jabs – Latest News https://latestnews.top Tue, 01 Aug 2023 06:15:17 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 https://latestnews.top/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/cropped-licon-32x32.png jabs – Latest News https://latestnews.top 32 32 We can’t get our diabetes jabs like Ozempic – because so many obese Brits are using them https://latestnews.top/we-cant-get-our-diabetes-jabs-like-ozempic-because-so-many-obese-brits-are-using-them/ https://latestnews.top/we-cant-get-our-diabetes-jabs-like-ozempic-because-so-many-obese-brits-are-using-them/#respond Tue, 01 Aug 2023 06:15:17 +0000 https://latestnews.top/2023/08/01/we-cant-get-our-diabetes-jabs-like-ozempic-because-so-many-obese-brits-are-using-them/ Private clinics are flouting Government guidance by handing over prescriptions of vital diabetes drugs to dieters who use the jabs to lose weight, a Mail on Sunday investigation has discovered. Ozempic, also known as semaglutide, and others like it are relied on by roughly 400,000 UK patients with blood sugar condition type 2 diabetes. But […]]]>


Private clinics are flouting Government guidance by handing over prescriptions of vital diabetes drugs to dieters who use the jabs to lose weight, a Mail on Sunday investigation has discovered.

Ozempic, also known as semaglutide, and others like it are relied on by roughly 400,000 UK patients with blood sugar condition type 2 diabetes. But in recent months a shortage has led health chiefs to issue orders to ration prescribing.

Alongside controlling blood sugar, Ozempic – given via a self-injection pen – leads to dramatic weight loss. In studies, some patients shed a fifth of their bodyweight after a year of using the once-a-week treatment.

Rumours that A-listers – including reality TV star Kim Kardashian – used the drug to stay slim spread on social media and demand is now vastly outstripping supply.

Earlier this month, the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) issued a patient safety alert, ordering all doctors and pharmacists not to prescribe Ozempic and similar drugs to only aid weight loss. It said: ‘Existing stock must be conserved for use in patients with diabetes.’

Ozempic, also known as semaglutide, and others like it are relied on by roughly 400,000 UK patients with blood sugar condition type 2 diabetes. But in recent months a shortage has led health chiefs to issue orders to ration prescribing

Ozempic, also known as semaglutide, and others like it are relied on by roughly 400,000 UK patients with blood sugar condition type 2 diabetes. But in recent months a shortage has led health chiefs to issue orders to ration prescribing

But this newspaper has discovered online pharmacists still offering Ozempic for weight loss alone.

Manual, a men’s health company that also sells hair loss and erectile dysfunction treatments, charged £230 for an initial one-month supply, increasing to £299 a month on subscription. The company requires a full-length photo and photographic ID in order to verify would-be patients are the weight they claim to be – however messages to our reporter said that once this check was done, Ozempic was in stock and could be supplied. Our reporters were also approved for treatment by myBMI.co.uk after handing over £279, despite making it clear in an online consultation it was only going to be used as a diet aid.

In each case, we cancelled the orders before any medication could be sent out. Neither company responded when asked to comment on our findings. While there is no suggestion what they are doing is unlawful, medical leaders have criticised the practice in response.

High-profile GP Professor Dame Clare Gerada said: ‘Private providers should adhere to ethical guidelines and patients who need this drug for live-saving and life-protecting reasons should take priority.’ Novo Nordisk, Ozempic’s manufacturer, said: ‘We do not promote, suggest or encourage the off-label use or misuse of any of our medicines. We are continuing to work with MHRA and the Department of Health and Social Care to monitor the supply of our medicines and keep healthcare professionals updated.’

Readers’ frustration as MoS discovers online firms are defying Government to sell drug to dieters

By MOIRA PETTY and JONATHAN NEAL 

Diabetes patients have vented their frustration at being unable to get hold of medication amid nationwide shortages – allegedly fuelled by dieters using the drugs to slim down.

Roughly 400,000 type 2 diabetics in the UK rely on the drugs, called GLP-1 receptor agonists, which help regulate hormones and blood sugar levels, cutting the risk of heart attacks and strokes.

But after widespread reporting of recent studies showed one such drug, semaglutide, helped people who take it shed almost a fifth of their weight – regardless of whether they had diabetes or not – demand surged, leading to a global supply problem. The Mail on Sunday was the first newspaper to report on the issue, in November last year.

At present, semaglutide is available in the UK under the brand name Ozempic. The once-a-week self-injection is licensed by UK drug regulators as a diabetes treatment, but doctors are allowed to prescribe it ‘off-label’ – use it in a different way than stated in its licence – to help patients without diabetes lose weight, if they believe it’s justified.

And celebrities including Elon Musk, Jeremy Clarkson and former PM Boris Johnson have all admitted to taking it.

Roughly 400,000 type 2 diabetics in the UK rely on the drugs, called GLP-1 receptor agonists, which help regulate hormones and blood sugar levels, cutting the risk of heart attacks and strokes

Roughly 400,000 type 2 diabetics in the UK rely on the drugs, called GLP-1 receptor agonists, which help regulate hormones and blood sugar levels, cutting the risk of heart attacks and strokes

Kim Kardashian was also rumoured to have used Ozempic to help her squeeze into her dress for the 2022 Met Gala ¿ the same one Marilyn Monroe wore when she sang Happy Birthday Mr President in 1962

Kim Kardashian was also rumoured to have used Ozempic to help her squeeze into her dress for the 2022 Met Gala – the same one Marilyn Monroe wore when she sang Happy Birthday Mr President in 1962

Kim Kardashian was also rumoured to have used Ozempic to help her squeeze into her dress for the 2022 Met Gala – the same one Marilyn Monroe wore when she sang Happy Birthday Mr President in 1962. Although Ms Kardashian has never confirmed this, the story was widely circulated on social media and further fuelled demand for the drug.

Another drug containing semaglutide, known by the brand name Wegovy, has been licensed for weight loss in patients who don’t have diabetes, but this is yet to be launched in the UK.

There are other GLP-1 drugs that work in a similar way, but shortages are now reportedly affecting all types of the drug, and semaglutide manufacturer Novo Nordisk say stock issues will continue until mid-2024.

In a bid to manage the situation, the Government’s Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) this month issued a patient safety alert to all doctors and pharmacists, effectively ordering them not to prescribe semaglutide for weight loss alone.

‘Use of these agents for the management of obesity is strongly discouraged,’ it said, adding: ‘Existing stock must be conserved for use in patients with diabetes.’

Despite this, The Mail on Sunday has discovered online pharmacists still offering semaglutide as a diet aid to obese patients, costing from £230 for a one-month supply. While there is no suggestion what they are doing is unlawful, in response, one high profile GP has called for a halt to all private sales of the drug for weight loss.

And London-based endocrinologist Professor Barbara McGowan says: ‘It’s a difficult situation. People are often desperate for treatment for obesity, which can cause a range of health problems, not just diabetes.

‘Semaglutide is an effective treatment [which leads to weight loss]. But while there are supply issues, patients with the greatest clinical need should be prioritised.’

As we have discovered, this isn’t what’s happening at present. Two weeks ago, The Mail on Sunday’s GP columnist Dr Ellie Cannon asked readers if they had struggled to get hold of semaglutide – and she received a flurry of emails and letters in response.

Many told of calling and visiting dozens of pharmacies in a frantic and ultimately futile search for Ozempic. Others revealed that they had been forced to self-ration, taking half doses to make their supplies last.

One patient affected by the shortages is Brenda Read, 73, who lives in Sittingbourne, Kent, with husband Barry, 75, and runs an antique business. Brenda was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes in 2008.

She says: ‘Doctors tried a dozen different types of tablets but nothing got my blood sugars down.’

In 2021 she heard about Ozempic from a friend and persuaded her GP to prescribe it. ‘They were reluctant as they said it was expensive,’ she says. ‘But I told them that I pay my taxes and they gave it to me.’

Thanks to Ozempic, Brenda lost four stone over three years. Currently, she is 14st 3lb and, importantly, her blood sugar is well within the healthy range. However, research shows as soon as patients stop taking GLP-1 drugs, they begin to put weight back on and blood sugars rise.

It’s a thought that terrifies Brenda. She says: ‘In June, the GP warned me patients were having problems getting hold of Ozempic. I rang 47 chemists over several days. At least a dozen told me, ‘You’ll never get it because the private doctors are getting in first.’

‘Eventually I was able to get a month’s worth, but that was half my normal dose, and for the last two weeks I’ve had nothing at all.

‘I know someone who is paying £250 a month for Ozempic and she’s watching the weight drop off. It’s all for a family event next year. I can’t afford that and don’t know how this will affect me for the rest of the year. I will probably have to go back on metformin [another commonly given drug for type 2 diabetes] to control my blood sugar, but that caused terrible bladder infections and I have no problems on Ozempic. It makes me so angry.’

Another reader, Carolyn, who asked us not to print her full name, was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes two decades ago, aged 44.

She started on Ozempic in 2020 and says it transformed her health: ‘It had lowered my blood sugars and I lost around two stone. I’ve been without it for several weeks, and in that short time I can feel my appetite increasing.

‘Years ago I was told that if my diabetes wasn’t controlled I had a greater chance of losing limbs, having a heart attack or a stroke. My last annual diabetic eye test showed my vision was deteriorating, so that’s another cause for concern if this drug shortage goes on.’

And retired plumber Michael Fennelly, 75, who lives in Worthing, said: ‘I didn’t lose much weight [on semaglutide] and my appetite didn’t change, but the effect on my blood sugar was almost immediate and has continued.

‘I ran out a week ago and now I’m concerned. I’ve read in the news that the shortages were caused by people obtaining the drug for slimming. How selfish they are when diabetics like me need it for medical reasons.’

Last week we contacted four of the best-known companies offering private prescriptions. Two indicated they would provide Ozempic – despite our reporters clearly stating on online forms that they were obese but did not have diabetes or any other health problem and wished to take the drug simply to lose weight.

After filling out a short questionnaire and paying £279, myBMI.co.uk approved our reporter for a month’s supply of the drug, which it claimed would be delivered within 48 hours.

Manual, a men’s health company that also sells hair loss and erectile dysfunction treatments, charged £230 for an initial one-month supply of semaglutide – then increasing to £299 a month on subscription.

Manual requires a full-length photo and photographic ID in order to verify would-be patients are the weight they claim to be – however messages to our reporter said that once this check was done, Ozempic was in stock and would be supplied.

In each case, we cancelled the orders before any medication could be sent out.

Dr Frank’s Weight Loss clinic took payment of £235, and at no point in the process was our reporter told they could not buy the jabs as they did not have diabetes.

The providers did not respond when we later contacted them for comment, however Dr Frank’s Weight Loss Clinic did subsequently send an email to our reporter saying: ‘We have carefully reviewed your consultation and at this time, we regret to inform you that you have not met the specific criteria to participate in the program.’

The £235 was refunded. Only online men’s health brand Numan, which has previously offered private prescriptions for Ozempic, told us it was not offering the drug due to the Government guidance.

In light of our findings, Dr Philippa Kaye, a GP and vocal advocate of GLP-1 drugs to treat obesity, says: ‘Both diabetes and obesity put patients at risk of things such as cardiovascular disease. However, when there isn’t enough of these medicines to go round, we need to ration according to greatest need.

‘That’s why the MHRA has acted. I would love there to be more of the drugs – but it isn’t right that people without diabetes are able to get Ozempic simply because they can pay for it, while patients with type 2 diabetes are left at risk.

‘Separately, I worry about how easy it is to get these drugs online – as The Mail on Sunday’s investigation has shown.

‘It’s a system that’s open to abuse by people with eating disorders and others who might try to use semaglutide inappropriately.’

Novo Nordisk – Ozempic’s manufacturer, which recorded nearly £7 billion in sales of the drug last year – is said to be planning a £1.8 billion upgrade to its manufacturing facility in a bid to increase its capacity.

A spokesman said: ‘We do not promote, suggest or encourage the off-label use, or misuse of any of our medicines. We are continuing to work with MHRA and the Department of Health and Social Care to monitor the supply of our medicines and to keep healthcare professionals updated so that they can support patients to receive the treatment they need.

‘We are fully aware that demand is high for both [diabetes and obesity] patient populations and are doing everything we can to meet patients’ needs.’

The NHS can prescribe semaglutide for a maximum of two years, but last week experts reiterated that treatment would be expected to be life-long. Speaking to The Mail on Sunday’s Medical Minefield podcast this week, Professor Carel le Roux, an expert in obesity at the University of Ulster, said: ‘We now think of obesity as a neurological disease affecting the areas of the brain that control how much fat the body wants to store.

‘We have medications [such as semaglutide] that work in that exact part of the brain to treat this disease, and bring it under control.

‘But the minute you stop treatment, the disease relapses. We always ask patients, ‘are you prepared to take this treatment for the rest of your life?’ Because if they aren’t, they shouldn’t start.’

He added that obesity should be seen like any other chronic disease.

‘We wouldn’t stop a patient with asthma or high blood pressure from taking medication, and this is no different,’ he said. ‘Not everyone will respond. So if somebody hasn’t lost approximately a stone in the first three months, we might consider stopping treatment and trying something else.

‘And of course, not everyone will want to be on medication.’

All this will come as little comfort to diabetes patients facing the prospect of having to come off the treatment that’s been keeping their condition under control.

As former lab technician Susan Brown, 73, from Maidstone, Kent, says: ‘It’s over a month since I’ve had any Ozempic to take for my diabetes, and my blood sugar levels have become far less stable.

‘I feel really shaky and sweaty, especially in the morning. I carry around my prescription, so that I can present it whenever I pass a chemist, but none have had it.

‘The GP says I will need an alt- ernative, so that worries me. In the meantime, I dread how washed out and unsteady I’m now feeling.’



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Forget Ozempic face… be wary of ‘Wegovy butt’! Weight loss jabs are leaving users with https://latestnews.top/forget-ozempic-face-be-wary-of-wegovy-butt-weight-loss-jabs-are-leaving-users-with/ https://latestnews.top/forget-ozempic-face-be-wary-of-wegovy-butt-weight-loss-jabs-are-leaving-users-with/#respond Wed, 21 Jun 2023 07:47:14 +0000 https://latestnews.top/2023/06/21/forget-ozempic-face-be-wary-of-wegovy-butt-weight-loss-jabs-are-leaving-users-with/ It’s the blockbuster weight loss drug adored by Hollywood, despite being armed with powerful side effects.  But now users of slimming jab semaglutide are warning about another unwelcome consequence — ‘Ozempic butt’.  Slimmers who’ve lost up to 141lbs (64kg) claim they’ve been left with ‘saggy’ bums. Others have complained about their derrières flattening like a […]]]>


It’s the blockbuster weight loss drug adored by Hollywood, despite being armed with powerful side effects. 

But now users of slimming jab semaglutide are warning about another unwelcome consequence — ‘Ozempic butt’. 

Slimmers who’ve lost up to 141lbs (64kg) claim they’ve been left with ‘saggy’ bums.

Others have complained about their derrières flattening like a ‘pancake’, including one who once underwent a Brazillian Bum Lift (BBL). 

The effects, albeit in the bum, are similar to those who’ve battled ‘Ozempic face’ — with the rapid weight loss leaving some users looking ill, exacerbating wrinkles and causing skin to sag.

In one TikTok, watched 26,800 times, @jocelyngarcia3514 shared a full body video of her loose skin around her bum

'I'm humble enough to share my results and my body,' she said

In one TikTok, watched 26,800 times, @jocelyngarcia3514 shared a full body video of her loose skin around her bum. ‘I’m humble enough to share my results and my body,’ she said

'Keep in mind I had a BBL about seven years ago and this is what my butt looks like after my 16th injection of compound semaglutide,' she added

'What does an ozempic/semaglutide butt look like?,' she also wrote. 'You guessed it? loose skin and cellulite (nothing to brag about, results vary)'

‘Keep in mind I had a BBL about seven years ago and this is what my butt looks like after my 16th injection of compound semaglutide,’ she added. ‘What does an ozempic/semaglutide butt look like?,’ she also wrote. ‘You guessed it? loose skin and cellulite (nothing to brag about, results vary)’

Sharing a second video, she documented her weight loss dropping to 128lbs (58kg) from 143lbs (64.9kg), sharing before and after comparisons of using Ozempic

Sharing a second video, she documented her weight loss dropping to 128lbs (58kg) from 143lbs (64.9kg), sharing before and after comparisons of using Ozempic

Semaglutide injections such as Wegovy and Ozempic have been heralded as ushering in a new era in the war on obesity. Now experts have discovered the drugs may have other benefits - namely restoring the body's ability to defend itself from cancer

Semaglutide injections such as Wegovy and Ozempic have been heralded as ushering in a new era in the war on obesity. Now experts have discovered the drugs may have other benefits – namely restoring the body’s ability to defend itself from cancer

The flab-busting drug doesn’t discriminate which weight it targets.

Videos highlighting the side effect by users themselves have racked up hundreds of thousands of views on TikTok. 

In one TikTok under the #ozempicbutt, watched 26,800 times, @jocelyngarcia3514 shared a full body video of her loose skin around her bum.

‘I’m humble enough to share my results and my body,’ she said.   

‘Keep in mind I had a BBL about seven years ago and this is what my butt looks like after my 16th injection of compound semaglutide,’ she added.  

‘What does an ozempic/semaglutide butt look like?,’ she also wrote. 

‘You guessed it? Loose skin and cellulite (nothing to brag about, results vary).’ 

Sharing a second video, she documented her weight loss dropping to 128lbs (58kg) from 143lbs (64.9kg), sharing before and after comparisons of using Ozempic.  

In another, @shellyslife365 told her TikTok followers: ‘At the beginning I was 285lbs (129.3kg) and now I’m only 144lbs (65.3kg).’

She added: ‘I’m almost at my goal weight, I have Ozempic Butt.

‘So now my butt is not this little round plump butt anymore. It’s flat and droopy like my chin. 

‘So my friends there is a thing called Ozempic butt. 

‘It will resolve itself after sometime, I truly hope.’ 

A third, @lynnesjourney also revealed she ‘had no butt left’ while using Mounjaro. 

This uses a similar drug to Ozempic, tirzepatide, mimicking certain natural appetite suppressing hormones. 

‘It’s all gone, now I’m stuck. I’ve lost all the fat in my b****,’ she said. 

‘I always said that if I ended up with saggy skin in my face, I’d have a facelift. But what am I going to do about my butt.’

Others took to TikTok comments to share their own experiences. 

‘I have Ozempic butt too, well, bariatric a**. Loose skin hanging on my a** from losing so much weight,’ @ramireztea wrote. 

Another commented, they were having the same issue ‘after losing weight fast from it’, while one agreed ‘I’m dealing with this! So sad’. 

But Dr Simon Cork, a senior lecturer in physiology at Anglia Ruskin University in Cambridge, told MailOnline: ‘This is essentially a sign that the drugs are working at reducing weight.’ 

He said: ‘The buttocks are one of the areas of the body where we deposit excess fat, more so in some people than others. 

‘So as people lose weight some people will see this come off their buttocks more than other areas.

‘Skin is like an elastic band. It stretches very easily, but the longer it is stretched the less likely it is to revert to its original size. 

‘This means that as people lose weight their skin stays stretched.’

He added: ‘It’s an unfortunate side effect of losing weight and many more people are likely to see this effect on their tummies, but it is a sign that Ozempic is having a positive effect on their weight.’

A third, @lynnesjourney also revealed she 'had no butt left' while using Mounjaro. This uses a similar drug to Ozempic, tirzepatide, mimicking certain natural appetite suppressing hormones

'It's all gone, now I'm stuck. I've lost all the fat in my b****,' she said. 'I always said that if I ended up with saggy skin in my face, I'd have a facelift. But what am I going to do about my butt'

A third, @lynnesjourney also revealed she ‘had no butt left’ while using Mounjaro. This uses a similar drug to Ozempic, tirzepatide, mimicking certain natural appetite suppressing hormones. ‘It’s all gone, now I’m stuck. I’ve lost all the fat in my b****,’ she said. ‘I always said that if I ended up with saggy skin in my face, I’d have a facelift. But what am I going to do about my butt’

In another, @shellyslife365 told her followers: 'At the beginning I was 285lbs (129.3kg) and now I'm only 144 lbs (65.3kg).' She added: 'If you're on Ozempic, like me, I'm almost at my goal weight, I have Ozempic Butt

'So now my butt is not this little round plump butt anymore. It's flat and droopy like my chin. So my friends there is a thing called Ozempic butt. 'It will resolve itself after sometime, I truly hope'

In another, @shellyslife365 told her followers: ‘At the beginning I was 285lbs (129.3kg) and now I’m only 144 lbs (65.3kg).’ She added: ‘If you’re on Ozempic, like me, I’m almost at my goal weight, I have Ozempic Butt. ‘So now my butt is not this little round plump butt anymore. It’s flat and droopy like my chin. So my friends there is a thing called Ozempic butt. ‘It will resolve itself after sometime, I truly hope’

Others took to TikTok comments to share their own experiences. 'I have Ozempic butt too, well, bariatric a**. Loose skin hanging on my a** from losing so much weight,' @ramireztea wrote. Another commented, they were having the same issue 'after losing weight fast from it', while one agreed 'I'm dealing with this! So sad'

Others took to TikTok comments to share their own experiences. ‘I have Ozempic butt too, well, bariatric a**. Loose skin hanging on my a** from losing so much weight,’ @ramireztea wrote. Another commented, they were having the same issue ‘after losing weight fast from it’, while one agreed ‘I’m dealing with this! So sad’

Semaglutide spurs on weight loss by mimicking the actions of a hormone released in the gut after eating — GLP-1.

As well as telling the pancreas to produce more insulin (hence why the drug is given to diabetics), GLP-1 also suppresses appetite, making us feel full. 

Elon Musk and Jeremy Clarkson have credited the drug for helping them lose weight.

Meanwhile, Kim Kardashian was rumoured to have used it to rapidly lose 16lbs (7.3kg) to fit into Marilyn Monroe’s dress at the 2022 Met Gala. 

Experts say the drug’s phenomenal success has driven a TikTok-fuelled stampede — with stocks now running dry across the world.

Despite being hailed as a miracle, trials have shown semaglutide users can rapidly pile pounds back on once they stop taking it.

Some patients have told of how they have had to stop taking the drug due to side effects. Users commonly complain about nausea, constipation and diarrhoea after taking the medication.

It has also been known to make food less appealing, potentially ruining the enjoyment of eating altogether.

The ‘Ozempic butt’ issue, however, has become so common that forum users are sharing their experiences of developing ‘saggy’ and ‘pancake’ bums in online chatrooms.  

In one Reddit group with over 39,000 members, one user wrote: ‘I’m down 28lbs so far… and I seriously think I lost most of it from my butt. It is a flat, saggy pancake now. Anyone else experiencing this? What are you doing to address it?’ 

In another thread titled ‘Does anyone think their butt is disappearing on Ozempic?’ a user said: ‘Yes I always had a good butt. And now it seems to have no volume and is saggy.’

On a separate group with over 16,000 members, one wrote: ‘Never have I lost as much fat in my a** as I have on Wegovy. 

‘I’ve ALWAYS had a decent sized a** through weight ups and downs, it’s consistently been the part of my body that I like…it’s practically a pancake now, it’s wild,’ they added. 

‘I’m seriously considering cosmetic surgery it’s that bad. With that said it’s still worth it to me.’

Wegovy was approved as a weight loss drug in the US in 2021 after clinical trials showed that alongside a diet and exercise regimen it could help a person lose 15 per cent of their weight over 68 weeks.

Wegovy has been found to help people lose 15 per cent of their body fat over 68 weeks. Other weight loss medications include tirzepatide, liraglutide and orlistat. The latter two are already available on the NHS

Wegovy has been found to help people lose 15 per cent of their body fat over 68 weeks. Other weight loss medications include tirzepatide, liraglutide and orlistat. The latter two are already available on the NHS

Wegovy and Ozempic work by triggering the body to produce a hormone called GLP-1 that is released naturally from the intestines after meals

Wegovy and Ozempic work by triggering the body to produce a hormone called GLP-1 that is released naturally from the intestines after meals

Despite being hailed as one of the most powerful pharmaceutical tools to date, experts have warned it is not a 'magic pill' or miracle fix-all. Trials have shown that users can rapidly pile pounds back on once they stop taking the fat-fighting drug and it can trigger a variety of nasty side effects. Users commonly complain of nausea, constipation and diarrhea after taking the medication

Despite being hailed as one of the most powerful pharmaceutical tools to date, experts have warned it is not a ‘magic pill’ or miracle fix all. Trials have shown that users can rapidly pile pounds back on once they stop taking the fat-fighting drug and it can trigger a variety of nasty side effects. Users commonly complain of nausea, constipation and diarrhoea after taking the medication

In March this year, NHS watchdog NICE also gave the green light for the weekly jab to be given in the UK for weight loss purposes. 

Wegovy will soon be available for people who have a BMI of 35 or more – a classification which means they are morbidly obese.

But earlier this week, the Government issued a blanket ban on wholesalers exporting some weight loss drugs, adding all forms of semaglutide to its parallel export ban list.

It means wholesalers are not allowed to buy stocks to sell them abroad, where they can drastically up the price.

Any company which breaches the export ban faces a punishment, handed out by the medicines watchdog.

Similar happened during the HRT crisis, when menopause-busting drugs were in short supply, and in the early days of the pandemic.

Dulaglutide, exenatide and liraglutide – which all work in the same way as semaglutide – are also on the export ban.

Latest NHS data shows 26 per cent of adults in England are obese and a further 38 per cent are overweight but not obese. One third of Americans are overweight, while four in ten are obese. 

Obesity rates have been on the rise for decades, with experts blaming sedentary lifestyles and unhealthy diets. 

They are also soaring in children, with a quarter of children in reception classes in England now considered overweight, and one in ten obese. 

A landmark study last month also revealed UK’s bulging waistline is stripping billions of pounds from the cash-strapped NHS each year, with twice as much spent on obese patients, as on those of a healthy weight.



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