>He said: “Weight-loss jabs are the talk of the House of Commons tea rooms, half my colleagues are on them and are judging the rest of us saying ‘you lot should be on them’.
I’m sure he’s riffing here but, er, that’s extremely unhealthy? If there’s even an element of truth here then that’s an awful work culture and it’s crazy that the Health Secretary (and someone who is known to wield a lot of influence within the government) would just casually say this like it’s jokes and laughs. This is how eating disorders happen.
Very strange article and unbecoming as always from the Health Minister.
edit: removed a couple of sentences upon suggestion.
antipodal22 on
I’m guessing they can also afford the treatments for the side affects as well then.
Wasn’t this supposed to only be used for people on type 2 diabetes or is this just another form of substance abuse?
CaptainKoreana on
I wonder how many actually take ozempic.
I also want to know if Lindsay Hoyle takes it himself.
Dapper_Big_783 on
Good idea these weight loss jabs. Wish they’d be prescribed for cars as well.
YesIAmRightWing on
if people need them they are decent.
am not interested in shaming people for wanting to be thin if it lowers demand on the NHS overall.
RaymondBumcheese on
It would be interesting to see how many of them are claiming it on expenses. Bobby Jenrick seems like the kind of guy to mainline it and then claim it is for PR purposes or something.
DoneItDuncan on
This is a bit weird right? Surely it can’t be good for otherwise healthy people to casually take medication for diabetes?
paul_h on
I’m on them – they’re magic. I bet the junk food industry is scaling up lobbying. Yea yes us know abou the pancreatitis – and I’ll book the blood test soon thru medichecks
Peachy-SheRa on
I wonder how our ‘excess’ economy will cope once the food and pharmaceuticals aren’t getting us fat and making us reliant on comorbidity meds – well aside the manufacturers of the weight loss injections who’re raking in billions..
broketoliving on
probably paid for on expenses, the average wage you couldn’t afford it
AntysocialButterfly on
Oh good, looking forward to the Westminster production of Requiem for a Dream…
NonagoonInfinity on
And this is coming from the bloke that thinks blockers are untested?
ManOnNoMission on
He’s really not helping the illusion that it’s a silver bullet.
alphabetown on
He has such a sinister hard on for these to the point I wouldn’t be surprised if hes being bankrolled by a manufacturer. Borderline eugenicist talk about getting people back into work via them (despite weightloss being only one aspect of health) and now touting MPs taking them maybe/ maybe not as a joke. These are not the magic bullet he thinks they are.
horagino on
And these are the people running our country? The ones with no self-discipline to even keep their mouths shut and not stuff them full of food? No wonder this country’s become such a mess.
i-am-a-passenger on
People being on mounjaro is the worst kept secret in the country (for those that can afford it at least). It really is a revolutionary drug which will have wide reaching societal impacts, making obesity a thing of the past.
limeflavoured on
Presumably he’s exaggerating (certainly round here saying “half of them” as a phrase can be used like that). But regardless, the fact that he is willing to say that says something about how he views them. Whether he, as health secretary, should be doing that is a different issue.
Spamgrenade on
They cost £150 – £250 privately, that’s pretty cheap for a working fat loss drug. Not surprising fat people use it really.
jodrellbank_pants on
That makes me not trust them even more.
Can’t make the effort to loose weight naturally.
Mclarenrob2 on
Are people really that lazy they can’t do exercise or eat proper food?
fjtuk on
2025 Wes Streeting, let’s use drugs to solve our obesity crisis
2035 NHS swamped by previously rare forms of cancer and malnutrition as country is addicted to weight lossndrugs
NafariousJabberWooki on
I thought it was sinus repository weight loss powder??
beIIe-and-sebastian on
Anecdotally, the pharmacy attached to the supermarket I used to work in when I was a student takes in £12k a week in sales of weight loss drugs alone now. That’s over £600k a year in additional revenue and it’s a small pharmacy.
Xironia on
As someone that suffers from chronic pancreatitis for life, after I lost 15 stone over a year on diet/exercise I can only imagine the way of it that is about to hit these people.
Loreki on
Can anyone just choose to go on them overnight? I assumed you had to be very obese, Channel 5 documentary obese, to get on them?
barnaclebear on
As an eating disorder survivor and recovery campaigner, this man should not be the health secretary if he’s going to make statements like this in public because it’s so unbelievably damaging. Not only is it reinforcing thin = good, fat = bad, but behaving like it’s fine to have a workplace culture where people are making inappropriate comments about people’s bodies? What the hell is wrong with him?
Main issues – many people are in larger bodies because they have an emotional attachment to food that causes an ensuing impact on their weight. When I was a kid, before I was diagnosed with anorexia, I used to binge eat in secret because it was a way of self soothing when my mum was emotionally unavailable due to stuff in her own life. That later became starving myself which shut off my emotions, and that then became laxative abuse and self induced vomiting alongside starvation. I can categorically tell you that the only time the pain and noise in my head stopped was in the moments I was making myself sick. I felt totally calm, then it would kick off again. I didn’t fix these issues with chemicals, I fixed them by understanding the emotions I was masking and dealing with the problems that I wasn’t able to cope with before, as well as being diagnosed with ADHD. Then it stopped.
Weight loss injections can be transformative if used appropriately. But what he’s suggesting is insane. There’s already multiple examples of underweight people misusing them and having serious consequences (eg Lottie Moss). Culturally we are at a point where people are seeing more diversity in representation & actually beginning to like themselves, rather than trying to force their bodies into shapes that aren’t natural or sustainable for them. No eating disorders expertise was requested during this consultation. What happens when you get to a ‘normal’ BMI? You can’t just keep losing weight forever and long term it’s not a sustainable solution, as soon as you stop, the weight goes back on. Psychological support and investing in existing mental health services, as well as helping people to access cheaper activity options and working with supermarkets to lower the price of fruit & veg would be a good start.
Under no circumstances am I saying there isn’t a use for these treatments, but from the perspective of my lived experience, I genuinely felt sick reading this statement. It showed a total lack of understanding and compassion for the millions of sufferers in the UK (NHS stats est 3-4m).
Subject_Ear_1656 on
Uncomfortable with how readily Streeting jumps from saying it’s to help the poorest people to saying it’s to save the NHS money. The first is valid, the second is not. We shouldn’t be basing the medical care of millions of people on a perceived cost saving down the line.
The same arguments were made about oxycontin.
voluntarydischarge69 on
What other drugs are they on its about time MPs had drink and drug testing
Educational_Pin_1455 on
Good for them. If losing some weight makes you feel more confident and be more active, crack on
Connor123x on
Maybe time should be spent on the quality of food being most is highly processed.
TTTSDoc on
What’s with the UK press obsession with the word “jabs” ?
Huge___Milkers on
Half the people running our country don’t have the self discipline or ability to just eat less food and maybe do some more exercise?
Hell you don’t even need to do any exercise to lose weight, just eat less food
orangecloud_0 on
The ozempuc craze? Dont you have to stay on those for life if you start?
TurnLooseTheKitties on
I daresay if the subsidised bars and eateries were closed to save the taxpayer some dosh, there would be less stuffing their face to need to go on weight loss jabs
35 Comments
I’m guessing the other half are on Charlie – if this [report](https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-59539589) is to be believed
>He said: “Weight-loss jabs are the talk of the House of Commons tea rooms, half my colleagues are on them and are judging the rest of us saying ‘you lot should be on them’.
I’m sure he’s riffing here but, er, that’s extremely unhealthy? If there’s even an element of truth here then that’s an awful work culture and it’s crazy that the Health Secretary (and someone who is known to wield a lot of influence within the government) would just casually say this like it’s jokes and laughs. This is how eating disorders happen.
Very strange article and unbecoming as always from the Health Minister.
edit: removed a couple of sentences upon suggestion.
I’m guessing they can also afford the treatments for the side affects as well then.
Wasn’t this supposed to only be used for people on type 2 diabetes or is this just another form of substance abuse?
I wonder how many actually take ozempic.
I also want to know if Lindsay Hoyle takes it himself.
Good idea these weight loss jabs. Wish they’d be prescribed for cars as well.
if people need them they are decent.
am not interested in shaming people for wanting to be thin if it lowers demand on the NHS overall.
It would be interesting to see how many of them are claiming it on expenses. Bobby Jenrick seems like the kind of guy to mainline it and then claim it is for PR purposes or something.
This is a bit weird right? Surely it can’t be good for otherwise healthy people to casually take medication for diabetes?
I’m on them – they’re magic. I bet the junk food industry is scaling up lobbying. Yea yes us know abou the pancreatitis – and I’ll book the blood test soon thru medichecks
I wonder how our ‘excess’ economy will cope once the food and pharmaceuticals aren’t getting us fat and making us reliant on comorbidity meds – well aside the manufacturers of the weight loss injections who’re raking in billions..
probably paid for on expenses, the average wage you couldn’t afford it
Oh good, looking forward to the Westminster production of Requiem for a Dream…
And this is coming from the bloke that thinks blockers are untested?
He’s really not helping the illusion that it’s a silver bullet.
He has such a sinister hard on for these to the point I wouldn’t be surprised if hes being bankrolled by a manufacturer. Borderline eugenicist talk about getting people back into work via them (despite weightloss being only one aspect of health) and now touting MPs taking them maybe/ maybe not as a joke. These are not the magic bullet he thinks they are.
And these are the people running our country? The ones with no self-discipline to even keep their mouths shut and not stuff them full of food? No wonder this country’s become such a mess.
People being on mounjaro is the worst kept secret in the country (for those that can afford it at least). It really is a revolutionary drug which will have wide reaching societal impacts, making obesity a thing of the past.
Presumably he’s exaggerating (certainly round here saying “half of them” as a phrase can be used like that). But regardless, the fact that he is willing to say that says something about how he views them. Whether he, as health secretary, should be doing that is a different issue.
They cost £150 – £250 privately, that’s pretty cheap for a working fat loss drug. Not surprising fat people use it really.
That makes me not trust them even more.
Can’t make the effort to loose weight naturally.
Are people really that lazy they can’t do exercise or eat proper food?
2025 Wes Streeting, let’s use drugs to solve our obesity crisis
2035 NHS swamped by previously rare forms of cancer and malnutrition as country is addicted to weight lossndrugs
I thought it was sinus repository weight loss powder??
Anecdotally, the pharmacy attached to the supermarket I used to work in when I was a student takes in £12k a week in sales of weight loss drugs alone now. That’s over £600k a year in additional revenue and it’s a small pharmacy.
As someone that suffers from chronic pancreatitis for life, after I lost 15 stone over a year on diet/exercise I can only imagine the way of it that is about to hit these people.
Can anyone just choose to go on them overnight? I assumed you had to be very obese, Channel 5 documentary obese, to get on them?
As an eating disorder survivor and recovery campaigner, this man should not be the health secretary if he’s going to make statements like this in public because it’s so unbelievably damaging. Not only is it reinforcing thin = good, fat = bad, but behaving like it’s fine to have a workplace culture where people are making inappropriate comments about people’s bodies? What the hell is wrong with him?
Main issues – many people are in larger bodies because they have an emotional attachment to food that causes an ensuing impact on their weight. When I was a kid, before I was diagnosed with anorexia, I used to binge eat in secret because it was a way of self soothing when my mum was emotionally unavailable due to stuff in her own life. That later became starving myself which shut off my emotions, and that then became laxative abuse and self induced vomiting alongside starvation. I can categorically tell you that the only time the pain and noise in my head stopped was in the moments I was making myself sick. I felt totally calm, then it would kick off again. I didn’t fix these issues with chemicals, I fixed them by understanding the emotions I was masking and dealing with the problems that I wasn’t able to cope with before, as well as being diagnosed with ADHD. Then it stopped.
Weight loss injections can be transformative if used appropriately. But what he’s suggesting is insane. There’s already multiple examples of underweight people misusing them and having serious consequences (eg Lottie Moss). Culturally we are at a point where people are seeing more diversity in representation & actually beginning to like themselves, rather than trying to force their bodies into shapes that aren’t natural or sustainable for them. No eating disorders expertise was requested during this consultation. What happens when you get to a ‘normal’ BMI? You can’t just keep losing weight forever and long term it’s not a sustainable solution, as soon as you stop, the weight goes back on. Psychological support and investing in existing mental health services, as well as helping people to access cheaper activity options and working with supermarkets to lower the price of fruit & veg would be a good start.
Under no circumstances am I saying there isn’t a use for these treatments, but from the perspective of my lived experience, I genuinely felt sick reading this statement. It showed a total lack of understanding and compassion for the millions of sufferers in the UK (NHS stats est 3-4m).
Uncomfortable with how readily Streeting jumps from saying it’s to help the poorest people to saying it’s to save the NHS money. The first is valid, the second is not. We shouldn’t be basing the medical care of millions of people on a perceived cost saving down the line.
The same arguments were made about oxycontin.
What other drugs are they on its about time MPs had drink and drug testing
Good for them. If losing some weight makes you feel more confident and be more active, crack on
Maybe time should be spent on the quality of food being most is highly processed.
What’s with the UK press obsession with the word “jabs” ?
Half the people running our country don’t have the self discipline or ability to just eat less food and maybe do some more exercise?
Hell you don’t even need to do any exercise to lose weight, just eat less food
The ozempuc craze? Dont you have to stay on those for life if you start?
I daresay if the subsidised bars and eateries were closed to save the taxpayer some dosh, there would be less stuffing their face to need to go on weight loss jabs