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Alcohol questions appear in social threads around vacations, weekends, nausea, reflux, and surprising changes in cravings. Alcohol tolerance can feel different when appetite, food volume, reflux, nausea, hydration, and glucose context change. Track timing, amount, food intake, hydration, symptoms, and next-day effects; ask your clinician about your specific risks. The question is not only medical; it is social. Users want to know whether their normal lifestyle still works. The product should help them notice whether alcohol worsens nausea, reflux, dehydration, sleep, appetite, or next-day fatigue. What to track: - Alcohol type, amount, timing, and whether you ate enough - Hydration, nausea, reflux, vomiting, sleep, and next-day fatigue - Medication, dose week, diabetes or glucose-related context if relevant - Whether cravings, tolerance, or behavior changed Community answer: - A responsible answer avoids universal permission. It asks what happened last time and what medical context the user has. - If the user repeatedly feels worse after alcohol, the timeline should make that pattern visible. - BodyM should treat this as a lifestyle pattern, not a moral question. Safety boundary: Ask your clinician about alcohol if you have diabetes, pancreatitis history, liver concerns, medication interactions, pregnancy possibility, or severe GI symptoms. Next action: Log alcohol as a context marker in your symptom timeline rather than relying on memory. Source context: - MedlinePlus: Semaglutide injection - MedlinePlus: Tirzepatide injection - MedlinePlus: GERD
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