The drug had to be administered with a daily injection to the stomach. ‘I wasn’t overly keen on that but I soon got used to it,’ she said. 
Camera IconThe drug had to be administered with a daily injection to the stomach. ‘I wasn’t overly keen on that but I soon got used to it,’ she said.  Credit: Adobestock

Not for everyone: I lost weight on the ‘miracle jab’ Ozempic because it made me vomit

Julie Cook Daily Mail

Ask Sam King how she lost weight and she will smile and say, “Healthy eating and exercise.”

But that was only after she had tried the wonder drug Ozempic, which not only didn’t help her lose weight but also caused nausea, vomiting and vertigo so bad she was bedbound.

“I know Ozempic works for many people and I am thrilled for them,’ said Sam, 35, a travel writer from Hampshire.

‘But for me the drug caused me nothing but ill health and I didn’t lose any weight.’

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Sam, who started gaining weight in her 20s, at her heaviest weighed 120kg (she is 5 ft 6 in).

She says, “I tried every diet going — slimming World, diet shakes, keto — nothing worked. I would spend two hours in the gym and lose a pound then put it on again.’

In 2022 she was feeling so exhausted she saw her GP. “I explained I was overweight and had tried everything.

“My doctor was sympathetic and told me about Ozempic. They gave me a prescription for a month initially. I knew that if I was slimmer and could exercise more, I might feel more energised.”

The drug had to be administered with a daily injection to the stomach. “I wasn’t overly keen on that but I soon got used to it,” she said.

Sam had read online stories of people losing huge amounts of weight on Ozempic, with social media hailing it as a wonder drug.

“I was so excited,” she said. Her appetite initially remained unchanged. The doctor had advised her to cut back on alcohol and to ensure she was following a healthy diet of fruit, vegetables and protein from meat and fish. But within days Sam felt nauseous.

“It was all-consuming and I found I couldn’t leave the house,” she said.

“Luckily I work from home so was able to work. But then the nausea got so bad I had to stay in all day and couldn’t leave the sofa. I would feel so nauseous I’d actually be sick — at first once a day, then several times. I felt horrendous.’

When Sam went back to her doctor for her next prescription, she was told these side effects were normal.

“But it got worse,” she said.

“The fatigue — the same fatigue I’d ironically gone to the GP for in the first place — was worse. I couldn’t lift my head off my pillow. I knew exercise was a component of losing weight but couldn’t get up. I’d be sick all day every day.”

After three months she had lost 2.7 kg — “but my GP told me that was probably due to my vomiting and dehydration; I’d never felt so ill,” she said.

These side-effects are not uncommon, “nausea affects 15 to 20 per cent of people; vomiting occurs in 5 to 9 per cent; diarrhoea in 8 per cent; and constipation 3 to 7 per cent,” said William Van Niekerk, a consultant plastic, reconstructive, aesthetic surgeon in Harley Street, London.

“I was so frustrated and envious of these people online saying they were losing stones and I had lost barely anything,’ Sam said.

“My body was the same and I looked fatigued; with dark circles under my eyes and shaking and weak from the sickness.”

Dr Semiya Aziz, a GP based in London, who has a special interest in weight loss, said, “Ozempic’s ability to help people lose weight varies from person to person.

“Factors such as genetics, baseline weight, metabolic health and adherence to treatment may all influence treatment outcomes.”

Sam decided to stop taking Ozempic after three months. She has since watched videos and read reports of some people keeping the weight off after taking the drug, while others put weight on again.

“It made me realise there is no magic wand.”

A year ago Sam came to Australia and decided to try and lose weight the old-fashioned way.

“I started a diet which was basically calorie-controlled meal plans.

“I stuck with it and went from over 88kg to 76kg in around a year, which i am now.”

She said she was shocked that a ‘normal’ diet has worked for her after all these years.

“I thought Ozempic would be a wonder drug and it seems to be for some people, but it certainly wasn’t for me,” she says.

“The three months on it were the worst months of my life.”


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