
I became a ‘hot girl' after losing three stone on fat jabs, but a mortifying side effect nearly ruined my life
However, there was one accessory she wasn't expecting to add to her wardrobe.
6
6
As well as figure-hugging dresses and thigh skimming skirts, Emmie was forced to start wearing panty liners daily.
Aside from her astonishing weight-loss, incontinence has been an unwelcome side effect of taking Mounjaro.
The 34-year-old explains: 'It would happen when I laughed, coughed or sneezed.
"I wet myself during one date, I never imagined that could happen with the jab.
'It was so frustrating, I finally felt confident enough to go on dates but I spent the whole time worrying it would happen.
'It was humiliating - I was a hot girl who couldn't pull.'
Events manager and single mum Emmie, who lives in Manchester with her 12-year-old daughter, says the unfortunate side-effect made her self-conscious
She admits: 'I constantly worried that I smelt of wee.
'It was really off-putting and something I never imagined I would have to deal with.'
Emmie says she began struggling with her weight last year when she started comfort eating during the winter months.
Doc gives advice on how to tackle Mounjaro side effect of excess loose skin
She says: 'I loved a good takeaway, a bottle of wine and chocolates.
'It was so cold last year, I found myself indulging way too much.'
By Christmas, the mum realised she'd gained three stone in just two months.
'As well as my main job, I also do catalogue modelling,' she says.
'I knew I needed to lose weight as I noticed I was losing work since gaining weight.'
A mortified Emmie hit the gym but found it hard to shift the pounds.
'I had friends who were using weight loss jabs, I'd heard good things and decided to give them a go,' she says.
In January, Emmie bought Mounjarno on a private prescription, paying £150 a month for the jabs.
6
6
6
'As soon as I started taking the jabs my food noise disappeared for the first time in my life,' she says.
But while Emmie quickly noticed her weight falling off, she soon became aware of her unfortunate side effect too.
She says: 'In the first four weeks, I lost seven pounds and felt amazing.
'But around the same time, I had been chatting to a man at a bar when I realised I had wet myself.
'It was just a few drops, but I fled to the loo with my jacket around my waist.'
Emmie's rapid weight loss in the first four weeks meant a rapid loss of tone around her pelvic floor muscles.
A study by HealthCentral.com revealed Ozempic or semaglutide can be linked to stress urinary incontinence.
This means the pelvic floor muscles can't hold up under pressure when you cough, sneeze or laugh because the drug's rapid weight and muscle loss, especially in pelvic muscles, lowers pelvic support and increases leakage risk.
Emmie says: 'The first time it happened, I convinced myself I had drunk too much.
'When it happened at work, I bought period panty liner pads to help control my pee problem.
'I even considered adult nappies for an extreme emergency.
Everything you need to know about fat jabs
Weight loss jabs are all the rage as studies and patient stories reveal they help people shed flab at almost unbelievable rates, as well as appearing to reduce the risk of serious diseases.
Wegovy – a modified version of type 2 diabetes drug Ozempic – and Mounjaro are the leading weight loss injections used in the UK.
Wegovy, real name semaglutide, has been used on the NHS for years while Mounjaro (tirzepatide) is a newer and more powerful addition to the market.
Mounjaro accounts for most private prescriptions for weight loss and is set to join Wegovy as an NHS staple this year.
How do they work?
The jabs work by suppressing your appetite, making you eat less so your body burns fat for energy instead and you lose weight.
They do this my mimicking a hormone called GLP-1, which signals to the brain when the stomach is full, so the drugs are officially called GLP-1 receptor agonists.
They slow down digestion and increase insulin production, lowering blood sugar, which is why they were first developed to treat type 2 diabetes in which patients' sugar levels are too high.
Can I get them?
NHS prescriptions of weight loss drugs, mainly Wegovy and an older version called Saxenda (chemical name liraglutide), are controlled through specialist weight loss clinics.
Typically a patient will have to have a body mass index (BMI) of 30 or higher, classifying them as medically obese, and also have a weight-related health condition such as high blood pressure.
GPs generally do not prescribe the drugs for weight loss.
Private prescribers offer the jabs, most commonly Mounjaro, to anyone who is obese (BMI of 30+) or overweight (BMI 25-30) with a weight-related health risk.
Private pharmacies have been rapped for handing them out too easily and video calls or face-to-face appointments are now mandatory to check a patient is being truthful about their size and health.
Are there any risks?
Yes – side effects are common but most are relatively mild.
Around half of people taking the drug experience gut issues, including sickness, bloating, acid reflux, constipation and diarrhoea.
Dr Sarah Jarvis, GP and clinical consultant at patient.info, said: 'One of the more uncommon side effects is severe acute pancreatitis, which is extremely painful and happens to one in 500 people.'
Other uncommon side effects include altered taste, kidney problems, allergic reactions, gallbladder problems and hypoglycemia.
Evidence has so far been inconclusive about whether the injections are damaging to patients' mental health.
Figures obtained by The Sun show that, up to January 2025, 85 patient deaths in the UK were suspected to be linked to the medicines.
'I had no idea that this was a possible side effect of the jab, it's definitely not one that people talk about.'
In a bid to ease her embarrassing symptoms, Emmie immediately began doing her pelvic floor exercises three times a day.
She says: 'I use Kegel balls, which come in different weights with strings attached.
'You pop inside your vagina and practice holding them for different periods of time.
'It took four weeks of training, but my symptoms have finally eased up.'
While urinary incontinence might have been a negative side effect, Emmie has found an added bonus aside from her weight loss.
'The jab has increased by sex drive and my orgasms are stronger than ever,' she says.
'I consider that an added bonus.'
According to research, the GLP-1 drugs can also alter autonomic nervous system responses and increase blood circulation, especially to your pubic area, which could explain Emmie's heightened sensitivity and increased sex drive.
After six months of using Mounjarno, Emmie has now lost 3st 1lb and has no regrets.
She says: 'I don't regret using the drug to fast-track my weight loss.
'It's not cheating, it's using what works for you.
'The oddball side effects created havoc in my life, but I got through it and I am back to feeling like my best self.'
6
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
10 minutes ago
- The Independent
Reshuffling canteen menu can help diners choose greener, healthier meals
Reshuffling a canteen's weekly menu can be a 'sneaky' way to encourage diners to choose meals that are healthier and more environmentally friendly, researchers said. A study led by researchers at the University of Bristol found that simply reordering an existing set menu to change which dishes were 'competing' each evening in a student halls of residence canteen cut the carbon footprint of diners' weekly meal choices by nearly a third overall. Saturated fat levels also fell by a significant amount, the research found, while the changes seemed to go unnoticed by diners. The researchers, whose study is published in the journal Nature Food, said the technique could be used to help the 42% of UK workers who report eating at a canteen, as well as those in schools and universities, make healthier, more environmentally-friendly diet choices. It could be another route to influence diet choices, which are mostly shaped by either restricting or disincentivising choice such as alcohol sales policy or the sugar tax, or by providing people with information about the impacts of what they choose. For the study, the researchers took two pre-existing weekly canteen menus with three dishes each day for five days, which produced 113,400 menu combinations when one vegan meal had to be served each day. The team used data collected separately from students on their dish preferences to calculate the number of times each dish would be chosen and then used the information to calculate a projected total weekly carbon footprint and saturated fatty acid intake. They identified an optimised menu – which contained the same 15 dishes as the original menu with only the combination of dishes offered each day changed – and tested it without telling the students. The scheme works on the basis that each person can only choose one dinner option each night, so organising the menu so that more carbon intensive, fatty meals compete with each other on one night boosts the uptake of healthier, more planet-friendly meals on other evenings. Dr Annika Flynn, senior research associate at the University of Bristol, said: 'Whether we choose a healthy dish will depend on whether it's more or less appealing than other dishes served that day. 'We figured if we swap which dishes are available across days, then this will change how dishes 'compete'. 'So by number crunching competition across the entire week, we worked out which swaps would be needed to promote healthier and greener choices. We tried this and, amazingly, it worked.' And she said: 'Since diners can only choose one evening meal per day, we found it is best to cluster the meals that have a high carbon footprint and saturated fat such as lasagne and chicken Kiev on the same day so these more popular options compete against each other. 'That means greener options – like lentil chilli and cauliflower curry – are more likely to be chosen across the week. 'The net effect is that people's total weekly carbon footprint and saturated fat intake is reduced.' She added: 'The scale of benefits generated by our relatively simple intervention of weekly menu manipulation, which didn't change the actual dishes or recipes themselves and seemed to go unnoticed, were really surprising.' The researchers said one of the weekly menus was shown to reduce the overall carbon footprint by 31.4% and saturated fat intake by 11.3%, while the other lowered the overall carbon footprint by 30% and saturated fat intake by 1.4% across some 300 diners. And while they were not able to ask the students directly about whether they were happy with the various menus, due to the 'blind' nature of the test, auxiliary data suggest the changes did not cause a dramatic change in consumer satisfaction, the researchers said. Dr Flynn added: 'This sneaky technique could be a game-changer in many different kitchen menu settings, especially given people's growing appetite to make healthier decisions and the increased drive to reduce carbon emissions globally.'


Daily Mail
10 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
I was 'terrified' I'd hurt my baby: bestselling novelist Sarah Vaughan shares secret battle with mental health condition that affects 1 in 6 new mothers
Bestselling author Sarah Vaughan revealed her battle with maternal OCD on the latest episode of the Mail's The Life of Bryony podcast, describing how the condition inspired her novel Little Disasters. Maternal OCD is a condition affecting up to 16% of new mothers, causing unwanted intrusive thoughts about harming their baby alongside compulsive behaviours intended to shield them from harm. Vaughan's novel Little Disasters explores maternal OCD from the perspective of a woman whose insecurities about parenting spiral after she is accused by those closest to her of injuring her child. The novel, published five years ago, has been recently adapted into a blockbuster television series starring Diane Kruger, now streaming on Paramount+. You can listen to this episode of The Life of Bryony by clicking the player below or here 'I didn't realise I was writing about my own maternal OCD until I finished my first draft', Vaughan told columnist Bryony Gordon. 'I had experienced this sort of gaslighting of yourself, and it was terrifying. 'You know on one level that you're not really throwing your baby down the stairs. That was my thing, I thought I'd drop my baby – which is very common. 'But you can always see that vision in your mind's eye. That makes it sound like psychosis, it's not that – but it's like the fear of it is so intense you constantly anticipate another reality.' Despite the 'terrifying' thoughts, experts say mothers with maternal OCD pose no risk to their babies - the condition actually stems from an overwhelming desire to protect them. Before novel writing, Vaughan worked for The Guardian as a senior news reporter and health correspondent. She said her background in journalism, covering high-profile child murder and abduction cases, sowed the seeds of her maternal OCD. 'I had a little niche of doing really dark cases', Vaughan explained. 'I covered Sarah Payne, the little girl who was snatched from a cornfield in West Sussex. I covered the Soham murders and a boy who was murdered by a paedophile in Norfolk. 'Whenever I would come to my husband with fears, he would say, well that's never going to happen. 'And I'd always say, well there was this case, this news story. Those cases are so rare, but you are led to believe they are more common than they are because you reported on them.' Looking back, Vaughan said a 'pressure cooker of circumstances' caused her to develop OCD after the birth of her second child. 'I had about six different triggers', she said. 'I collapsed in the street 19 weeks into my second pregnancy. I was pushing my child in a buggy. I had something called symphysis pubis disorder, where basically a big baby causes your ligaments to stretch. 'I had been behaving like I was invincible… then I was bedridden for the rest of that pregnancy. 'At the same time, my husband had to move across the country for his job, and I joined him: pregnant, with a toddler, not being able to walk. 'I then took voluntary redundancy at The Guardian after a consultant said to me, if you think you can commute to London, you're mad. 'So, I was in chronic pain. I couldn't walk. I was isolated with no friends, and my husband was working long hours in this new job. 'There's a line from my book: there's nothing lonelier than being at home with a screaming baby and a mind that's unravelling.' Listen to The Life of Bryony podcast Ever feel like everyone else has it together while you're barely hanging on? Join Bryony Gordon for honest, unfiltered conversations about life's messier moments – from anxiety and heartbreak to addiction and loss. Listen wherever you get your podcasts now. Vaughan said that at her worst, she would struggle to let her children out of sight, because of worries they would be snatched. The novelist also remembered struggling to walk up and down flights of stairs with her new baby, fearing she would drop them. She believes the illness fed into her 'perfectionist' nature, which had served her well in journalism but proved destructive as a new mother. 'I never got my baby to take the bottle. I was obsessed with this idea: how do I know if it's sterile? I would spend hours and hours sterilising everything. 'It really kind of impacts people who are perfectionists… everything had to be immaculate. 'I was trying to validate myself for not having a job by becoming a domestic goddess, but not a forgiving one.' A combination of CBT therapy and setting herself the goal of finishing her first novel eased Vaughan's anxieties. She urged mothers experiencing similar 'catastrophising' thoughts about parenthood to seek help if they feel overwhelmed or immobilised. Vaughan said: 'When I had my baby, I think it was something like 2% of mothers had postnatal OCD. Now it's as high as 16%. 'That's a lot of women experiencing this and there are organisations out there that can help you.' To listen to the full interview with Sarah Vaughan, search for The Life of Bryony now, wherever you get your podcasts.


Telegraph
10 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Sergeant sues RAF after missing promotion chance when pregnant
A sergeant is suing the RAF for discrimination after she missed out on promotion because a fitness test got cancelled when she was pregnant. Sgt Haylee Curtis is taking RAF bosses to an employment tribunal as she claims that she was unable to advance rank without a fitness test, which was cancelled. Her official medical records stated it was cancelled three days before the test 'due to being pregnant', a hearing was told. Sgt Curtis has now been given permission to sue the Ministry of Defence after winning an appeal at the Employment Appeal Tribunal (EAT). Her pregnancy discrimination case had been thrown out at an employment tribunal in Watford, but the EAT ruled that legal mistakes had been made in the dismissal of the original claim. The appeal hearing in London was told that Sgt Curtis alleges that she was discriminated during her pregnancy and maternity leave during 2017 and into 2018. She was a corporal at the time, and was eligible for promotion to sergeant and had to wait for a vacancy. The tribunal heard that she had injured herself playing netball and was medically downgraded, with a full fitness certificate required to apply for opportunities at the sergeant rank. She was due to attend the medical board in August 2017, so that she could have her fitness tested but it was cancelled because of her pregnancy. The EAT heard that Sgt Curtis believed that 'the cancellation of her medical board appointment, was discriminatory'. Sgt Curtis has since been promoted to sergeant, but she claimed that the discrimination 'had long term consequences for her career and career earnings'. She said that her career extension – referring to the period of career security service personnel are afforded, and whether it will be lengthened beyond an initial contracted term – would have been 'significantly longer' if she had been promoted at an earlier date.