KFC in Canada has gone WOKE

B00Mer

Make Canada Great Again
Sep 6, 2008
46,861
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Rent Free in Your Head
www.canadianforums.ca
KFC in Canada has gone WOKE, converting all their chicken products to HALAL. Next thing you know, their female employees will wear burqas and each meal will come with a free prayer rug.


GR6BFCeaoAA2JFE.jpg
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
113,256
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Low Earth Orbit
What you're pro Ukraine and pro Islamic now

KFC offered pulled pork and other pork products.

Bending to Islam is not the way to go. Look at France..
You do realize it means Jews can now eat KFC and arent stuck with Popeye's.
 

Serryah

Hall of Fame Member
Dec 3, 2008
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New Brunswick
Unless you wrap your chicken in bacon, I think it would be hard to make an non-halal chicken.

TBH I've no idea and didn't care beforehand.
What you're pro Ukraine

Sort'a have been since Russia decided to become Imperial under PooPoo.

and pro Islamic now

I've no issues with Islam so long as it's followers are decent. Just like any other religion, like Christians.

But go psycho, that's a different story.

KFC offered pulled pork and other pork products.

Really? Huh, guess being from the East means we missed that.

Bending to Islam is not the way to go. Look at France..

LOL - Bending to Islam.

If you don't want Halal, don't get Halal. Otherwise get over it.

Get fucked.



Aww, did you feefees get hurt, Capt. AI?
 
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spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
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Nope.. cook home meals and popping Ozempic once a week.
Why? Have you?
Talk to doctor before using Ozempic for weight loss
Author of the article:Alex Vezina
Published Jun 14, 2024 • Last updated Jun 14, 2024 • 3 minute read

Let’s talk about Ozempic or, to use its generic name, semaglutide, originally developed to treat people with type 2 diabetes but now also being used by many people for weight loss.


Experts will tell you to speak to a doctor before using Ozempic or similar semaglutide products, to lose weight.

Altering the body’s natural hunger response the way this drug does is not something to undertake without medical supervision.

Weight and dieting to lose weight are complex issues, which can have both positive and negative outcomes.

Obesity is associated with a variety of serious and chronic medical conditions, some of which can be fatal over time.

Supposed miracle cures for weight loss have been around for a long time, so what makes this relatively new drug originally developed for another purpose work?

Simply put, semaglutide works for the most logical reason of all — it makes people less hungry.

When it comes to health, this has potential benefits as well as potential risks.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
37,568
3,290
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Talk to doctor before using Ozempic for weight loss
Author of the article:Alex Vezina
Published Jun 14, 2024 • Last updated Jun 14, 2024 • 3 minute read

Let’s talk about Ozempic or, to use its generic name, semaglutide, originally developed to treat people with type 2 diabetes but now also being used by many people for weight loss.


Experts will tell you to speak to a doctor before using Ozempic or similar semaglutide products, to lose weight.

Altering the body’s natural hunger response the way this drug does is not something to undertake without medical supervision.

Weight and dieting to lose weight are complex issues, which can have both positive and negative outcomes.

Obesity is associated with a variety of serious and chronic medical conditions, some of which can be fatal over time.

Supposed miracle cures for weight loss have been around for a long time, so what makes this relatively new drug originally developed for another purpose work?

Simply put, semaglutide works for the most logical reason of all — it makes people less hungry.

When it comes to health, this has potential benefits as well as potential risks.
Fake Ozempic is circulating in Europe and Americas, WHO warns
Author of the article:Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
Naomi Kresge
Published Jun 20, 2024 • 1 minute read

(Bloomberg) — The World Health Organization warned that fake batches of Novo Nordisk A/S’s hit diabetes drug Ozempic have been circulating amid soaring demand for the medicine, which some patients use to lose weight.


Three falsified batches were identified in Brazil and the UK in October of last year and in the US in December, the WHO said on Thursday. Though the global public health body has been monitoring growing numbers of reports of fake semaglutide, as Ozempic is known generically, since 2022, this is the first time it has issued an official warning notice.

The counterfeit products could harm patients’ health because they don’t contain the correct ingredients, and in some cases they may even contain a different drug — such as insulin — which could be dangerous when taken incorrectly, the WHO said. Ozempic is a diabetes treatment; semaglutide is sold for obesity under the brand name Wegovy.

Fake weight-loss drugs are a growing concern as runaway demand for the medicines feeds a ballooning gray market. In the US, regulations allow compounding pharmacies to sell copycat versions of the drugs because they’re in shortage. Novo and its US rival Eli Lilly & Co. have sought to link the compounded medicines with the possibility of outright counterfeits, with Lilly saying on Thursday that some compounded medicines contained a different chemical than the Food and Drug Administration-approved medicine.

Patients should avoid “unfamiliar or unverified sources, such as those that may be found online,” the WHO said.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
37,568
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Fake Ozempic is circulating in Europe and Americas, WHO warns
Author of the article:Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
Naomi Kresge
Published Jun 20, 2024 • 1 minute read

(Bloomberg) — The World Health Organization warned that fake batches of Novo Nordisk A/S’s hit diabetes drug Ozempic have been circulating amid soaring demand for the medicine, which some patients use to lose weight.


Three falsified batches were identified in Brazil and the UK in October of last year and in the US in December, the WHO said on Thursday. Though the global public health body has been monitoring growing numbers of reports of fake semaglutide, as Ozempic is known generically, since 2022, this is the first time it has issued an official warning notice.

The counterfeit products could harm patients’ health because they don’t contain the correct ingredients, and in some cases they may even contain a different drug — such as insulin — which could be dangerous when taken incorrectly, the WHO said. Ozempic is a diabetes treatment; semaglutide is sold for obesity under the brand name Wegovy.

Fake weight-loss drugs are a growing concern as runaway demand for the medicines feeds a ballooning gray market. In the US, regulations allow compounding pharmacies to sell copycat versions of the drugs because they’re in shortage. Novo and its US rival Eli Lilly & Co. have sought to link the compounded medicines with the possibility of outright counterfeits, with Lilly saying on Thursday that some compounded medicines contained a different chemical than the Food and Drug Administration-approved medicine.

Patients should avoid “unfamiliar or unverified sources, such as those that may be found online,” the WHO said.
Ozempic linked to rare cases of vision loss in Harvard study
Author of the article:Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
Robert Langreth
Published Jul 03, 2024 • 3 minute read

(Bloomberg) — Novo Nordisk A/S’ best-selling diabetes and weight-loss drugs Ozempic and Wegovy appears to be associated with a higher risk of a rare form of vision loss, according to an analysis by doctors at Massachusetts Eye and Ear, a Harvard-affiliated hospital.


Patients who took the drugs for weight loss were more than seven times more likely to be diagnosed with a stroke-like eye condition, known as NAION, than those taking other classes of drugs for obesity, according to the study of patient records. Those taking the drugs for diabetes were more than four times more likely to develop the rare ailment than people on other types of treatments, according to the results published Wednesday in the journal JAMA Ophthalmology.

The relatively small study examined the records of Massachusetts Eye and Ear patients. The low number of cases of the eye condition in people who took the drugs — 37 between both groups — limited the study’s statistical power, according to the paper. The findings don’t prove the medications caused the eye complication and must be replicated in larger studies involving more hospitals, the Harvard researchers and other experts said.


“I don’t think this is a strong enough signal to take patients off the drug,” said Susan Mollan, a neuro-ophthalmologist in Birmingham, England who wrote an editorial accompanying the study. It didn’t show that the eye effect immediately followed taking the drugs, as some of the cases occurred months later. Still, doctors should tell patients about the potential risk, she said.

The incredible popularity of Novo and rival Eli Lilly & Co.’s weight-loss drugs has caused shortages that both companies have worked to rectify. Novo’s semaglutide, the active ingredient in both Ozempic and Wegovy, has been studied for more than 15 years and scientists largely consider it safe. But as the drugs are used by more people, researchers are looking to see if there are any previously unknown side effects emerging.


Careful Look
The Mass Eye and Ear analysis was designed to look at whether semaglutide is associated with increased risk of NAION after doctors noticed a handful of cases and realized those patients were on the drug. The condition normally affects between one in 10,000 and one in 50,000 people per year, and usually leads to permanent partial vision loss in the affected eye. There’s no standard treatment.

This potential risk “is something that definitely should be looked at more carefully,” says Mahyar Etminan, a drug safety researcher at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver who wasn’t involved in the study. “This is a very serious condition so if it were true, it changes the risk-benefit calculus.”


That’s particularly relevant for people taking Wegovy only for weight loss and don’t have other medical conditions that could benefit from treatment, he added.

Hard to Know
There are other reasons that make it important to follow up on the study, Etminan said. Diabetes itself is a risk factor for the eye condition, he pointed out, so it’s unclear how Ozempic or Wegovy would cause it. The design of the study makes it hard to know whether it was the severity of their diabetes or heart disease that raised patients’ risk, rather than taking the drugs, he said.

The study included 710 patients prescribed diabetes drugs and 979 patients prescribed weight-loss drugs who were treated at Mass Eye and Ear over a six-year period starting in December 2017, when Ozempic was first approved. Within those two groups, the researchers compared the rates of NAION in people who had filled their first prescriptions for Ozempic or Wegovy to the rates of those on rival treatments. It didn’t look at Mounjaro and Zepbound, the diabetes and obesity treatments made by Lilly.


The researchers started the study last summer after three people came into the clinic with NAION over a short period of time, all who were on semaglutide, said Joseph Rizzo, director of the neuro-ophthalmology service at Mass Eye and Ear and a Harvard Medical School professor.

Now his group is talking with other researchers about performing a much larger study involving other hospitals.

“My hope is that doctors and patients are aware of this association,” he said, while emphasizing that the study doesn’t prove a causal link between the drug and the eye disease. It’s particularly important for patients who already have some vision loss to know about the possible risk so they can make an informed decision before starting it, he said.