R
Ronny Morris
Guest
Any diabetics out there that are using Ozempic or a medication in that class? Can I still obtain a third class medical certificate?
Diabetes treated with oral medication (like Ozempic/semaglutide) will require a special issuance. But the chances for certification and SI are generally high.Any diabetics out there that are using Ozempic or a medication in that class? Can I still obtain a third class medical certificate?
Ozempic is an injectable. In fact, the fancy dose-calibrated pen is the reason for short supply... apparently difficult to scale up production.Diabetes treated with oral medication (like Ozempic/semaglutide) will require a special issuance.
I thought the thyroid cancer was a concern from animal studies. Is their human evidence of same?There are some very troubling reports concerning adverse reactions when use for weight loss. These include (altho low possibility) thyroid cancer and potential intestinal blockage. Such that these are now FDA warnings on the boxes. The Mayo Clinic is reporting Pancreatitis in some patients.
Sorry Paul. I think I confused matters. You are correct semaglutide can be injected or ingested orally. What I was referring to was one big difference is what the medication is being used to treat. If it's treating Diabetes, it will require a special issuance. I used the phrase 'diabetes treated with oral medication' to refer to any Diabetes not treated with insulin. But as you pointed out, some of the non-insulin diabetes meds can also be injected.Ozempic is an injectable. In fact, the fancy dose-calibrated pen is the reason for short supply... apparently difficult to scale up production.
Most Semaglutide use is injected. There are oral forms, but dose effectiveness seems to vary widely person to person, making administration challenging.
And, I thought the oral meds were CACI-issuable?
Paul