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NY Times, Selling That New-Man Feeling (testosterone)

neversickanymore

Moderator: DS
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NY Times Sunday Nov 24th, 2013

Selling That New-Man Feeling
One afternoon a few months ago, a 45-year-old sales representative named Mike called “The Dr. Harry Fisch Show,” a weekly men’s health program on the Howard Stern channel on Sirius XM Radio, where no male medical or sexual issue goes unexplored.“I feel like a 70-year-old man in a 45-year-old body,” Mike, from Vancouver, British Columbia, told Dr. Fisch on the live broadcast. “I want to feel good. I don’t want to feel tired all day.”

A regular listener, Mike had heard Dr. Fisch, a Park Avenue urologist and fertility specialist, talk about a phenomenon called “low testosterone” or “low T.” Dr. Fisch likes to say that a man’s testosterone level is “the dipstick” of his health; he regularly appears on programs like “CBS This Morning” to talk about the malaise that may coincide with low testosterone. He is also the medical expert featured on IsItLowT.com, an informational website sponsored by AbbVie, the drug maker behind AndroGel, the best-selling prescription testosterone gel.

Like many men who have seen that site or commercials or online quizzes about “low T,” Mike suspected that diminished testosterone was the cause of his lethargy. And he hoped, as the marketing campaigns seem to suggest, that taking a prescription testosterone drug would make him feel more energetic.

“I took your advice and I went and got my testosterone checked,” Mike told Dr. Fisch. Mike’s own physician, he related, told him that his testosterone “was a little low” and prescribed a testosterone medication.

Mike also said he had diabetes and high blood pressure and was 40 pounds overweight. Dr. Fisch explained that conditions like obesity might be accompanied by decreased testosterone and energy, and he urged Mike to exercise more and to lose weight. But if Mike had trouble overhauling his diet and exercise habits, Dr. Fisch said, taking testosterone might give him the boost he needed to do so.

Rest of the article: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/11/24/business/selling-that-new-man-feeling.html
 
This sounds pretty dodgy, most pharma companies only care about the money and know that even if their drugs are killing people, they can make hundreds of billions of dollars and then settle out of court for a few billion. Capitalism at its finest, create a demand for a product you have, use scare tactics and dodgy marketing, profit for as long as you can until you get sued or shut down.

That said, I often wonder if I should get my testosterone levels checked. It's known than opiates such as the methadone I take daily decrease testosterone levels, and I have many symptoms of low testosterone. Is it Low T?
 
^ The thing is, docs aren't going to see much point in checking your serum t levels unless you're weeks off the opies, because it wouldn't change their management all that much. They'd know your t was low because they'd probably know you used opiates frequently, and their recommended treatment would be quitting the opiates.
 
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