Lottie Moss seen for first time after revealing shock overdose on weight loss drug as she attends fashion event
LOTTIE Moss has been seen for the first time after revealing she was rushed to hospital after taking Ozempic.
The half-sister of supermodel Kate Moss, 26, looked amazing in a crop top and suit as she attended a fashion show this evening in London, following her terrifying ordeal.
Lottie Moss attended a fashion week event this evening[/caption] The star has opened up about her Ozempic hell[/caption]Lottie weighed 9stone 4lbs when she used jab, which is prescribed in the UK for weight loss under the brand name Wegovy, but dropped almost one stone in weight in a few weeks.
The star was so dehydrated she was hospitalised and suffered a seizure after being taken to accident and emergency.
She explained: “I had a seizure which was the scariest thing that’s ever happened to me.
“My friend had to hold my feet down and it was just so scary.
“My face was clenching up. My whole body was tense. I couldn’t move my hands. It was honestly horrible.”
Lottie said a nurse in the hospital warned her that the Ozempic she had been injecting was meant for a person double her weight.
She said she obtained it from a friend who knew a doctor who was prescribing the drug privately and started suffering terrible side effects immediately.
Lottie said on her Dream On podcast: “I was throwing up. It was horrible. I took a lower dosage the first time I took it. Then I went up higher and I ended up being in bed for two days.
“My weight started at 60kilos [9st 4lbs] and then I went down to about 57 [8st 9lbs] with the first dose.
“Then I went down to like 54 [8st 5lbs].
“It was crazy. I think my lowest was 53 [8st 3lbs] in a few weeks.
“That’s not a healthy weight loss and that’s not a healthy drop.”
Lottie, who like Kate also works as a model, said she started struggling with her body image after being signed to an agency aged 18.
Everything you need to know about fat jabs
Weight loss jabs are a hot media topic at the moment, with hundreds of success stories from people who shed the pounds.
In March 2023, the NHS announced it would make Wegovy, a drug made by Danish firm Novo Nordisk, available on prescription to thousands of obese Brits.
It contains the drug semaglutide, which is said to have helped reality star Kim Kardashian and Twitter boss Elon Musk lose weight.
Wegovy, which helped a third of people reduce their weight by 20 per cent in trials, is now available from pharmacies like Boots.
How do they work?
The jabs work by suppressing your appetite, making you eat less and therefore lose weight.
To do this, semaglutide mimics the role of a natural hormone, called GLP-1.
GLP-1 is part of the signalling pathway that tells your body you have eaten, and prepares it to use the energy that comes from your food.
London GP and founder of wellgoodwellbeing.com, Dr Zoe Watson, said: “Your body naturally produces an appetite regulating hormone called glucagon-like peptide-1.
“These jabs work by regulating your appetite, which can lead to eating fewer calories and losing weight.”
Aren’t they diabetes drugs?
Semaglutide, the active drug in Wegovy, was originally sold under the name Ozempic specifically for diabetes patients.
But people started noticing it helped suppress their appetites, stopping them eating as much and helping them shed the pounds.
Novo Nordisk then developed Wegovy, which contains the same chemical but at higher doses specifically to aid weight loss.
Wegovy is not prescribed for diabetes patients.
Can I get them?
Wegovy is offered on prescription to obese adults given specialist weight loss treatment.
The NHS currently also offers a similar drug called Saxenda, or liraglutide.
Both are only available on Tier 3 and Tier 4 weight management services, which means you have to be referred to weight management clinics led by experts.
GPs can’t prescribe them on their own either, Dr Watson said.
The jabs have to be taken as part of an overall programme to help with lifestyle changes and psychological support to get the best effect from the medication prescribed.
Despite being approved for use, supply of Wegovy on the NHS has been postponed indefinitely because of a surge in worldwide demand.
Supply was also halved in the US because of the skyrocketing demand.
Are there any risks?
Like all medicines, the jabs do not come without side effects.
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, thyroid tumours, gallbladder problems and hypoglycemia.
What other options are there?
Mounjaro (brand name for tirzepatide) also came onto the market in early 2024.
Like Wegovy, tirzepatide stems from a drug originally designed to treat diabetes.
The weekly injection helped overweight people drop more than two stone in 18 months.
It is available with to order with a prescription online from pharmacies including Superdrug and LloydsPharmacy Online Doctor.
It works in a similar way to Wegovy and Saxenda, but is more effective.
Dr Mitra Dutt from LloydsPharmacy says: “Based on clinical trials, 96 per cent of people were able to lose more than five per cent of their body fat using Mounjaro. In similar trials, 84 per cent of people lost more than five per cent of their body weight on Wegovy, and 60 per cent on Saxenda.
“Mounjaro works by activating two hormonal receptors (GIP and GLP-1), which enhance insulin production, improve insulin sensitivity, and work to decrease food intake.”
Issuing a warning, Lottie begged people not to use weight loss jabs unless they had been prescribed and poured scorn on the “heroin chic” trend which Kate, 50, made famous in the Nineties.
Lottie, who is now a successful OnlyFans star, said: “I hope that by talking about this, it can maybe be a lesson to some people that it’s not worth it.
“All these celebrities are on it right now. It was the worst decision I ever made.
“This heroin chic trend right now is coming back, we should not be going back there.
“This should not be a trend right now. It’s just, where did the body positivity go?”
Lottie is a successful Only Fans model[/caption] The star said taking the drug was the worst decision she ever made[/caption]