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Weight loss jabs could be dished out like statins

Weight loss jabs could be dished out like statins

Perth Now2 days ago

Weight loss injections could be handed out like statins.
Professor Sir Stephen Powis, a medical director of NHS England, thinks the jabs will become cheaper in the future, and they will be used to lower people's risks of getting an illness.
His belief comes as it was recently revealed that weight loss jabs could cut the risk of obesity-related cancers.
Experts in Israel analysed data from 6,356 people - with around half of the volunteers having had bariatric surgery, which modifies the digestive system to lower food intake, and the rest took slimming jabs - and after an average follow-up of 7.5 years, 298 patients were found to have had obesity-related cancers.
Weight-loss jabs, or GLP-1-based medicines, such as tirzepatide - act like the glucose hormone GLP-1 by decreasing appetite and increasing feelings of fullness.
And researchers, who presented the findings - which are in the journal eClinicalMedicine - at the European Congress on Obesity in Malaga, Spain, said "new generation, highly potent GLP1-RAs with higher efficacy in weight reduction" such as Wegovy, can produce could result in an "even greater advantage" of reducing obesity-related cancers.
Prof Powis told The Sun newspaper: "I think, over time, it's highly likely they will become more widespread.
"I think there will be a combination of increased evidence of positive outcomes and cost dropping."

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Weight loss jabs could be dished out like statins
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Perth Now

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Weight loss jabs could be dished out like statins

Weight loss injections could be handed out like statins. Professor Sir Stephen Powis, a medical director of NHS England, thinks the jabs will become cheaper in the future, and they will be used to lower people's risks of getting an illness. His belief comes as it was recently revealed that weight loss jabs could cut the risk of obesity-related cancers. Experts in Israel analysed data from 6,356 people - with around half of the volunteers having had bariatric surgery, which modifies the digestive system to lower food intake, and the rest took slimming jabs - and after an average follow-up of 7.5 years, 298 patients were found to have had obesity-related cancers. Weight-loss jabs, or GLP-1-based medicines, such as tirzepatide - act like the glucose hormone GLP-1 by decreasing appetite and increasing feelings of fullness. And researchers, who presented the findings - which are in the journal eClinicalMedicine - at the European Congress on Obesity in Malaga, Spain, said "new generation, highly potent GLP1-RAs with higher efficacy in weight reduction" such as Wegovy, can produce could result in an "even greater advantage" of reducing obesity-related cancers. Prof Powis told The Sun newspaper: "I think, over time, it's highly likely they will become more widespread. "I think there will be a combination of increased evidence of positive outcomes and cost dropping."

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