GLP-1s, Ohio, and the Cost of Waiting: What This Policy Shift Really Means for You
Ohio’s GLP-1 rollback isn’t budget control it’s a staged dope deal. The first hit was cheap, the second one won’t be. These meds worked too well, too fast, and now the system’s tightening access to keep prices high for when Gen 2 hits. If you’re relying on these drugs, the rules just changed again.
In ancient Norse tradition, they’d call this a thing, a gathering of minds leading us today to discuss.
On July 1, 2025, the State of Ohio will eliminate GLP-1 coverage for weight loss in state employee health plans. The official reason? A ballooning Medicaid bill—up from $172 million in 2021 to over $431 million in 2024 (Reuters). But let’s not confuse cause with cover story.
This isn’t about savings. It’s about slowing you down until the market catches up.
⏳ The Pause That Profits
Pharma didn’t fail. It succeeded too fast.
GLP-1s like Ozempic and Wegovy weren’t just popular—they were revolutionary. They disrupted treatment timelines, upended chronic disease management, and exposed how unprepared insurers, supply chains, and support industries really were. From gym culture to supplement stacks, no one was ready.
So the system does what it does best: delay access to consolidate control.
🧪 What’s Really in the Pipeline?
Ohio is pulling back, but Big Pharma is accelerating. Why? Because the next wave of GLP-1 treatments is already lining up:
CagriSema – Semaglutide + amylin | ~23% weight loss | Phase III, 2027 (Barron’s)
Amycretin – Oral GLP-1 + amylin | ~24% weight loss | In development (FT)
Orforglipron – Oral GLP-1 from Eli Lilly | Late 2025 filing (Wired)
Triple Agonists – Multi-hormone therapies for higher efficacy | Through 2026+ (Reuters)
These aren’t band-aids. They’re business models—designed to maintain pricing power, expand market reach, and extend patent life through 2032 and beyond.
🏛️ The Real Logic: Profit Protection, Not Cost Containment
Make no mistake—Ohio’s rollback isn’t a rejection of GLP-1s. It’s a safeguard. By pausing coverage, the state avoids premature market saturation while keeping chronic disease revenue streams intact.
Fewer GLP-1 prescriptions = More diabetes care
Slower weight loss = More bariatric surgeries
More time = More monetization runway
That’s balance sheet logic. But for the individual trying to lose weight, improve mobility, or regain health—it’s betrayal.
❌ The Cost of Denial
Removing access to GLP-1s doesn’t just restrict treatment—it amplifies inequality:
Those seeking better health lose access.
Chronic disease treatments remain covered.
The result? Incentivize illness, not prevention.
And whether intended or not, the message is clear:
Weight loss is a luxury, not a right—unless it’s profitable.
🛠️ So What Do You Do Now?
If you’ve lost GLP-1 access—or chose not to rely on it—you’re not out of options.
You’re just out of insurance support.
Here’s where to fight back:
Lift weights to retain muscle mass (JAMA).
Use protein tactically: Fairlife, IsoPure, Quest—tools that preserve lean mass (Obesity Reviews).
Train with intent—not for calorie burn, but for metabolic control.
Build community that isn’t built on a script pad.
🧭 Where MyoBio Stands
We don’t care how you got here—GLP-1, keto, stress, surgery, or all of the above.
We care how you hold the line while the industry plays catch-up.
MyoBio trains for sustainability—for muscle, for mood, for real metabolic health.
Because let’s be blunt:
They’re keeping you fat until it’s more profitable not to.
✅ Ready to Push Back?
Book a My30 session to get your strength base locked in.
Or schedule a full My90 assessment to rebuild the plan on your terms.
Fitness, Capitalism, and the Privilege Divide: A Delicate Balance
Ah, welcome. In ancient Norse tradition, they’d call this a thing, a gathering of minds and power, leading us today to confront an inconvenient truth of fitness. Fitness is the epitome of modern aspirations: the pursuit of health, wellness, and beauty in a world that often feels out of reach to many. But beneath the glittering gym memberships, shiny personal trainers, and sleek athletic apparel, there's a rather inconvenient truth we often fail to acknowledge: fitness, in this capitalist society, has become a luxury, a privilege reserved for those fortunate enough to afford it. Now, we’ve heard the usual refrain: “You don’t need expensive equipment or fancy gyms to stay fit, just willpower and a good pair of shoes!” True, in theory. But, Our modern world doesn’t merely reward discipline; it rewards access. And access whether it’s to a pristine gym or premium workout supplements too often depends on your pocketbook and don't worry we will talk about marketing messages here in a minute.
So, let's not kid ourselves. We’ve all heard the stories the promises of achieving your best body in 30 days or transforming your life with a simple app. The marketing machine churns out catchy slogans that sound like they’ve come from the halls of Madison Avenue, but the reality? It’s far more complicated, far less inclusive. The fitness industry, like so many others, thrives in a capitalist environment that plays on the one truth we all know too well: in this world, those with money often have the best access. And let’s face it, fitness has become one of those access points where wealth equals wellness.
You see, at the heart of the issue is the uncomfortable intersection between capitalism and health. Fitness, once a basic human pursuit to stay active, has been commodified, and today, it’s marketed to the affluent. The high-end gym memberships, the fancy supplements, the top-of-the-line equipment, the personal trainers that charge as much as a down payment on a car these are all targeted at a demographic that can afford them. And what of the rest of the population? The ones who can’t afford $150 for a single training session or the high-priced yoga class? Well, they’re often left to deal with the fallout of this divided society where fitness becomes a matter of privilege.
Now, I know what you're thinking. You're running a business. You've got overhead costs to cover, employees to pay, rent to meet, and taxes to file. You’re part of a system that demands you make a profit. If you charge less, you can’t afford the quality equipment, the personalized service, or the amenities that attract the higher-paying clients. Those clients, the ones who can drop $200 a month on a membership, are the ones who subsidize the less affluent. And if you don’t have those higher-paying clients? You don’t stay in business. Simple. But it’s the truth we’re all dancing around fitness isn’t just a product; it’s a luxury that’s been packaged, sold, and marketed in a way that leaves a large portion of society standing at the door without an invitation.
In a perfect world, fitness would be about equality, wouldn’t it? It would be about ensuring that anyone, no matter their income, could access the tools they need to live a healthy, active life. But we don't live in a perfect world. We live in a world where access to basic services healthcare, education, and yes, fitness often depends on how much money you have. Capitalism has woven itself into the fabric of our society in such a way that fitness has become just another commodity for those who can afford it, leaving the rest to scramble for scraps.
This isn’t just about a gym membership. It’s about an entire system that commodifies well-being, where those with financial privilege dictate the terms of what’s healthy and desirable, and those without it are left to either go without or settle for subpar alternatives. As business owners, we’re caught in the middle, having to balance the demands of profit with the reality that our pricing often excludes those who need fitness the most. It's a tough sell. It’s hard to reconcile the need for sustainability with the ethical implications of serving an audience that’s largely affluent while not leaving the rest behind.
Let’s talk about the elephant in the room: marketing. The fitness industry doesn’t just sell services it sells a lifestyle, a version of yourself that’s better, faster, stronger, and often… thinner. So, let’s be honest here, it’s not just about fitness anymore it’s about aesthetics. The marketing machine has cleverly intertwined the concept of fitness with an image of beauty that only a select few can ever truly attain. And who is that select few? The ones who can afford the aesthetics of the gym the fancy gear, the exclusive memberships, and, of course, the personal trainers who charge $100 an hour.
And all the while, those who don’t have that disposable income who are just trying to make it through another month are left to wonder why fitness and there for potentially health itself has become such a luxury. Why is it priced out of their reach? Why is fitness, a simple human need, so deeply entangled in an economic system that says, “If you can’t pay for it, you don’t deserve it.” This isn’t just about profits; this is about an entire system that has structured wellness in a way that excludes those who need it the most.
But, let’s not get lost in the doom and gloom here. Business owners, like yourself, are stuck in a system, yes. But that doesn’t mean you can’t acknowledge the divide. Recognize that there’s a larger conversation happening here, one that goes beyond marketing strategies and profit margins. Fitness, like all industries, is shaped by capitalism, but that doesn’t mean it can’t evolve. It doesn’t mean the conversation has to stop at profit it can expand to accessibility, to inclusivity, to a world where fitness isn’t a privilege, but a right.
You, as a business owner, are part of the conversation. And while you're not in charge of the whole system, the choices you make can either reinforce this divide or slowly begin to chip away at it. At the end of the day, fitness shouldn’t be determined by wealth it should be about the desire and access to improve oneself. And in that, perhaps, lies the possibility to Make Life More