FDA approves nonprescription diet p

Falco

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FDA approves first nonprescription sale of diet pill
<div></div><div id="QUOTEHEAD">QUOTE</div><div id="QUOTE">WASHINGTON (AP) -- Dieters got a new tool Wednesday to help them take off the extra pounds -- the first government-approved nonprescription diet pill.

The Food and Drug Administration said the fat-blocking weight-loss pill orlistat, which has been available by prescription, can be sold in a reduced-strength version over the counter.

The new version will be sold as &quot;alli&quot; by GlacoSmithKline PLC. Xenical, the prescription version, is made by Roche Holding AG.

The drug is intended for people 18 and older to use along with a reduced-calorie, low-fat diet and exercise.

Dr. Charles Ganley, FDA's director of nonprescription products, stressed that the drug is intended for use along with diet and exercise programs.

&quot;Using this drug alone is unlikely to be beneficial,&quot; Ganley said at a telebriefing.

While some dietary supplements make weight-loss claims, Ganley said this is the first nonprescription drug approved by the agency for that purpose.

Ganley said in trials, for every five pounds people lost through diet and exercise, those using orlistat lost an additional two to three pounds.

When taken with meals, orlistat blocks the absorption of about one-quarter of any fat consumed. That fat -- about 150 to 200 calories worth -- is passed out of the body in stools, which can be loose as a result. About half of patients in trials experienced gastrointestinal side effects.

The agency recommended users take a multivitamin when using this drug.

The new drug would contain half the dose of Xenical prescription capsules. The price has not been set but is expected to run $1 to $2 a day, company officials said. The company estimated 5 million to 6 million Americans a year would buy the drug over the counter.

The Food and Drug Administration said the most common side effect of the product is a change in bowel habits including loose stool and some oily spotting. Eating a low-fat diet will reduce the likelihood of this side effect.

FDA said people who have had organ transplants should not take OTC orlistat because of possible drug interactions. In addition, anyone taking blood-thinning medicines or being treated for diabetes or thyroid disease should consult a physician before using orlistat, the agency said.

GSK Consumer Healthcare, which will market the pill, said it chose the name alli to indicate a partnership with consumers in their weight-loss efforts.

&quot;We know that being overweight has many adverse consequences, including an increase in the risk of heart disease and type 2 diabetes,&quot; said Dr. Douglas Throckmorton, deputy director for the FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research.

&quot;OTC orlistat, along with diet and exercise, may aid overweight adults who seek to lose excess weight to improve their health,&quot; he said.</div>
Blocks the absorption of fat? That doesn't sound good.

Worth posting as a news item, but I can't see this being very helpful for bbs who are cutting while eating a balanced diet. More for the cheeseburger-eating portion of the population.
 
Yeah, right up until the side effects kick in and then they get a look a the laundry.

It forces them to eat cleaner to stay clean.
 
<div></div><div id="QUOTEHEAD">QUOTE</div><div id="QUOTE">The drug is intended for people 18 and older to use along with a reduced-calorie, low-fat diet and exercise.</div>

FDA and their tricks, what makes this one special compared to all the others?
 
I heard them say on the news that if you lost 5 pounds by diet and exercise that using this drug would give you another 2 pounds of fat loss. And they also said that you would have to fight the urge to crap your pants because all the fat absorbed by the pills gives you the squirts!
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<div></div><div id="QUOTEHEAD">QUOTE</div><div id="QUOTE">We achieve the same thing by eating less fat. Sheesh. </div>

Not true!! Adhering to a low-fat diet doesn't make you poop your pants!
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BTW, if I remember correctly (I'm too lazy/busy to look it up), the package insert for this stuff talks about &quot;oily stools.&quot; Yuck factor=10+

I just can't imagine what makes people think that blocking fat is a good approach to weight reduction. I mean really. So you're on orlistat, and you keep on keepin' on with your Big Macs, fries, large shakes, and apple pies. Lots of dirty laundry to be sure, but there's enough carbs in that mix to keep you from losing weight. Like people omn orlistat are really going to go on a &quot;judicious weight-loss diet regimen.&quot; Uh-huh. Why not just do that to begin with, and reduce cals from *all* sources, *judiciously*? The logic escapes me.
 
The thing is that people have differing perspectives on food.  While I am sure everyone on this board enjoys their meals, I suspect that we have more of a tendency to view food as a tool, or means to an end.  This tends to make it easier for us to manipulate our intake.

Other folks, however, have all sorts of other social and psychlogical associations with food that make this sort of change more difficult.  I am not discounting the issue of simple lack of will power, just pointing out that we tend to view food differently than the general population.  

Case in point: since I started seriously tracking nutrients and manipulating my diet, my wife has made at least one comment about my &quot;taking the fun out of eating.&quot;  To her, eating is as much a social action as anything.
 
Ruthenian: I always watch your posts, as you usually have a good fresh perspective on things...even though you came out of the closet as a hippie plant muncher...!  
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One thing I figure is that stuff like that sells because (at least here in America) people just want to take a pill and *poof* be buff.
Yeah, right.
I think food can be both a tool and a social event and a pleasure toy...but you fly in the face of adversity, and for me, I make a lot of mistakes when with other people as opposed to feeding myself.
 
<div></div><div id="QUOTEHEAD">QUOTE</div><div id="QUOTE">One thing I figure is that stuff like that sells because (at least here in America) people just want to take a pill and *poof* be buff.</div>
No doubt.  It fits well with the culture of victimhood and irresponsibility that has steadily grown in the States.  A lot of people seem to think that they are owed protection from the unwanted consequences of their actions/choices.
 
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