Diabetes drug Ozempic has become part of the public eye in recent months as it is touted as something of a weight loss wonder drug on social media.
Celebrities and influencers alike endorse the drug as a fat-dissolving miracle, with the hashtag #ozempic amassing hundreds of millions of views on TikTok.
Ozempic is an injectable prescription drug used to manage blood sugar levels in people with type 2 diabetes. Based on a natural human hormone called glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1), it plays an important role in regulating appetite and blood sugar levels.
The active ingredient in Ozempic is a molecule called semaglutide that acts as a GLP-1 agonist. That is, it mimics the structure of GLP-1 and activates its receptor.
Studies have shown that obese people are often less sensitive to hormones that make them feel full. However, by slowing gastric emptying, drugs like Ozempic can restore satiety in these patients.
However, the drug is also very popular outside of medical use, and many people who already have an enviable physique rely on it to look slimmer.
Many celebrities have also spoken about using Ozempic. Others have given less glowing reviews, either by mocking or outright denouncing.
chelsea handler
On Sunday, Chelsea Handler drew giggles from the star-studded audience at the Critics’ Choice Awards when she joked about drug use in Hollywood.
While entertaining the crowd with a list of jokes in the opening monologue as presenter, the comedian turned his attention to Julia Roberts. gas slit.
“We love you, Julia,” Handler said. “The term ‘gaslighting’ was actually Merriam-Webster’s word of the year. I’m just trying to convince you, like when celebrities say they’ve lost ‘drink water and lose weight’, but really everyone is on Ozempic. ”
As the audience burst into raucous laughter, Handler added:
And Handler has personal experience using the drug. variety December 2022, once Chelsea in recent times The host said the doctor gave her the drug under a different name without realizing it was Ozempic.
“Apparently, it makes you lose your appetite,” Handler said as he ate the pizza. “But I like having an appetite. It made me nauseous. I don’t like it, it’s just this fucking town.”
Khloe Kardashian
Earlier this month, Khloe Kardashian shared photos from a photo shoot sherbet magazine.
“I’m open about my nose job. Anyone who ‘respects’ me must know I’ve lost over 60 pounds over the years,” Kardashian said. , writing in response to one comment about her appearance that has since been deleted. “My only recent change is my bangs. I didn’t know I had to make a running list.”
Another Instagram user suggested that reality TV star and businessman Kardashian used an injectable diabetes pill to lose weight.
“The fact that she lost this weight using diabetes meds is disturbing,” the comment read, according to a screenshot shared on Kardashian’s fan account.
“Let’s not discredit my years of exercise,” Kardashian wrote in response. I think New Year still means mean people.”
Kyle Richards
real housewives of beverly hills Star Kyle Richards this week busted the assumption that he used Ozempic to achieve his physique.
Richards spoke out after multiple Instagram users left comments on the post 6 pagesnoted a recent bikini selfie that the TV personality shared on her Instagram story.
“Ozempic?” asked one user, prompting Richards to retort: ”I don’t take Ozempic. I never drink.”
“I think I’ve been to a plastic surgeon many times,” Richards read in another comment, adding, “I’ve never tried Ozempic. This is not from a plastic surgeon.
“I am honest with what I do,” she added. “But if having plastic surgery makes you feel better, stop being her sister.”
Jeremy Clarkson
former top gear Host Jeremy Clarkson admitted he started using Ozempic over the weekend after asking people how to stay lean.
“It turned out they had all started taking a new Danish drug called Ozempic, and when questioned they all raved about it,” he wrote in his column. Sunday Times“If you increase the dose with each injection once a week, you will lose your appetite.
“When you see a Sunday roast with gravy and beef and the perfect Yorkshire pudding, you think, ‘Let’s just have a stick of celery instead.'”
Clarkson explained that he went to a clinic in London for blood tests and an ultrasound before being prescribed medication to prevent him from developing diabetes.
And while taking Ozempic, like any drug, comes with risks, Clarkson says he won’t be deterred once he’s reaping the benefits.
“Truly unbelievable,” he wrote. “I open the fridge and there’s half a chicken and a juicy bottle of rosé, and I don’t want either. Of course, in the future, you have to balance it, or you’ll die. But now By the way, that’s great.”
Elon Musk
Billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk tweeted in October 2022 that he had achieved a weight loss transformation using Ozempic’s sister drug, Wegovy.
On October 1, one of the South African-born businessman’s followers uploaded a photo of him and asked about his “secret.”
“You look great, fit, ripped and healthy. Are you lifting weights? Are you eating healthy?” asked a Twitter user.
“Fasting,” Musk replied, before adding, “And we goby.”
Remi Vader
TikTok star Remi Bader opened up about being prescribed Ozempic “before it was trendy” when she appeared on Amanda Hirsch’s show. not skinny but not fat podcast.
Bader, a Victoria’s Secret ambassador, told Hersh, “I’m almost pissed that it’s this trendy thing right now when I get to the real issue.” . Independent.
The influencer went on to explain that doctors recommended the drug shortly after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved it for its use in 2020. Bader, who was pre-diabetic, was experiencing insulin resistance and weight gain issues.
However, Bader gave Ozempic a mixed review because he found that his binge eating worsened after he stopped the weekly injections.
“I went to the doctors and they said ‘100 percent because you went to Ozempic’ because they made me think I wasn’t hungry,” she said. “I lost some weight.
“My bulimia got so bad that I blamed Ozempic,” she added.
Jameela Jamil
good place Star Jameela Jamil has long been an outspoken critic of fad diet promotions and social media trends that can lead to unhealthy behavior among impressionable people.
And she released a statement on Monday to stay true to form and condemn the increased use of Ozempic by people who take it solely to lose weight.
“I said what I said about the potential harm of people using diabetes meds just for weight loss,” Jamil wrote. I’ve been buying these things for over $1,000 from Yahoo!
British-born Jamil has since expressed concern that the trend “will end just like we were told opioids were safe.” She added, “There is little to no discussion of the side effects of online advertising.”
“I’m very worried, but I can’t change your mind because fat phobia is suffocating our generation,” she continued.
In the post’s caption, Jamil said: The advice you’ve given me on this is wrong. ”
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