micro-community-banner
 
Profile Image
  • Saved
Effects of Health Qigong Walking Practice on anxiety and serum metabolites in patients with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus: A randomized controlled trial - PubMed

Effects of Health Qigong Walking Practice on anxiety and serum metabolites in patients with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus: A randomized controlled trial - PubMed

Source : https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41176176/

Health Qigong Walking Practice significantly reduces anxiety and improves glucose-lipid metabolism in T2DM patients with anxiety. Its superiority over standard aerobic exercise in glycemic control may be mediated through the...

Qigong walking markedly reduced anxiety and improved glycemic control in T2DM patients beyond aerobic exercise; metabolomics showed shifts in amino-acid and nitrogen pathways, supporting holistic mind-body benefits.

Profile Image
  • Saved
A Rare Cause of Umbilical Discharge in a Healthy Adult: A Case Report of Patent Urachal Sinus in Primary Care - PubMed

A Rare Cause of Umbilical Discharge in a Healthy Adult: A Case Report of Patent Urachal Sinus in Primary Care - PubMed

Source : https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41211096/

Umbilical discharge in adults is a rare presentation in primary care and is frequently misdiagnosed as superficial infections, umbilical dermatitis, or abscesses, particularly in individuals with known predisposing factors such...

Healthy adult with purulent umbilical discharge was found to have an infected urachal sinus on imaging; drainage and planned excision resolved symptoms, underscoring congenital urachal anomalies as key differentials.

 

Profile Image
  • Saved
Obesity care reimagined: Integrating chronic disease management and sustained interventions.

Obesity is a multifaceted, escalating global health crisis, affecting over a billion people in 2022 and projected to impact more than half the adult population by 2050. As a chronic, relapsing, multifactorial disease, it increases the risk of serious non-communicable diseases (e.g., type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, certain cancers) and contributes to over 5 million deaths annually. The global economic burden is projected to reach $4.32 trillion by 2035, alongside psychosocial challenges such as stigma, low self-esteem, and social isolation.

For adults with a BMI ≥30 kg/m², or ≥27 kg/m² with at least one obesity-related comorbidity, pharmacologic therapy should be considered when lifestyle interventions alone fail to achieve ≥5% weight loss after 3–6 months. When paired with behavioral and lifestyle measures, long-acting, once-weekly GLP-1 receptor agonists have been associated with substantial, sustained weight loss (e.g., a mean 12.1% reduction in body weight) and improvements in BMI, waist circumference, and blood pressure.

Viewing obesity as a chronic disease means shifting from short-term fixes to long-term care strategies. Management should address genetic, metabolic, environmental, and social drivers while evaluating the impact of functional limitations and emotional factors—such as psychological distress, stigma, and disordered eating—that may compromise adherence. Personalized care, aligned to each patient’s clinical, functional, and psychosocial profile, is essential for durable outcomes.

How can functional and emotional burden assessments be systematically integrated into obesity care to improve adherence and outcomes? What strategies can HCPs use to embed these therapies into long-term care plans that integrate pharmacologic, behavioral, and lifestyle support?

Profile Image
  • 6d
    Many people have an underlying emotional issues linked to both causing their obesity and being obese. I feel psychotherapy is a very important part in becoming successful when starting Show More
  • 1w
    More important is changes in lifestyle/diet and keep the way off not sure how long you keep pt on the meds unless they are diabetic. Not sure how long commercial Show More

Show More Comments

  • Saved
Can new obesity therapies reshape long-term adherence and care models?

Obesity treatment is shifting toward long-term disease management—where the goal is not only to reduce weight but also to maintain it safely and sustainably. New agents targeting gut–brain and metabolic pathways have expanded available treatment options, while also underscoring the need to address long-term engagement.

Adherence remains a key challenge. Real-world evidence shows that many patients discontinue therapy within the first year, often due to side effects, administration burden, or mismatched expectations. As new formats emerge—including oral formulations—treatment strategies are evolving to better align with patient preferences and routines.

Studies suggest that mode and frequency of administration can influence persistence. Some patients prefer the simplicity of once-weekly injections; others find daily oral dosing easier to incorporate. These differences highlight the need for early, personalized conversations about lifestyle fit, tolerability, and long-term commitment.

Pharmacotherapy is just one pillar of sustainable obesity care. Lasting outcomes still rely on nutrition, behavioral support, and structured follow-up. The opportunity now lies in integrating these therapies into adaptable models that reinforce patient engagement well beyond the initial response.

How do you navigate adherence challenges when patients transition between therapy formats? What potential do emerging oral options hold for improving persistence in long-term obesity care?

Profile Image
  • 6d
    I feel some patients will be better suited for the oral therapies, as many of these patients already take daily medications. Some patients struggle with remembering to take medication Show More
  • 1w
    Patients needs to do Lifetime changes to keep weight loss and making the best food choices with assistance of nutritionist and AI

Show More Comments

  • Saved
Oral therapies could reshape obesity care — what could this mean for real-world practice?

As of 2025, the obesity treatment landscape continues to evolve. Injectable GLP-1 receptor agonists have set new clinical benchmarks, achieving 15–20% average weight reduction and improving cardiometabolic outcomes in adults with obesity. Yet real-world use often lags, hampered by injection hesitancy, supply constraints, and insurance variability.

Emerging research suggests the next frontier may lie with oral GLP-1–based therapies. In phase 3 studies, these agents have delivered weight reductions of 14–15%, closely mirroring injectables. Meanwhile, early-phase data on dual and triple agonists targeting GLP-1, glucagon, and amylin pathways show promising results, with up to 24% reductions reported in select populations. Gastrointestinal effects remain the most common treatment-related events and are typically mild and transient.

As these therapies near clinical integration, clinicians must consider how oral options will complement current care models—aligning with behavioral interventions, supporting adherence, and broadening access. Framing obesity as a chronic, manageable disease remains key, with new therapies positioned as tools for long-term metabolic health.

Pharmacologic therapy—oral or injectable—should enhance, not replace, nutritional, behavioral, and physical activity strategies. As HCPs, your role is pivotal in ensuring optimal treatment pairing and fostering durable outcomes.

Which of your patients might be best suited for oral anti-obesity therapy once available? What strategies have been most effective in supporting adherence and tracking response over time?

Profile Image
  • 6d
    I have some patients who are highly needle-phobic, despite the injectables being just once weekly dosing. I also have some patients who are not as reliable doing a weekly Show More
  • 1w
    Insurance will be a big driver. Oral GLP1s may also be limited on how they need to be taken (rybelsus for exapmple)

Show More Comments