Medication

‘I used Ozempic as a quick fix – but I put the weight back on immediately’

They have been labeled ‘miracles of weight loss’, but what is it like to use GLP-1 agonists? Yasmin Shaheen-Zaffar explains why she couldn’t reach them again

Yasmin last used Ozempic in 2022(Yasmin Shaheen-Zaffar)

Yasmin Shaheen-Zaffar has used weight loss drugs for years – but now the rest of her jabs are in the bin.

The child’s mother was prescribed the injectable Saxenda for weight loss in 2017 and later switched to the popular drug Ozempic, but after five years she withdrew and remove them – and put on the weight he lost – he refused. reach them again.




Saxenda is one of the weight loss medicines prescribed by the NHS for people with severe obesity or associated health conditions. Ozempic is only prescribed to patients with type 2 diabetes and is not approved for weight loss in the UK, although the Government admits it is “used off-label for that purpose”.

A new study earlier this month found that semaglutide drugs, which include Ozempic, may reduce the risk of heart attack or stroke in obese people without diabetes. It comes after Hollywood A-listers, Sharon Osbourne and Rebel Wilson, made headlines for talking about their weight loss transformations.

However, many health experts have raised concerns about the side effects and potential long-term risks of using GLP-1 agonists for weight loss. Therapist Yasmin, 52, told the Mirror: “I’ve used weight loss jabs as a quick fix and I think they’re a good place to start, but you you cannot depend on them forever.”

Before she started using Saxenda in 2017, her BMI was above the healthy range(Yasmin Shaheen-Zaffar)
Yasmin is underweight after using weight loss jabs and has lost 1.5st(Yasmin Shaheen-Zaffar)

Yasmin, 52, started using Saxenda at the age of 40 when she found herself “unable to stop eating” after a tragic loss. He said the death of his grandmother in 2017, to whom he was very close, inspired him to eat good food. He explained: “I was an emotional eater and I like to gain weight.

“Food was my way of coping after my father died when I was 13, then I lost my partner to suicide as an adult. I ate through my grief,” said Yasmin, from Harrogate. The child’s mother became concerned about her health when she struggled to fit her clothes and her BMI reached 35, which is higher than the average between 18 and 25.

After seeing her GP, she decided to contact an online chemist to talk to a private doctor about other ways to lose weight. Yasmin was prescribed Saxenda, the drug liraglutide, and began daily injections into her stomach. The drug suppresses your appetite by mimicking a natural hormone called GLP-1, which makes you feel full.

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