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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Weight loss injections should be advertised as lifelong medications

108 replies

weighmoreweighless · 25/04/2026 10:39

When Ozempic first came out, the guidelines were for usage to be for up to 2 years. I can’t remember if I read the rationale for that but seem to recall it was in the guidelines.
Thinking back it was along the lines of Ozempic was to be used alongside lifestyle and psychological support to address unhealthy eating habits and psychological drivers for overeating. By the end of two years people were expected to be able to maintain these new habits and weight. Happy to be corrected there but that’s meet I remember reading.

Now we have Mounjaro and many users are saying it’s a lifelong medication similar to blood pressure medication or asthma medication.

From reading the weight loss injections topic there are lots of posters who believe they will take the drug for a few months and that will be it, cured of obesity.

Now many of those who have successfully lost several stones are saying that they will remain on these drugs for life because of course they stop working once you stop, just like any other medication.

There are plenty of threads from posters who have regained weight after stopping. A few posters say they have maintained their weight loss but these seem rare on mumsnet at least.

I know diets don’t work and wish that word would disappear beyond being used to describe what we eat eg vegetarian diet, Mediterranean diet etc. I’d love to see diet replaced with another word or phrase such as healthier lifestyle or similar.

The reason diets fail, or one of them, is that so many people drastically cut their food intake for a few weeks, struggle with hunger, lose a little weight and give up because it’s too hard to sustain that low level of calories, food and nutrients.

The focus should always be on eating a healthier diet, achieving a healthier lifestyle by including more exercise within your own capabilities, less alcohol, not smoking, plenty of vitamin D, good sleep and relaxation habits. It should be a holistic approach, not just eat less, move more. Eat better and yes, move more but it’s more than that. It’s a mindset of needing to change habits for life. Sure we all have times and events where we eat and drink more or don’t exercise as much for a variety of reasons but what matters is what we do most of the time.

With this in mind I’m thinking that the advertising should be changed to reflect this. Companies need to be more transparent about the medications so that people are fully informed that these drugs are not going to be a quick fix or magic cure like people seem to think or hope. I’d be so angry if I’d paid out thousands to lose weight and then when I stopped it came back on because the prescriber hadn’t been completely open with me. There’s been posters who have stuck to healthier eating and increased exercise but still gained weight after stopping.

There’ll be arguments for fully researching the drugs before taking but how many people have the time or understanding of research to be fully informed? Most will just trust what they read in the press or on social media and the pharmacist prescribing. Critical thinking isn’t applied or rather thinking about what happens after. It’s the instant gratification and not thinking of the long term consequences or the financial implications of having to pay out indefinitely or at least until they become available for all on the NHS. Not unlike that packet of jam doughnuts I really wanted to buy yesterday instead of eating a healthy lunch Confused. Just to clarify I wouldn’t have eaten them all. Two of the five for sure though and maybe a third after the school run. I’m a terrible sugar fiend.

This has ended up all disjointed because I can’t go back up the page to edit as I’m typing. I’ll try once I get to the edit option. I have ADHD and my thought processes are all over the place and I go off on tangents. Sorry.

TL:DR Should pharmaceutical companies/pharmacies/doctors/pharmacists change their advertising and recommendations to say that WLI (weight loss injections/medications) are likely to be needed to be taken for life to control obesity due to the likelihood of weight being regained once stopping even in cases of maintained healthy diet and lifestyle due to the chronic nature of obesity?

I’m going to try and edit this now into some semblance of order but if it remains chaotic I’m sorry. It at least has paragraphs even if it does jump around like a flea at a fair.

Poll:

YABU: No, people who take these drugs should realise that these aren’t a quick fix and they need to stay on them long term, and be prepared for the financial cost.

YANBU: Pharmaceutical companies/pharmacies/ pharmacists etc should tell people they are likely to need to take this for life and pay for it themselves unless it becomes available to all on the NHS.

OP posts:
HereIGoOnceMore · Yesterday 11:52

Hmm. That’s scary advice. Just because someone’s heart is physiologically OK doesn’t mean they are not at risk from obesity related inflammatory events.

I’d be curious to learn what product this cardiologist is being paid to research.

RootsOfTheTree · Yesterday 14:54

It isn't as clear as obese = worse health outcomes.

It really is. You seem to feel you have been somehow cleared as not at the cardiovascular and cancer risks of obesity @Ponoka7. That cannot be the case. You may well be healthy now (and I hope you are and remain so) but your current status does not exempt you from the future risks of obesity.

Backawayfromthesausage · Yesterday 15:22

Ponoka7 · Yesterday 11:42

Have you got a link to that? I mentioned this, my heart is healthy so it doesn't apply to me, but he said the research isn't that clear and it's around 20%, but for some categories and a by-effect of WLI was many people stopped smoking.

I mean this politely bit firmly. I shall do it this time. But please learn to use google instead of asking people to search for you. There are literally dozens of articles on it,

https://www.healthline.com/health-news/tirzepatide-reduces-risk-major-cardiovascular-events

Mounjaro, Zepbound Lowers Risk of Cardiovascular Death by 62%

GLP-1 weight loss drugs containing tirzepatide (Mounjaro, Zepbound) can reduce heart-related health risks for people with serious heart conditions, according to new research.

https://www.healthline.com/health-news/tirzepatide-reduces-risk-major-cardiovascular-events

Backawayfromthesausage · Yesterday 15:23

Ponoka7 · Yesterday 11:38

I was offered a heart scan as part of research for over 55's. Although I'm obese, my heart is healthy and my cancer risk low. It isn't as clear as obese = worse health outcomes. He is a research cardiovascular consultant, at the time he was working out of Liverpool Royal hospital. All you mention is true, but with just Statins and a lifestyle that we are supposed to follow, will do the same. He felt there are risks to lifelong medication and we shouldn't be medicating at the lower end of obesity. He likened it to medicating lung conditions in heavy smokers. You are just putting off the inevitable early death, unless the addiction is given up.

This doesn’t make any logical sense, in fact it’s highly contradictory, are you saying yoh will go on life long statins? But not weight loss injections which negates the need for them, and you were told you don’t have risks by being obese? What is a research consultant exactly?

Ponoka7 · Yesterday 16:40

RootsOfTheTree · Yesterday 14:54

It isn't as clear as obese = worse health outcomes.

It really is. You seem to feel you have been somehow cleared as not at the cardiovascular and cancer risks of obesity @Ponoka7. That cannot be the case. You may well be healthy now (and I hope you are and remain so) but your current status does not exempt you from the future risks of obesity.

Are you a research consultant? Involved in infectious disease? I'm actually losing weight naturally, just had to get my shit together. But I've excellent genetics, mixed heritage. Looking at the people who I know from across Africa, I do think that activity and healthy, but overeating, does make a difference when it comes to obesity. I know quite a few builders who are obese type 1, they are in better health than semi sedentary bmi normal range men of the same age. As we are all 57- 75, we are seeing a lot of poor health in people who you would think will age well.

Ponoka7 · Yesterday 16:43

Backawayfromthesausage · Yesterday 15:22

I mean this politely bit firmly. I shall do it this time. But please learn to use google instead of asking people to search for you. There are literally dozens of articles on it,

https://www.healthline.com/health-news/tirzepatide-reduces-risk-major-cardiovascular-events

That article is concerning people who have type 2 diabetes or transcatheter procedures. When you Google 20% comes up, but a large percentage were smokers who stopped. So no decisive studies, yet.

Backawayfromthesausage · Yesterday 16:49

Ponoka7 · Yesterday 16:43

That article is concerning people who have type 2 diabetes or transcatheter procedures. When you Google 20% comes up, but a large percentage were smokers who stopped. So no decisive studies, yet.

What> google. It’s just completed final trials and about to be approved for cardio vascular disease treatment. Honestly google is a thing you can t rely on social media nd people to research for you. And certainly not me, as I abhor laziness.

RootsOfTheTree · Yesterday 17:18

Ponoka7 · Yesterday 16:40

Are you a research consultant? Involved in infectious disease? I'm actually losing weight naturally, just had to get my shit together. But I've excellent genetics, mixed heritage. Looking at the people who I know from across Africa, I do think that activity and healthy, but overeating, does make a difference when it comes to obesity. I know quite a few builders who are obese type 1, they are in better health than semi sedentary bmi normal range men of the same age. As we are all 57- 75, we are seeing a lot of poor health in people who you would think will age well.

No I’m not a “research consultant”. No idea why you ask. And why are you talking about infectious diseases now? It’s well known that bmi based risk profiles don’t take into account very fit, muscular people. As you said you were discussing losing weight with your consultant I assumed you thought you were overweight. Anyway I’ll leave you to your superior genetics. Mine are average so I’m aware I’m at risk of diseases like most other people (not the superior ones, obviously) 🙄

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