Thursday, April 5, 2018

Ga. doctor prescribed weight-loss drug to patients she never saw

For more than two decades, Dr. Jan McBarron has been one of the country’s most outspoken physicians in calling out traditional medicine for its reliance on prescription drugs.
Across multiple platforms, including a series of books and a nationally syndicated radio program, the Columbus weight-loss specialist has regularly expounded on how vitamins, herbs and other natural products can be just as effective in dealing with disease.
That advocacy has brought the 66-year-old physician, comfortable in front of cameras and microphones, special recognition from the nation’s largest dietary supplement lobbying group and made her a virtual rock star in the worlds of holistic and alternative medicine.
Yet what McBarron has long preached hasn’t always guided her practice.
The doctor famous for railing against the dangers of prescription drugs has built a source of income by prescribing and dispensing a potentially dangerous diet drug, an investigation by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution found. And, the AJC found, she has done it by prescribing the drug in at least some instances for people she never met.
Earlier this year, an informant contacted the AJC alleging that McBarron was prescribing and dispensing the appetite suppressant phentermine for people based solely on their answers to an online questionnaire.
To investigate the allegation, the AJC asked two people who had never been McBarron’s patients — one in Georgia and the other in a state more than 500 miles away — to fill out the patient signup form on the website for the doctor’s practice, Georgia Bariatrics. The form required that they list their height and weight and note their understanding that they would be taking medication for the sole purpose of losing weight.

The Disturbing Reason You’re Not Losing Weight That Has Nothing to Do With Diet or Exercise

It’s no secret that dieting is not easy. It requires paying special attention to your food choices and making time for exercise. But just as there are many methods for weight loss, there are many factors that can sabotage your weight loss journey as well.

But first, pay attention to weight loss sabotagers

Vegetables and salmon
Make sure your diet is right. | iStock.com
If you’re actively trying to lose weight, it takes more than just cutting back on calories. The wrong foods, the wrong exercise, and even not getting enough sleep can be detrimental to your weight loss goals. But if you’re doing everything “right” and the scale still isn’t budging, you may have to look inward for the reason — literally.

The hormone connection

Woman struggling to button her pants
Your hormones can make it difficult to lose weight. | Voyagerix/iStock/Getty Images Plus
Hormones are special chemical messengers in your body that are created in your endocrine glands. They control most of your bodily functions, from your emotions to your hunger — so when they’re “off,” it can really affect you. Needless to say, hormones can be detrimental to weight loss.
Narrowing in on the main “weight gain” hormones and figuring out how to keep them balanced can help you lose weight once and for all.