The Ozempic Exit
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The Ozempic Exit

A new study shows that more than 50% of people who start Ozempic or its cousin drugs quit within a year — not because they don’t want to lose weight, but because the side effects are hell. We’re talking relentless nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, constipation, acid reflux — symptoms that hit fast, often within 48 hours of the first dose or every time the dose goes up. For many, it’s just not livable. And here’s the kicker: the “solutions” doctors recommend to manage those side effects — eat tiny meals, avoid fat — practically guarantee nutritional collapse. Fat is where your body gets and absorbs key vitamins like A, D, E, and K. No fat means no nutrients. Combine that with a drug that shuts off hunger, and you’re looking at malnutrition and muscle loss dressed up as “health.” Even for those who stick it out, the drugs only work while you’re on them. Stop, and on average you regain two-thirds of the weight within a year. And here’s the most telling part: there are no instructions on the labels for how to ever safely go off of them. No taper plan, no exit strategy. It’s a lifetime subscription model, designed to keep you paying. So when you hear “miracle weight loss drug,” remember: half the people who try it can’t stomach it — literally. The post The Ozempic Exit appeared first on Redacted.