently.
You're going all over the country or you're everywhere now.
I'm really inspired by your voice and your mission mission to you know get people to wake up to what's going on
i i've tried to do it for a long time you're you're a bit more uh passionate and and uh vocal
and and uh compelling than i am so maybe you're gonna help push it i'm reading from your hymnal
i've been like i've been like like sisyphus pushing the rock uphill for like 30 years or 40 years.
I think you're like a Superman. You're going to push it over the edge and it's going to fly down.
So your book is amazing. Good energy, the surprising connection between metabolism
and limitless health. People should definitely get that. You wrote it with your sister, Casey Means,
and it lays out a lot of these issues around metabolic health and our social and political
issues. It's, it's a must get book. It's out now. So make sure you get it. And Tina, your work is so important. I think both of
you are some of the most thoughtful, committed people I've ever met who are thinking about these
deeply and not just sort of at the surface and trying to find real solutions both on the macro
and micro level. And I'm so grateful to both of you and your work.
Tina, you have a wonderful free GLP-1 video training series, Ozempic Uncovered. If you want to get deeper with Tina, for sure go there. It's drtyna.com forward slash Ozempic Uncovered.
That's drtyna.com forward slash Ozempic Uncovered. Be sure to look at it. We'll put it all in the
show notes. We're going to put put it all in the show notes.
We're going to put all the studies in the show notes we talked about.
We're going to put more studies in there.
We did probably 20 hours of research that I did.
I probably, my team did 20 hours on top of that.
You guys have done so much.
All that's going in the show notes.
You can click through and read the studies yourself.
You can make a decision for yourself.
But I think what we're talking about is a very different and nuanced view of how to
approach this problem of both poor metabolic health. And I love this concept of metabolic busted and also the macro issue of,
you know, how do we deal with this at a social level? So we don't have to give people a Zempik
or anything else. We just, you know, somebody sent me a video of like somebody walking around
in the 70s, everybody on the beach in the 70s. And there was like not a single person overweight
in the 70s. So now it's like, we're all in this together.
So thank you both.
Any last thoughts or words from either of you?
Well, there was one study I didn't share,
and I don't know if we're allowed to talk about it here,
but they did it in 2022.
They had type 2 diabetics admitted to hospital with COVID.
They administered once a week,
some Acclutide for a few weeks,
80% reduction in death and ICU admission. Interesting.
That makes sense. That makes sense because if you're improving metabolic health, you're
lowering your risk. I'm just wondering, aside from the good points that Callie makes,
there aren't potentially some smear campaigns on these going forward too from...
Well, listen, it's true. And I would just say, I know we're all in agreement that our body is also a GLP-1 agonist,
and we can create, with food and with supplementation, GLP-1.
And my company, which we're proud to have you as a support of, TruMed, we have doctors
write interventions to actually combat obesity with Food is Medicine.
Pendulum, I know a company we're fans of has a new product
that's specifically formulated.
So we actually help, if appropriate, unlock tax-free spending to these items.
And that's where I think the rubber really hits the road.
We need to be steering money to food and Pendulum, not necessarily drugs.
And that's what we're doing right now at TrueMed.
Well, we didn't get to talk about it enough, and we'll put it in the show notes.
And Tina, you talk about it a lot.
But there are ways to naturally increase our GLP-1.
For example, if you are testosterone deficient, if you hit the gym and you pump by and your
testosterone go up, if you stop eating sugar and starch, your testosterone go up.
It's the same thing with GLP-1.
If we're low in GLP-1, there are natural ways to do it by eating more protein, by exercising,
by taking certain herbs like berberine and cinnamon.
There are other things that actually work to help. And I want you to just for a second talk about TruMed because it's a way for people to get access
to these kinds of treatments with tax-free dollars. So tell us about TruMed for a sec,
because I think it's important. If people are wanting to make lifestyle change, but they can't
afford it, or they think they don't have money, there's a way to get access to these things with
dollars that are pre-tax dollars.
I go to my mom, the standard American patient.
When she had high cholesterol, she got a quick prescription for a statin.
That doctor could have written a letter of medical necessity for probiotics,
for healthy food, for exercise.
And with that letter of medical necessity unlocks tax-free spending.
There's $150 billion in these HSA, FSA accounts.
Right now, those are generally just waiting for you to get sick and go to drugs. Yeah, health savings accounts. And those
often are just, you get sick and you buy your drugs, you buy your interventions. Those can go
right now to root cause items, to items that you talk about, to Pendulum, to Athletic Greens,
to Daily Harvest, to CrossFit, to companies we're proud to partner with right now.
Yeah, it's great.
I use my HSA card to buy supplements with TruMed.
I use my HSA card to buy things when I go to get an acupuncture or get a massage or
do things that actually help my body.
We've been so proud in the past five months.
We've done 130,000 patients.
So much that some of the arms of the healthcare industrial complex are saying, hey, it's moving
a little fast. But this is fully within the law right now that medicine can be
food, can be supplements, can be exercise. If a doctor outlines those interventions for the
prevention or reversal of disease, we can do that. And what our message is, whether you use
TruMed or not, if you're about to get your Ozempic
or a STAT or a Metformin, if you're about to get on that chronic disease treadmill or
your child, you can ask your doctor, hey, can we do a letter of medical necessity instead?
Can we actually outline some dietary, exercise, lifestyle interventions?
And with that letter, you can actually use tax-free money on those items.
We've got to steer money, medical dollars to these items.
So that's what our mission is at Truva.
Thank you, Kelly, for doing that and making it available.
It's such a great thing.
And I think you both are providing education, training, doing such good things in the world.
I'm really honored to have you on the Doctors Pharmacy Podcast.
Maybe we'll have you back to go deeper.
It was a great conversation.
I think people hopefully got the sense of what we're talking about and have a little bit more to think about when it comes to this and get out of the
binary black or white conversations and talk about more of the nuance and be able to actually get
deep into a topic that matters for all of us, which is getting America healthy, getting us
as individuals healthy and creating a solution that works and includes all the potential levers
we have to pull because sometimes we need a pound of cure. So thank you both. And we'll see you again soon.
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