Can Ozempic make America slim again? RFK Jr and Musk are at odds [View all]
New York: For Robert F. Kennedy Jr, the activist whom US President-elect Donald Trump will nominate to serve as the secretary of health and human services, the solution to obesity in America now at 40 per cent of adults is straightforward: The first line of response should be lifestyle, he told Jim Cramer in a December 12 interview on CNBC.
Elon Musk, the technology billionaire who advises the president-elect, sees things differently: Nothing would do more to improve the health, lifespan and quality of life for Americans than making GLP inhibitors super low cost to the public, he wrote on the social platform X, referring to the new class of drugs that cause weight loss, including Ozempic. Nothing else is even close. (GLP is Glucagon-like peptide, a hormone produced in the gut and released in response to food.)
And there, with the contrasting views of two men in Trumps ear, lie two sides of an issue that is plaguing health and nutrition researchers. Is it even possible to change lifestyles and the food environment enough to solve Americas obesity problem? And, if not, do we really want to solve it by putting millions of people on powerful drugs? What is the right balance between the two approaches?
Many people find that eating well is easier said than done. Food companies have saturated the United States and other nations with seductively cheap and tasty things to eat, available seemingly everywhere and around the clock. Obesity researchers suspect the current food environment has allowed many Americans to be as overweight as they possibly can be.
https://www.theage.com.au/world/north-america/can-ozempic-make-america-slim-again-rfk-jr-and-musk-are-at-odds-20241219-p5kzkm.html
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