Obesity medication that is effective has been a long time coming. Enter semaglutide (sold as Ozempic and Wegovy), which is helping people improve weight-related health, including lowering the risk of having a heart attack or stroke, while also silencing 'food noise'.
As demand for semaglutide increases, so are claims that taking it is 'cheating' at weight loss or the 'easy way out'.
We don't tell people who need statin medication to treat high cholesterol or drugs to manage high blood pressure they're cheating or taking the easy way out.
Nor should we shame people taking semaglutide. It's a drug used to treat diabetes and obesity which needs to be taken long-term and comes with risks and side effects, as well as benefits. When prescribed for obesity, it's given alongside advice about diet and exercise.
Watch: The health myths, debunked. Post continues after video.
How does it work?
Semaglutide is a glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist (GLP-1RA). This means it makes your body's own glucagon-like peptide-1 hormone, called GLP-1 for short, work better.
GLP-1 gets secreted by cells in your gut when it detects increased nutrient levels after eating. This stimulates insulin production, which lowers blood sugars.
GLP-1 also slows gastric emptying, which makes you feel full, and reduces hunger and feelings of reward after eating.
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