Skip to content

General Discussion

A place to talk about whatever you want

37.7k Topics 339.5k Posts
  • C'mon scammer, do better.

    6
    2
    6 Posts
    99 Views
    taiwan_girlT
    @George-K said in C'mon scammer, do better.: @Doctor-Phibes said in C'mon scammer, do better.: Scammers just don't have pride in their work any more. It's very sad. [image: 1738203825923-gif92jcweaaijd9.jpeg]
  • A different perspective...

    15
    15 Posts
    108 Views
    89th8
    @taiwan_girl Exactly, the blessing and curse of short terms. This is where I would hope Trump would step up and say "here is a 12 year plan to get our financials in order" (yes that takes it through two terms for Vance).
  • Pritzker warns

    6
    6 Posts
    111 Views
    taiwan_girlT
    https://x.com/JBPritzker/status/1884640728745115836
  • Dear Self,...

    35
    35 Posts
    264 Views
    taiwan_girlT
    I think that in many times, passion becomes business and isn't as fun any more.
  • Jeremy Takes a Victory Lap

    2
    2 Posts
    23 Views
    LuFins DadL
    And it is fair to point to this as the beginning of the resistance. This woke a lot of people up, and in another interview, I saw Ben reference this as the reason why they decided to stand their ground on the issue. Link to video
  • Lightning Down

    14
    14 Posts
    190 Views
    Doctor PhibesD
    According to George he's had 9 erections in 3 years, or something.
  • New Media Spots in the WH Press Pool

    8
    8 Posts
    68 Views
    Doctor PhibesD
    @Horace said in New Media Spots in the WH Press Pool: People think Bombadil was a tree-fucker? I seem to remember in Bored of the Rings that Tim Benzedrine rescues Frito from being sexually abused by a tree, but it's been a while.
  • Hearing loss

    2
    2 Posts
    57 Views
    89th8
    Finally, now when I tell my kids to BE QUIET, there is science behind it.
  • Crypto, explained.

    2
    2 Posts
    31 Views
    HoraceH
    Fair, but bitcoin hasn't reached that finale yet, and I don't expect it to in my lifetime.
  • Stop "reimagining" things. Just stop.

    13
    13 Posts
    206 Views
    jon-nycJ
    The reimagining happened in the 70s. Maybe this is re-reimagining.
  • Three media at once

    1
    1 Posts
    31 Views
    No one has replied
  • Dear Senators...

    11
    11 Posts
    73 Views
    George KG
    @jon-nyc said in Dear Senators...: Must have been that 5g tower on sandhill road. Oh, FFS, you know better than that. It was the 5G Nanobots in the COVID vaccines.
  • Let's make those fat people pay

    11
    11 Posts
    204 Views
    Doctor PhibesD
    @George-K said in Let's make those fat people pay: When I went into private practice in a more blue-collar-ish community, I could walk into a room and also tell. Skinny legs, dry skin, a bit twitchy. Actually, that might be the crackheads. Funnily enough, I once commented to one of our admins that one of the senior managers looked like a smoker, but I'd never seen him with one. She gave me an awkward look and said she didn't want to say anything. I later learned that he smoked voluminous quantities of weed after hours.
  • Surgery or Ozempic?

    3
    1
    3 Posts
    83 Views
    George KG
    It was in a throwaway journal which cited another throwaway. Behind a paywall, so here's the entire article (less the diagram). I can't find the article in the other throwaway. Originally published by our sister publication General Surgery News By Ajai Srinivas SAN DIEGO—Bariatric surgery far outperforms lifestyle interventions and glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) medications at maintaining weight loss, according to a meta-analysis presented at the 2024 annual meeting of the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery. With results from six randomized controlled trials, three systematic reviews and more than 40,000 patients, the study is the first synthesis of its kind. The analysis included two systematic reviews of bariatric surgery, one of Roux-en-Y gastric bypass including 18,665 patients and one of sleeve gastrectomy including 6,095 patients; a single systematic review of lifestyle interventions including 723 patients; and six randomized controlled trials of GLP-1 medications, including four studies of semaglutide with a total of 11,871 patients and two of tirzepatide with 3,209 patients. Lifestyle interventions were the least effective treatment, the investigators found, producing a mean total body weight loss of 7.4% at the end of the treatment period, followed by a mean per-month weight regain of 0.14%, with participants reaching their pre-intervention weights within 4.1 years. GLP-1 medications proved more effective. Weekly semaglutide injections for 20 weeks and tirzepatide for 36 weeks produced a mean total body weight loss of 10.6% and 21.1%, respectively. Roughly half of the weight lost was regained within a year after stopping injections; with continued injections, weight loss plateaued after 17 to 18 months, at 14.9% for semaglutide and 22.5% for tirzepatide. Outcomes after surgery were significantly better. Gastric bypass surgery and sleeve gastrectomy resulted in a mean total body weight loss of 31.9% and 29.5%, respectively, one year after surgery. Accounting for weight regained in the decade after surgery, both procedures produced a stable total body weight loss of approximately 25%. While the results demonstrate a striking difference favoring surgery, lead investigator Megan Jenkins, MD, a bariatric surgeon at NYU Langone Medical Center, in New York City, emphasized that surgery and medication ought to be viewed not in opposition but through a holistic lens, as options and potential complements based on the needs of each patient. “One of the big benefits of these new medications is that it’s helped us to treat obesity as a chronic disease,” Dr. Jenkins said. “We’ve always treated it that way, but I think the medical field has had trouble truly seeing it as a chronic disease, like diabetes and high blood pressure, for example, which have always been treated with a combination approach. “With obesity, some patients are excellent candidates for medicine—for those with BMIs [body mass indexes] in the mid- to low 30s, that may be all they need to get to a healthy weight,” Dr. Jenkins said. “But others, with a BMI of 50 or up, still need surgery, and they may need medications to help them get to a healthy weight for surgery. We now have multimodal options for this chronic disease that we didn’t have before.” Sarah Samreen, MD, the director of metabolic and bariatric surgery at The University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston, praised the study for providing the first large data set comparing obesity treatments, and concurred with Dr. Jenkins’ comments regarding multimodal treatment. She added that she wanted to see randomized controlled trials comparing surgery and medications in the future, as well as studies comparing the financial aspects of both modalities. “We have studies showing the long-term financial benefits of surgery, and we know based on this study and others that medications have to be taken for life to maintain their efficacy, but we don’t have data to clearly show when medications are financially justified compared to surgery,” Dr. Samreen said. “We need that data.”
  • Lock up the twerker

    2
    1
    2 Posts
    48 Views
    HoraceH
    STEM graduate?
  • Happy Sandwich Day!

    2
    2 Posts
    44 Views
    MikM
  • Stranded Astronauts

    41
    41 Posts
    641 Views
    89th8
    There are some good photos out there from it now, btw: [image: 1738179957589-ca347baf-f797-4025-b60b-34118b029a41-image.png]
  • Cooking outside can be exciting...

    1
    1 Posts
    17 Views
    No one has replied
  • This guy's got balls

    8
    8 Posts
    133 Views
    Doctor PhibesD
    In less (or possibly more) complicated times... Link to video
  • Love the work, hate the job?

    26
    26 Posts
    460 Views
    Doctor PhibesD
    @Aqua-Letifer said in Love the work, hate the job?: I keep my phone plugged in at all times and when I'm in my car, I turn it off to make it a pain in the ass to use. Pretty much the only thing I like about my phone is the fact that I can listen to podcasts and music when I'm driving.