Dad, 58, died after taking ‘miracle’ weight loss drug for just 19 days to ‘confidently walk daughter down the aisle’
THE family of a dad who died suddenly believe a weight loss jab he used for just 19 days is to blame.
Tim Ramsay, from South Australia, wanted to shed some pounds so he could confidently walk his daughter down the aisle.
Tim suddenly died after taking weight-loss injections[/caption] Tim, pictured with daughter Elyse, wanted to shed some pounds so he could confidently walk her down the aisle[/caption]The 58-year-old was a truck driver, which made staying fit and eating healthy challenging.
He was told by his GP the weight-loss medicine would be good for “all aspects of [his] life and protect all [his] organs,” Tim’s daughter Elyse, 29, told 60 Minutes Australia.
Tragically, he died just 19 days after he started taking the weight-loss jab Saxenda.
Just hours before he collapsed at home on November 27, 2022, Tim was discharged from the hospital complaining of severe stomach pains.
Stomach pains are a well-known side effect of Saxenda, the active ingredient of which is liraglutide.
Saxenda and other weight loss jabs Ozempic and Wegovy, which contain semaglutide, mimic the hormone (glucagon-like peptide 1) that makes you feel full.
Elyse had received a distressed call from her father in the middle of the night begging her to come and pick him up from a truck depot and take him to get seen by a doctor.
After rushing him to hospital, medics failed to find the source of his stomach pains and he was sent home.
Rita, Tim’s wife, told the doctors treating her husband that he was on several medications at the time, but was reassured the drug combination with Saxenda would have been fine.
That night, Tim was found on the floor in his bathroom.
Rita performed CPR on her husband for 40 minutes, but tragically, it wasn’t enough to save him.
His family wants further investigation after a coroner ruled his cause of death as undetermined.
“I don’t believe that anybody should die without an explanation, you just don’t expire, there has got to be a reason for Tim’s death,” Rita, told 60 Minutes.
Elyse said: “Nineteen days between his first injection and the day he left us, alarm bells in our heads, in the TGA’s heads, and the coroner’s head should be ringing.”
Australia’s drug regulator is currently investigating at least three deaths with possible links to Ozempic and other weight loss injections.
In the UK, Olympic and other “weight loss” jabs have now been linked to ten deaths.
There have also been 7,228 reports of illness associated with the drugs, citing nausea, vomiting and diarrhoea, according to the medicines watchdog.
And 68 patients were admitted to hospital over their symptoms, the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) said.
Elyse received a distressed call from her father in the middle of the night before he passed away[/caption] Rita, Tim’s wife, is calling for a bigger investigation into her husband’s death[/caption]Weight loss jabs : Everything you need to know
Weight loss jabs... So, what are they?
Weight loss jabs are a hot media topic at the moment, with hundreds of success stories sharing how they helped them shed the pounds.
In March, 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, will also be available from pharmacies like Boots.
Meanwhile, pharma company Eli Lilly last month announced results for its own weight loss drug tirzepatide.
The weekly injection helped overweight people drop more than two stone in 18 months.
How do they work?
The jabs work by suppressing your appetite, making you eat fewer calories and therefore lose weight.
To do this, an ingredient found in the fat-busting drug, known as 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?
Both Wegovy and tirzepatide stem from drugs originally designed to treat diabetes.
Semaglutide, the active drug in Wegovy, was originally sold under the name Ozempic specifically for diabetes patients.
But they started noticing it helped suppress their appetites, stopping them from eating as much and helping them shed the pounds.
So Novo Nordisk developed Wegovy, which contains the same chemical but at higher doses specifically to aid weight loss.
Wegovy is not prescribed for diabetes patients.
Tirzepatide is sold under the name Mounjaro for diabetes.
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.
But despite being approved for use, the 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.
Eli Lilly said it will apply for a UK licence for tirzepatide soon, which could make it available to the NHS.
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.