Meet the people suing Ozempic maker for wrecking their bodies: 'I will never eat solid food again'

Hundreds of Americans have jumped on a multi-state lawsuit alleging that the makers of Ozempic and Mounjaro caused them life-altering injuries.

The suit was filed against Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly, the two pharma giants that have raked in billions thanks to the blockbuster weight-loss meds.

Ohio native and grandmother of seven Dana Filmore can no longer eat solid foods and has to blend her meals. Louisville’s Jacqueline Barber threw up so much she became dangerously malnourished.

Tennessee oil rig worker Bob Tuttle was forced to quit his job because the stomach pain was unbearable. And Philadelphia-born Debbie Kirtz believed she would never make it out of the hospital alive.

They and many others argue in the suit that Lilly and Novo failed to warn its millions of eager customers about the very real risk of severe gastrointestinal injury, including stomach paralysis, gallbladder issues, colon removal, and more, as well as making misleading statements about the drugs’ safety.


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  • Dana Filmore of Columbus, Ohio, now subsists on a diet of protein shakes and Jell-O. Her stomach paralysis tied to Ozempic prevents her from eating solid foods

Dana Filmore, a 55-year-old diabetic, was uncomfortable with the prospect of having to stick herself with a needle every week when her doctor suggested she try Ozempic to manage her type 2 diabetes.

For about two years, the medicine did what it was approved to do – lower her blood sugar levels. But in the last six months that she was on it, the severe nausea kicked in. It gradually worsened, and she had to burn through her vacation time to recuperate.

It got to a point where she became scared to eat solid foods, because a few bites would send her to the bathroom.

She told USA Today: ‘The solids are really difficult on me. My body just rejects it.’

She was recently diagnosed with gastroparesis, or paralysis of the stomach.

It causes muscle contractions in the stomach to become too weak to digest food and pass it along to the intestines, causing food to stay in the stomach for longer than it should.

When the stomach does release the food, rather than doing so gradually in a steady manner, the stomach empties in larger, unprocessed bursts, causing chaotic diarrhea.

Mrs Filmore, who has had to excuse herself mere minutes after starting a meal, said: ‘You never know what will set it off.’

It has even disrupted her 35-minute commute to her job, where she manages a team of technicians at a mechanical company.

She said: ‘Halfway to work, I have to stop into a restaurant or to a gas station. My stomach doesn’t give me that long to really decide where I'm going to go.’

Her diet now consists mostly of protein shakes and Jell-O. It’s the only meal plan that keeps her from running to the bathroom.

In Louisville, Kentucky, Jacqueline Barber, another plaintiff in the case, has also been diagnosed with gastroparesis that threatened her life.

She was prescribed Ozempic for her type 2 diabetes in 2021, but spent every night for over a year sleeping on the couch next to a garbage can to manage her uncontrollable vomiting.

The 48-year-old said: ‘To lay on the couch and throw up nonstop, can't hardly make it to walk, go anywhere, it's very depressing.’

Alls she could keep down were peanuts, peanut butter crackers, and peanut butter cookies.

‘I ended up losing 140 pounds. I was down to around 87 pounds, couldn't walk or get around, couldn't get off the couch. Nobody knew what was going on. No one put the two together.’
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Jacqueline Barber of Louisville, Kentucky was diagnosed with stomach paralysis after taking Ozempic to manage her diabetes

Ms Barber had to be placed on a feeding tube.

‘My stomach was paralyzed,’ she said. ‘I couldn't tolerate anything.’

Meanwhile, Tennessee-native Bob Tuttle, 60, was 60 miles offshore on an oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico when he had to be airlifted in a helicopter to the emergency room after four days of not being able to keep food down.

He was diagnosed with stomach paralysis within the week tied to the Ozempic he had been prescribed in 2018.

Mr Tuttle, a safety and environmental advisor on the rig, was healthy and fit – a necessity for the job, which includes plenty of stairs and running around.

The drug successfully managed his A1C levels and kept his diabetes under control. But gradually, he began to lose weight without intending to. He became increasingly fatigued and, later, severely nauseous.

He got his diagnosis just a few days after leaving the oil rig: ‘Gastroparesis, in laymen’s terms, is just the inability of the stomach to process solids or liquids that one ingests.

‘My stomach was processing some of the liquids, but none of the solids during the tests that they ran on me in the hospital.’

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  • Bob Tuttle of Tennessee became so sick from his stomach paralysis that he had to quit his job as a safety advisor on an oil rig

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  • Mr Tuttle had to be airlifted off the rig in the Gulf of Mexico after four days of being unable to keep food down. He was diagnosed with stomach paralysis within the week
Now off the drug and no longer chronically nauseas, Mr Tuttle still had to quit his job to deal with the illness.

Mr Tuttle has joined the lawsuit against the companies.

Novo and Lilly have denied allegations that their medicines cause stomach paralysis.

A spokesperson for Novo Nordisk said they are without merit and risks of semaglutide, the active ingredient in Ozempic, are clearly stated on the label.

They added: ‘Novo Nordisk stands behind the safety and efficacy of all of our GLP-1 medicines when they are used as indicated and when they are taken under the care of a licensed healthcare professional.’

Ozempic’s FDA-approved warning label mentions ‘gastrointestinal adverse reactions’, and none of those listed include gastroparesis.

Nearly 22,000 adverse reactions to Ozempic have been recorded in the FDA’s voluntary Adverse Event Reporting System. Gastrointestinal conditions such as stomach paralysis make up 43 percent of those reports.

That doesn't mean all 22,000 injuries were actually caused by the drugs. And considering millions are taking the drugs every day, doctors say the side effect panel of the shots is pretty safe.

Now that a few years have passed since the introduction of Ozempic for people with diabetes, researchers are better able to track the longer-term effects of taking the drug beyond helping people shed some weight.

Researchers from the University of British Columbia studied a tranche of health records between 2006 and 2020 of people taking liraglutide, another diabetes drug, semaglutide, and another drug called bupropion-naltrexone.

The researchers found that people using semaglutide for weight loss, which works by binding to GLP-1 receptors in the pancreas and brain to reduce appetite and control cravings, were 9.1 times more likely to develop pancreatitis (inflammation of the pancreas), a condition that can sometimes require surgery.

Additionally, semaglutide users were 4.22 times more likely to experience bowel obstruction, a potentially life-threatening condition, and had a 3.67 times higher risk of developing gastroparesis (often called 'stomach paralysis'), which slows or stops the movement of food from the stomach to the small intestine.

In a trio of studies into the effects of GLP-1 agonists – a class that includes Ozempic and Wegovy – on GI health, researchers examined real-world data for patients prescribed one of the drugs between 2021 and 2022. They compared them to a control group of either diabetic or obese people who were not prescribed the drugs.

Patients taking a GLP-1 were 66 percent more likely to be diagnosed with gastroparesis compared to those not taking the drugs.
 
On this episode of "posters read the title but not the article"..
literally the only thing you need to do to cure type 2 diabetes is lose weight. the people in this article are using it exactly like every other fat person that wants to medicate their weight away and they deserve to be made fun of exactly the same
 
Oh boy, I can't wait to see the side effects fallout from all the non-diabetics injecting themselves with this ad infinitum because they're too lazy to lose weight the normal way.
I'm one of the non-diabetics taking the medication for weight loss, and I've been periodically posting about it in the Health & Fitness thread we have regarding the meds. Nothing really major has happened aside from a reaction to alcohol because that wasn't conveyed to me in any way. Every time I check in with my doctor I make a post in that thread just for anyone who is curious what it's like to actually be taking it.

(I'm taking Ozempic because I am partially physically disabled so a lot of forms of exercise aren't possible for me. I don't eat shit but my problem is I was formerly a good little desperate niggercattle on SSRI's and shit and all those psych meds, which did absolutely fuck all for me, caused me to gain ~50 pounds. I have not been able to drop all that extra weight no matter what I've done.)
 
You can't stop fatties from eating themselves to death. They won't hit the gym. They won't eat better. It isn't expensive to eat well. It costs way more to eat unhealthy goyslop. A good chunk of fatties are on welfare, so the taxpayers are already paying for their destructive behavior. You'd have an easier time fighting obesity by ending welfare than any kind of soft incentive program. You are dealing with addicts.
I get it, I should add that I wanted these 'incentive' programs like the gym memberships and 'health food' spending accounts to replace the RXs when it comes to fighting T2. Like, you MUST show that you went to the gym 1x oer week for one year and used your card to buy better foods before any further medications would be covered by insurance (or tax payers). If I had to cycle through about 2 years of cheaper and shitty alternative treatments before my insurance would consider covering the actual medication for a disease I was born with, I kinda feel the same needs to apply to self inflicted ones.
 
The 3 people in the article are diabetics so they need medication of some sort anyway.
Type 2 diabetics do not "need" medication. What they need is to stop eating carbohydrates all the time, since that is why they are diabetic.
Carbs = glucose.
It's that simple. Type 2 diabetes is put into remission through dietary change alone. Those people need to make permanent changes...but they won't. They want to keep on eating sugar and drinking HFCS, and they want a magic pill or injection to allow them to keep poisoning themselves.

It's not that fucking hard to stop eating thousands of calories a day. Type 2 diabetes is literally due to lifestyle choices
This. 1000 times, this. It's such a simple concept and so easy to implement...but people refuse to listen and don't want to change their garbage lives.
 
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Even when the people were using Oz. for the actual purpose, a lot of it has to do with them wanting a fast miracle cure, which is rarely a thing. Even when you read that some medicine ended up curing people in short time, it's a few cases and not all of them. I keep telling people that you can die by taking something as harmless as an allergy medicine if your body reacts badly to them. You can react badly to anything for whatever reason. Yes, it's a risk to take, but you can't then complain if such risks come back to bite you in the ass for taking them.

Most medicines come with warnings that people don't read. Even in court they will tell you "we included a paper that said that if you had this or that, you shouldn't take it". It will all depend on how this was recommended to people, because Oz is still relatively new and if they were warning of the effects, it's all on them. It sucks for these people and I know people really don't want to be sick, but shortcuts are a risk.
 
I don't really need Ozempic or its alternatives, but I would probably take them to lose 15 quick. But I've decided to wait for 5+ years of broad normie usage before I consider it, so that weird side effects like this can come to light. So far, I think this and the blindness thing are the main scary side effects I've seen, and in both cases I think it was mainly hitting diabetics, who are likely to be on it long term instead of under a year for people using it for weight loss. I'm also not sure what 66% more likely means here - is this a 10% chance to 16.6% chance increase, or is it a .01% to .0166% chance? How much of that correlation is because of the type of person who uses Ozempic, rather than the drug itself?

I dunno, this article doesn't do much to put me off the idea. Still got a few years to go, but Ozempic is holding up fairly well considering how effective it is for weight loss.
 
It's that simple. Type 2 diabetes is put into remission through dietary change alone. Those people need to make permanent changes...but they won't. They want to keep on eating sugar and drinking HFCS, and they want a magic pill or injection to allow them to keep poisoning themselves.
Having a lot of relatives working as health workers, I can tell you you don't even need to drop sugar and drinks altogether for ever. A good diet doesn't remove you from all the things you like, unless you have a very extreme case of obesity, and even so. Doctors will be this strict, but dietitians and similar are a bit more understanding with people who got very fat. They know that, if they completely get rid of candies, they won't follow the diet. Instead of eating ten bars of chocolate per day, it's more like half of it in the morning, the other one after lunch. People are just so lazy that they won't make an effort.
 
I find this interesting. It seems like the medication worked fine for the first year or two before things suddenly went to shit. How will this effect celebrities and regular people who are using it as a weight loss drug? I see a lot of happy customers currently, but it's only been shilled really hard in the last year. Sounds like we're going to have a huge wave of sick and permanently injured people next year if the people in this article are anything to go by.
 
I have not been able to drop all that extra weight no matter what I've done
That's because exercise does not make you lose weight.
I am partially physically disabled so a lot of forms of exercise aren't possible for me.
Again, exercise does not cause weight loss.
I don't eat shit
Perhaps, but you definitely eat an abundance of carbohydrates.
A good diet doesn't remove you from all the things you like, unless you have a very extreme case of obesity, and even so.
We're not talking about merely losing weight, though. We are talking about Type 2 diabetics i.e. people who have severe Insulin Resistance and therefore cannot have glucose.

Having a lot of relatives working as health workers
Totally irrelevant, on every level.

I can tell you you don't even need to drop sugar and drinks altogether for ever.
Wrong. 100% wrong. Type 2 diabetics are literally unable to remove the glucose from their bloodstream, due to Insulin Resistance. They must change their diet, permanently.

dietitians and similar are a bit more understanding with people who got very fat. They know that, if they completely get rid of candies, they won't follow the diet. Instead of eating ten bars of chocolate per day, it's more like half of it in the morning, the other one after lunch.
Uh-huh. And that's why their patients are still overweight and diabetic. They might lose a few pounds but nothing of real significance or benefit.
 
Not all T2 are because of being overweight. On one side of my family diabetes is genetic and the ones who get it are thin. One family member uses Ozempic and it's been a good drug, but it has decreased appetite so they're slightly underweight and have to force themselves to eat enough calories. There's also that one fit doctor that did a Ted Talk years ago about how he was so sure all his T2 patients were being noncompliant and had bad diets, until he got T2 himself.

That said, doctors are pushing the heck out of these injectables, some who don't have any business recommending them.
 
risks of semaglutide, the active ingredient in Ozempic, are clearly stated on the label.
Ding ding ding.

You pays your money, you signs your informed consent, you takes your chances.

There is no earthly reason these people should be compensated for the concretisation of a risk they agreed, in writing, to run.
 
Ding ding ding.

You pays your money, you signs your informed consent, you takes your chances.

There is no earthly reason these people should be compensated for the concretisation of a risk they agreed, in writing, to run.


You forgot this part
Ozempic’s FDA-approved warning label mentions ‘gastrointestinal adverse reactions’, and none of those listed include gastroparesis.
 
Dana Filmore of Columbus, Ohio, now subsists on a diet of protein shakes and Jell-O.
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And it looks like she hasn't missed a single jello cup...

This. It's not that fucking hard to stop eating thousands of calories a day. Type 2 diabetes is literally due to lifestyle choices.

Look I know baked/roasted chicken, fish, brussel sports, broccoli, brown rice, every other green veggie and cauliflower might get a bit boring but goddamn losing 20+lbs JUST by not eating trash is a lot better.
Just by reducing calories (ie eating when I'm hungry til I'm full), cutting back portions, half the carbs, and processed fooe/seed oils I've lost weight, am no longer pre-diabetic, and lowered my BP 20 points. I still largely eat things I like too, not just baked chicken and broccoli. It just takes more thinking and research. And willpower.

I really don't understand why (US at least) doesn't have more programs covered or pushed by insurance companies to make it easier to get healthier.
Because Big Pharma pushes doctors to prescribe pills to alleviate symptoms instead of treating root causes. They also fund a lot of medical schools and lobby the government. In school doctors are told Americans are too dumb to stop eating and start exercising, and that nutrition science is up there with chiropractic, healing crystals, and copper bracelets.

RFK tried to get the insurance companies to team with him against Big Pharma because he figured they'd want to pay less out. They told him off the record they benefit far more from unhealthy people due to premiums volume.
 
You forgot this part
"Gastrointestinal adverse reactions" will be found at the conclusion of these proceedings to, yes, include gastroparesis.

If people do not like the ass-covering done by modern pharmaceutical companies to ensure they stay in business, people don't need to use their products.

Eli Lilly, GSK and their ilk are corporations. They are not charities. They are not operating for the public good. Adverse drug reactions are well known, inevitable at a certain low level, and frankly the cost of being a patient of modern medicine.

There is absolutely no incentive to produce new blockbuster drugs, particularly for lifestyle diseases such as type 2, if everyone who consents to take it then is allowed to get on the phone with the ambulance0chasers and whine for 'muh compunsayshun'.

They consented to the treatment and its risks as those risks were known to their physician at the time they were consented. That's how the laws on medical consent work.

Sometimes people are just unlucky. Every piece of bad luck does not give rise to compensation.
 
Not all T2 are because of being overweight. On one side of my family diabetes is genetic and the ones who get it are thin. One family member uses Ozempic and it's been a good drug, but it has decreased appetite so they're slightly underweight and have to force themselves to eat enough calories. There's also that one fit doctor that did a Ted Talk years ago about how he was so sure all his T2 patients were being noncompliant and had bad diets, until he got T2 himself.

That said, doctors are pushing the heck out of these injectables, some who don't have any business recommending them.
I had to do a glucose test back when i was like 18, i had the opposite problem to diabetes, like my sugar was always low and i got into ketosis super easy, i used to almost faint when i didnt eat, the doctor basically told me i had to eat more sugar ( i don't have that problem anymore) .There was a woman who was pregnant also taking the test, who was probably diabetic, and she was telling me how her whole family was diabetic. I felt pretty bad for her because diabetes can make pregnancies tricky.
 
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