Do you take MB daily and do you cycle?
Dose?
tks
Agetron
#1720
Interesting… I started Jardiance this week and was using MB every 3rd day… so far all good.
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If you have commercial insurance, you can get Jardiance for $10/mo with the manufacturer’s co-pay coupon.
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If you have Medicare, you cannot use the coupon. It’s a raw deal for Medicare folks like my parents.
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Beth
#1723
My issue is with a lot of these things, I have to meet my out of pocket deductible first, and that is 8k
@Connie_Theron_Beidel My doc advised me to take it daily, so I did that for a long time, but recently I heard the people at Gethealthspan advise to skip it on the weekends, so that is now what I do.
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Davin8r
#1724
More evidence that SGLT2i’s inhibit mTOR and activate AMPK:
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Did they give any reasons besides cost saving?
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Beth
#1726
It had zero to do with cost. I have a memory like a sieve, so I’ll see if I can find it today and circle back …
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Beth
#1727
I quickly found this in the FAQs
At Healthspan, we recommend a conservative and gradual approach to oral dosing. Most individuals begin at 5 mg per day, taken 5 days per week (with 2 days off). This intermittent protocol helps activate methylene blue’s benefits while reducing the risk of overexposure or tolerance.
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Got it, for some reason I thought you were talking about empaglifozin, not methylene blue.
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You have to meet your deductible to have any meds covered by your insurance? That’s insane.
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Beth
#1730
@PrimarchLongevity Wanna hear something even more criminal? This year, for the first time, I added up what I pay each month at the pharmacy with my insurance ‘negotiated rate’ and compared that to buying a year’s worth with good rx cash pay… buying it on my own without the help of insurance saved me well over 1k!
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I’ve had good luck with manufacturer coupons for other drugs in the past.so people should definitely give that a try.
The trick for me has been finding a doctor who will prescribe it to someone with excellent insulin sensitivity. Some anti-aging/longevity docs will, but they are few and far between and are expensive, which partially defeats the purpose (at least you get a script). I can’t even get a doc to prescribe cholesterol medications.
[Yes, @Agetron has the perfect doctor who essentially hands over the prescription pad at every visit, but that doctor is a
.
]
My experience is that I’m basically told to come back when I’m fat and sick with arteries coated in bacon grease and then they’ll help me.
So it’s India or pay a telemedicine place with a slick website a small fortune for what would otherwise be cheap medications.
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Sometimes I make the mistake of looking at Mark Cuban’s CostPlusDrugs prices after filling a prescription at the drug store. Definitely don’t do that.
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Good news for those considering taking empagliflozin concurrently with pioglitazone:
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I was under the impression that empagliflozin, unlike canagliflozin, didn’t affect mTOR. Perhaps I should switch back, but I had nocturia issues my first try.
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Agetron
#1735
Hahaha - working at a medical university for 25 years, you develop long relationships with many future physicians. Yes, I was lucky that one I knew best stayed in town. Only went to him after my previous 3 physicians over a decade were of no help. Their attitude on TRT, or rapamycin was stay the course - you are going to get old - live with it. Felt pretty hopeless - I even used the expensive online docs for a bit. But, they only would give a month prescription at a time, and everytime you end up with a new doc and constant visits for another month of prescription was expensive in the long run.
My curent GP is fantastic, as long as I can provide current research showing potential - he is willing to monitor me and provide the opportunity to test it out. Most of these medications have been given out for a decade with no issues. The struggle to be responsible for your health is almost impossible with most physicians in this litigious society. You almost have to have more than a patient relationship to move that needle.
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I also have such a PCP like @Agetron! The trick is to shop for one who has positive reviews in the listening department, and isn’t a narcissistic know-it-all.
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I have a doctor in Hong Kong who will prescribe any drug I ask him for. They do exist.
I have a cadre of doctors that I see for various different circumstances. Each has a different specialty. I don’t know what I’d do if I only had one doctor. I don’t think only one could meet all my needs.
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