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작성자 Randell Freame 댓글 0건 조회 4회 작성일 24-11-13 09:02

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Tim Ramsay, pictured with his wife and their daughter Elyse at her graduation, died suddenly after going to hospital complaining of severe stomach pains. His cause of death was initially ruled as 'undetermined' but his family believes it was linked to weight-loss drug Saxenda

'He was a long-distance truck driver for many, many years and with the terrible food options available on the road and how exhausted he was when he was home, he was finding it so hard to lose weight,' Elyse tells me.

Mark Harmon has grey/white hair.

While her father was prescribed Saxenda through proper channels after speaking to a doctor, Elyse was 'horrified' to learn after his death that thousands of people are accessing weight-loss drugs online without being properly warned of side effects.

'But this medication was not designed for weight loss. Using it off-brand to satisfy our obsession with being thin is simply not worth the risk to those who require it to treat their diabetes - and it is certainly not worth the risk to our own lives.'

Nausea was the first sign something was wrong. While it is a common side effect when first taking Saxenda, it often eases over time as the patient's body adjusts to the medication. However, Elyse said her father was 'sick and queasy the entire time' he used the drug. 

While her father was prescribed Saxenda through proper channels after speaking to a doctor, Elyse, pictured here with her family, was 'horrified' to learn after his death that thousands of people are accessing weight-loss drugs online - without being properly warned of side effects

As her mum tried to explain what had happened, Elyse was numb with shock but the facts were clear: her 58-year-old dad had collapsed suddenly in the bathroom that evening and paramedics couldn't revive him.

Stomach pains are a known side effect of Saxenda, the 'miracle' weight-loss drug Tim had been taking for just 19 days. Saxenda is the 'sister drug' of the wildly popular Ozempic, an injection used to treat type 2 diabetes which gained popularity for its 'off-label' weight loss effect

The coroner put the official cause of death as 'undetermined', but both Elyse and her mother Rita, a 60-year-old retiree, are convinced Saxenda, the 'miracle' weight-loss drug Tim had been taking for just 19 days, contributed to his death.

A farmer-turned-long-distance-truck-driver from South Australia, Tratament Pentru Sanatatea Parului he was particularly proud of his daughter, his only child, for becoming a solicitor, after her humble beginnings on the family's farm on the state's Yorke Peninsula.

Stomach pains are a well-known side effect of Saxenda - the sister drug of the wildly popular Ozempic, an injection used to treat type 2 diabetes which has gained popularity for its 'off-label' weight loss effect.

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