Connect with us

Fitness

People in Ireland being prescribed weight loss injections without seeing doctor

Published

on

People in Ireland being prescribed weight loss injections without seeing doctor

People in Ireland are being legally prescribed weight loss injections without seeing a doctor in person or even speaking to a medical professional on the phone.

Multiple online pharmacies are offering prescriptions for weight loss injections such as Saxenda and Wegovy, which are similar to Ozempic but are allowed to be prescribed in Ireland for obese people who don’t have diabetes. One online pharmacy asks customers to fill out a questionnaire and then send a photo of them standing on a scale – to prove their weight – along with photos showing their body.




While this is done to ensure that the person isn’t lying about their BMI – which must be over 30 to be prescribed the medication – at no point do they speak to a doctor on the phone before being prescribed the injections. Customers can then have the medicine delivered to them, or pick it up at a pharmacy.

Read more: Boy, 16, left unable to walk independently by ‘laughing gas’ as doctors issue warning

Read more: Mother and daughter arrive outside Aviva Stadium to listen to Taylor Swift – after falling victim to ticket scam

The medication is not covered under the drugs payment scheme for weight loss purposes, and it is costly at around €300 a month. Many websites have also popped up claiming to sell and deliver the weight-loss jabs without the need for a prescription.

Last year, 286 units of products claiming to contain semaglutide (the active ingredient in Ozempic) were detained by the Health Products Regulatory Authority (HPRA), which is urging people not to buy these medications from unknown sources online, as they are likely falsified medicines. Content creator Robyn McManus, who speaks about her journey of using Saxenda online, said multiple TikTok and Instagram accounts claiming to sell the drug were commenting on her videos.

She said: “When I was posting about it I had loads of pages messaging me and commenting under my posts for people to buy it. I was trying to delete them because people are so desperate to buy it and because of shortages and stuff they are buying it. There is a form of it being sold that has ‘not for human consumption on it’ and you mix it at home, it’s a raw semaglutide. It’s crazy.”

Continue Reading