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Nearly half of online pharmacies selling weight loss drugs are operating illegally, study finds

Consumers who try to buy popular weight loss drugs online without a prescription risk being scammed or receiving unsafe products, a new study shows.

About 42% of online pharmacies that sell semaglutide, the active ingredient in Novo Nordisk’s anti-obesity drug Wegovy, are illegal, operating without a valid license and selling medications without prescriptions, according to a study published Friday in JAMA Network Open.

People who shop online for weight loss drugs “face serious consumer risks” of receiving “ineffective and dangerous products,” said Tim Mackey, an author of the report and professor of global health at the University of California, San Diego, as well as the director of the Global Health Policy and Data Institute. The study also included researchers from University of Pecs in Hungary.

Shortages of the popular weight loss medication, which belongs to a class of drugs called GLP-1s, have led to “a black market of illegal knockoffs,” said Dr. Christopher McGowan, the founder, medical director and research director of True You Weight Loss, a weight loss clinic in Cary, North Carolina.

DoucheBagMcSwag ,

Damn you Kyle

cybervseas ,

This is all true, and concerning. I wonder how much of this is real concern for patient well-being, and how much is big pharma really wanting to hold onto the new cash cow?

Edit: counterfeit is a problem. What about generics from compounding pharmacies?

Boozilla ,
@Boozilla@lemmy.world avatar

Compounding can be a ‘red flag’ in the industry. This not to say compounding is inherently bad. There are some very legitimate uses for it. However, if the pharmacy does a lot of compounding business (percentage-wise) it could trigger an audit. And you’re right that big pharma trying to crush the little guys is a big part of this, too. Some pharmacies will intentionally under-report the amount of compounding they do, because they know it can draw unwanted attention. Pharmacy is one of those messy complicated things where there are way too many middlemen and rent-seekers, which makes it more expensive for patients and harder for regulators to keep tabs on things. Thank goodness Lina Khan with the FTC is doing her best to throw some sunlight under these dark rocks.

Telodzrum ,

Since the spinal infection a decade ago, these compounding pharmacies are operating under incredibly heavy regulation and have their operations very restricted and bifurcated between clean labs and standard labs. The testing requirements are both extreme and reasonable. I’m as comfortable ordering a compounded script as I am one from a traditional vendor these days.

teft ,
@teft@lemmy.world avatar

Since the spinal infection a decade ago

For anyone like me who had no clue about this happening:

en.wikipedia.org/…/New_England_Compounding_Center…

solsangraal ,

‘Is curing patients a sustainable business model?’

TL;DR: when it comes to big pharma, there is never real concern for patient “well-being,” only for them to be alive enough to keep paying for pills

MediaBiasFactChecker Bot ,
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