 Current options for weight loss medications include the ridiculously named Q-Semiha, a combination of fentermine, the fen and fenfen, and topiramate, a drug that can cause seizures if you stop it abruptly. It was explicitly rejected multiple times for safety reasons in Europe, but remains for sale here in the USA. Or at least at the time I made this video. Belvick is in a similar boat, allowed here, but not in Europe out of concerns about it possibly causing cancer, psychiatric disorders, and heart valve problems. It's sold in the US for about $200 a month, but if you think that's bad, there's sexenda, which requires daily injections listed at the low, low price of only $1,281, and don't forget the $0.96 for a 30-day supply. It carries a black box warning, FDA's strictest caution about potentially life-threatening hazards for thyroid cancer risk, paid consultants and employees of the company that makes it, argue, the greater number of breast tumors found among drug recipients may be due to enhanced ascertainment, meaning easier breast cancer detection just due to the drug's effectiveness. Contrave is another option if you ignore the black box warning about a potential increase in suicidal thoughts. And then there's ally. It's the drug that causes fat, malabsorption, and thereby causes side effects with names like flattis with discharge. It can be your ally in an old leakage. The drug evidently forces the patient to use diapers and to know the location of all the bathrooms in the neighborhood in an attempt to limit the consequences of urgent leakage of oily fecal matter. A Freedom of Information Act exposé found that though company-sponsored studies claimed all adverse events were recorded, one trial apparently conveniently failed to mention 1318 of them. What's a little bowel leakage, though, compared to the ravages of obesity? As with anything in life, it's all about risks versus benefits. But in an analysis of more than 100 clinical trials of anti-obesity medications lasting up to 47 weeks long, drug-induced weight loss never exceeded more than 9 pounds. That's a lot of money and risk for just a few pounds. Since you're not treating the underlying cause of fattening diet, when people stop taking these drugs, the weight tends to come right back, so you'd have to take them every day for the rest of your life. And people do stop taking them, using pharmacy data from a million people. Most ally users stopped after the first purchase. Most meridian users didn't even make it three months. Taking weight loss meds are so disagreeable that 98% stopped taking them within the first year. Studies show many doctors tend to overestimate the amount of weight loss caused by these drugs or were simply clueless. One reason may be that some clinical practice guidelines go out of their way to advocate prescribing medications for obesity. Are they seriously recommending drugging a third of Americans, more than 100 million people? You will not be surprised to learn that the principal authors of the guidelines had a significant financial interest or leadership position in six separate pharmaceutical companies that all coincidentally worked on obesity drugs. In contrast, independent expert panels like the Canadian Test Force on Preventive Health Care explicitly recommend against weight loss drugs, given their poor track record of safety and efficacy.