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.
 
Guess it's okay for bug pharma to lie and kill people if it's fatties, based on the comments, never mind that they're doing this in other ways to other groups too. You can barely trust an aspirin.
I mean, every medication you take has potential side effects, they even clearly state them when you are prescribed them. It’s fucking impossible to make a treatment that changes your body in someway without hazards. How this is proof of some uber conspiracy to poison the masses is mind boggling to me. Sure sometimes protocols are ignored for a quick buck but it isn’t as often as people like to think it is. Sometimes the dice roll just comes up snake eyes.
 
article: diabetics takes medication developed for diabetic to treat their diabetes
A&Niggers: "hur dur fucking fat asses!"

Anyway, this is a complete failure on the doctors for not maintaining regular checkups with something taking something released a little over half a decade ago. While it's easy to criticise the patients for not reporting their symptoms, the simple fact is that (as we've seen over the past few years), people are all too willing to "trust the experts".
 
or the best one, the low fat chips that gave people “anal leakage”?
Oh yeah, olestra. I remember olestra now. Fucking lulzy to the extreme. Scientists engineered a special cooking oil that wasn't digestible and rushed it to the market. Since it wasn't digestible, people would eat a bag of Doritos and have the oil pour out of their bungholes and soil their undies.

A supermarket in a town near the Permabunker grills beef on a big open air BBQ on weekends during summer. I'm gonna go there today and get myself a nice big tri tip roast and enjoy it. Byte me, weight loss "scientists".
 
I mean, every medication you take has potential side effects, they even clearly state them when you are prescribed them. It’s fucking impossible to make a treatment that changes your body in someway without hazards. How this is proof of some uber conspiracy to poison the masses is mind boggling to me. Sure sometimes protocols are ignored for a quick buck but it isn’t as often as people like to think it is. Sometimes the dice roll just comes up snake eyes.


The thing is that they do not admit the drug causes stomach paralisis and they say its safe. That's the "conspiracy".

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.

There are two people in the thread saying the know people who got this side effects or something similar, if that's the case, it's not that rare, the company probably knows about it and they should inform it in the lablel.
 
Guess it's okay for bug pharma to lie and kill people if it's fatties, based on the comments, never mind that they're doing this in other ways to other groups too. You can barely trust an aspirin.
Too many people are too myopic to think about that.

It's like when you see people support gerrymandering or making it harder to change and amend laws through voting. They never stop to think what would happen if this power gets into the hands of someone malevolent in the future. Oftentimes they don't care, all that matters is the present and instant gratification.
 
Guess it's okay for big pharma to lie and kill people if it's fatties, based on the comments, never mind that they're doing this in other ways to other groups too. You can barely trust an aspirin.
It’s not that it’s ok I just have far less sympathy because being a fatty is a choice and not wanting to put the work in and wanting magic pharma pills to be normal because you can’t put the soda down and hit the thread mill is far less sympathetic a situation than, say, getting fucked over with bad dementia or schizo meds.

I sympathize with the people who were told by the doctors it’s a good diabetes meds depending but definitely not for the people who thought it was their way to be thin while still being a gluttonous pig
 
Yeah? Have a look into fines and settlements paid out by the pharmaceutical industry and then tell me they're not prioritising profit over health.
Well yeah, most people are motivated by money not altruism. I can’t think of any company in any industry that doesn’t prioritize profit over morality or anyway to have a successful company that has no one driven by success. The best you can do is have oversight and punishments for exploiting people but even that won’t stop corruption. I just don’t see any way to root out bad actors more without hurting innovation and research. It’s a balancing act.
 
My grandfather is diabetic and in his late 70s, yet through sheer discipline with diet, exercise, sleep schedule and taking his pills on time has managed to become one of our healthiest family members.

Ozempic drug that is prescribed to those who are unwilling to change their habits in order to control their illnes, but there're no shortcuts in life.
 
I hope that Whitney Thore bitch got medical complications from this. She's my wifes personal lolcow and she forces me to hatewatch the show with her 🤣 come to think of it, TLC is basically just the Lolcow network. They've been finding and documenting deranged and eccentric retards for over 20 years. Regardless Whitney's unearned weight loss and and unearned attitude due to said weight loss are grating, to say the least.
 
Quite a few of the "mean girl" posters in this thread, completely disregarding the fact that a lot of people are often prescribed Ozempic or similar medications by their health care providers (and have it quite aggressively pushed on them). That actually happens with a lot of diabetic medications, honestly. It suddenly became a thing pushed onto people alongside the usual "diet and exercise" advice in the last few years.

Sure, you can (and probably should) hold the deathfats accountable for not doing more to correct their health, but it shouldn't be totally ignored that oftentimes these medications are pushed by primary care physicians.
 
It feels like the trend with moujaro and ozempic takers is that they'll suffer nasty side effects if they take the drug whilst actually suffering from the disease it's meant to treat. Doesn't seem very widespread though.
 
What you mean to tell me, this is not 100% reversible, and my genitals will NOT return to their original form? I injected all this acid into my blood to become a xenomorph man c'mon!
Love how saving your teeth isn't covered by health insurance but troon piss that trannies don't need is.
There will be many tens of thousands more cases in the future of stomach paralysis. Many users of this drug gained back the weight once they stopped using it so went back to the drug.
They will permanently be on it. Your brain struggles to turn back on the chemicals responsible for making you feel full because Ozempic is doing it. So you're be chronically feeling starved after stopping Ozempic after a long enough duration of use.
(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.)
EAT LESS. That is literally all you have to do. You do not need to exercise at all to lose weight.
I don't really need Ozempic or its alternatives, but I would probably take them to lose 15 quick. But
Eat less you fat fuck
That's because exercise does not make you lose weight.
50/50 truth. More muscle = higher metabolic rate = more calories burned per day. If you eat the same amount of calories per day but proceed to build muscle with exercise, you will lose weight over time due to that extra muscle.
Likewise with cardio. Doing 20 minutes of moderate intensity running will cause you to burn more calories throughout the day beyond the act of running, which means weight loss. But it also causes a desire to eat more as a result, so it's not effective if you can't control yourself.


They told him off the record they benefit far more from unhealthy people due to premiums volume
WHAT THE FUCK
fuck health insurance
Fuck obama for legally requiring you have health insurance
fuck fat people
fuck america's medical industry
Type 2 adult onset is caused by a variety of reasons, but in the US is primarily diet based.
Eating carbs too often or your pancreas is fucked up for other reasons. Those are the only ways you get type ii diabetes. Majority of type 2 diabetes cases is due to the former. They're starting to see type 2 diabetes in older japanese men because of their diet even though they're not overweight.
That's true but it is usually the case that a T2 will be obese, since T2 is ultimately the result of excess glucose intake, which normally results in obesity.
No, excess glucose intake doesn't result in obesity. Two people eat, idk, say 1000 calories in carbs every day. The first person isn't overweight, they supplement 300 extra calories with veggies and meat. The second person supplements an additional 1.5k calories with fatty shit. They both eat throughout the day instead of 2 meals. The first person will not become obese, the second person will, but both of them will develop type ii diabetes because both are fucking with their insulin by having it release several times a day to handle all that carb.

True. I'm currently observing an FB group where people are defending high carb diets loaded with HFCS and seed oils.
:story: people with two brain cells shouldn't be allowed access to the internet. HFCS should be banned.

There's instead some evidence that cross contamination with packaging materials(plastics) can fuck up how the body processes the calories, which is also why zoo animals are getting fat despite having strict diets
Big contributing factor is fruits are being bred to have more sugar.
 
Our bodies weren't designed to get our day's glucose intake in one bite.
Vegetables and other healthy foods are consumed in order to help slow the release of glucose into the blood stream, resulting in less insulin (and thus less insulin resistance down the line). Eating slowly w/veggies also reduces the amount of blood glucose. Slow-release carbs are also great at keeping your blood glucose lower.

Your body can handle huge spikes in glucose even exceeding the recommended amount. But forcing release of insulin constantly by snacking on carbs all day or not getting in some of the things that help slow release of glucose into blood such as exercising and vegetables, that's what's gonna give you insulin resistance = diabetes.

Eating 1,200 calories a day and it all being carbs isn't going to make you fat. Carbs in, carbs out. burn 1,200 carbs a day and you don't lose weight, don't gain weight.
 
I just want to add a personal anecdote. My mom was a type 1 diabetic before she passed, she didn’t take good care of her health and was subsequently shilled semaglutide as she couldn’t exercise due to secondary issues diabetes brought onto her like lymphoma and neuropathy.

I can say from personal experience that semaglutide accelerated her death and caused her to enter hypoglycemia 10x more than what it was in previous decades. She eventually transitioned into just drinking Diet Coke and eating saltine crackers for the last year of her life. She was unable to physically take in the nutrients she needed to balance her blood sugar throughout the day and subsequently would end up on the floor screaming with a 32 blood sugar during the night when she couldn’t actively gauge it.

I hope these pharma fuckers lose everything.
What kind of retard prescribes semaglutide to a T1 diabetic? Like there's not enough fat people climbing over each other to hoard this shit as it is, there are stooges trying to push this shit on the last people who should probably be given this type of drug?

I really have a tough time mocking the people in the article because I am sure their doctor told them Ozempic was really safe and the best option for them to manage their diabetes.

I have to wonder what kind of kickbacks doctors are getting to sling these dangerous weight loss drugs.
The article implies the issue is permanent, but to me it certainly sounded like all of them continued taking the drug despite awareness that is was wrecking their shit and their "stomach paralysis" mostly went away once they stopped. I'm no medico-legal expert but this is what I'm hearing: "I demanded a magic pill to save me from my own fat ass! I got it, and it worked, and I kept taking it despite experiencing the side effects I was warned about... but I demand financial restitution anyway, because I want a magic pill to make me lose weight without giving me a tummy ache! I don't want to actually eat less!" Seriously? Fuck off.

(And yeah I know they were officially taking it for the beetus but I don't care, it doesn't matter. Most of them ate themselves into diabetes in the first place, so they can get off their high horse about fat non-diabetics taking it. It works to help T2 diabetics primarily by providing a nausea-based incentive to put the fork down, and their health subsequently improves because they're eating less shit and probably losing some excess weight.)

Xenical :story: Generic name orlistat.

"The primary side effects of the drug are gastrointestinal-related, and include steatorrhea (oily, loose stools with excessive flatus due to unabsorbed fats reaching the large intestine), fecal incontinence and frequent or urgent bowel movements."
Even in the age of GLP-1s there are still some fatasses who take both this and Contrave on top of that. The kicker is they're still fat as fuck. Imagine pharmaceuticals ensuring that food is unappealing and eating an absolute chore, plus making you shit your pants semi-regularly, and still shoveling in enough goyslop to remain morbidly obese. My cat has more discipline than this.
 
You can lose weight and reverse diabetes* with intermittent fasting. And yet when I look up mainstream media coverage of this practice, all I see is deboonking and scaremongering about how dangerous it is.
The Newcastle protocol is now endorsed by the nhs. Basically a vlcd to start with to lose 10% or do which kick starts remission, then slower weight loss. It works, it’s probably quite hard to stick to, it’s 800kcal (?) a day. I’d struggle with that little if I’m honest. I think if the GLP1 s are used as they should be then they’re a net benefit. As in, use it as a tool to lose excess weight AND SIMULTANEOUSLY reset your relationship with food so you can wean off and remain healthy. I am not sure I’d want to be on something like that permanently. The gut has a lot of feedback and remodels itself in response to starvation or feeding. I wonder if long term use is putting the body into an artificial starvation and gut degenerative mode?
Intermittent fasting is great, you get the benefits and you need to refeed as well to make sure you’re still getting energy and nutrients. In the uk it’s quite popular - mile mosely popularised it.
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.
I have a young thin t2 in my family. We were all shocked when he was diagnosed becasue he’s thin and takes care of himself. He’s on a really strict diet and that’s sorted it out. He has to be incredibly careful what he eats but he’s always been fit, never ate rubbish and has never been remotely overweight. Almost all T2 can be and must be managed by diet, it’s literally the only way you can manage it.
Not all T2 are because of being overweight.
Yup, this is true. A small number of people have a genetic T2 predisposition. They too can almost always control with diet .
Genetic diabetes is type 1, not type 2.
No he’s right - there is a very small group of people who are predisposed to getting t2 even if underweight. I also have one in the family. Underweight, never been overweight in his life. Always fit, but got T2 and was diagnosed late because how could he even consider it? It’s associated with the HLA b27 locus and probably a couple other ones too. It’s also fairly rare. And as noted above, also controllable by strict diet - not a very fun diet, but it is possible
 
despite experiencing the side effects I was warned about
Again stomach paralisis was not a side effect in the label, the company even says that in the article.

Why do people here like to suck big pharma dick so much? If they can sue why shouldn't they? It seems some people here think only normal people should suffer the consequences of their actions but if big pharma fucks up ( like not mentioning a possible side effect) they should be left alone. What's good for the goose is good for the gander.
 
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