FAT CHANCE

From ‘curing’ snoring to slashing your risk of cancer – all the surprising ways weight loss jabs can boost your health

Including a go-to guide on everything you need to know about the medicine - and how you can get it for free on the NHS

IT'S impossible to escape the hype around weight loss jabs.

Whether it's wild before-and-after pictures flooding social media or the feral gossip each time a celebrity posts a snap of themselves than before.

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The surprising ways science says fat jabs could boost your health

Now, we're being faced with a barrage of studies claiming the jabs might be good for more than just shedding the pounds.

Most recently, scientists said the medicines could be the cancer hope of the future, and after early studies suggested they could reduce the risk of tumours, for example.

The jabs work by mimicking a hormone called GLP-1, which is normally released after eating.

This makes people feel full and reduces their appetite.

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Over the last few years, several medicines containing synthetic hormones have become available in the UK.

Ozempic - whose active ingredient is semaglutide - is prescribed to treat type 2 diabetes and has the added benefit of making users lose weight.

Its manufacturer, Novo Nordisk, released a higher dose of semaglutide under the brand name Wegovy to treat obesity, which was rolled out in the UK last year.

The Mounjaro KwikPen, which contains tirzepatide but works in a similar way, has been approved by UK regulators as a diabetes and weight loss treatment.

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Another option is liraglutide, which is prescribed on the NHS as Saxenda to tackle obesity.

But away from weight loss, here are all the other benefits scientists are claiming the jabs might have.

Feeling Full Naturally: Top 5 Foods That Act Like Weight Loss Jabs

It could slash the risk of cancer...

Fat jabs could be the cancer hope of the future after early studies found they reduce the risk of tumours growing.

The world’s top experts are preparing for a research boom to find out if the wonder drugs can head off the most feared disease.

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Research by Case Western Reserve University in Ohio found obese people were 19 per cent less likely to get cancer if they used the injections than people who did not.

Another study by the same university analysed 1.2million people with type 2 diabetes and found their bowel cancer risk was halved if they used the GLP-1 drugs compared to only insulin.

Other findings also suggest the injections’ rapid weight loss could help breast cancer survivors avoid relapse, which is more likely in fat patients.

Experts suggest about four in 10 cancers are linked to obesity, particularly bowel and breast tumours which are some of the most common.

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It might cure snoring...

Researchers say the fat-blasting jabs can silence snoring by treating an underlying health condition called sleep apnoea.

It happens when your breathing stops and starts while you are asleep, causing people to gasp, snore and wake up spluttering during the night.

Around 10million Brits are thought to have it, according to the .

Being overweight or obese can increase a person's risk of the condition by narrowing the airways.

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After conducting two studies on adults with obesity and sleep apnoea, drug maker Eli Lilly claimed its fat jab Mounjaro could cut down the number of times people had breathing issues during the night.

After 52 weeks, those given 10 to 15 mg injections of Mounjaro, on average, experienced almost 30 fewer dangerous breathing events per hour, amounting to a 55 per cent drop.

By contrast, participants taking a placebo medication only had 4.8 fewer events, a five per cent reduction.

At the same time, those taking the weight loss drug also shed about 18 per cent of their body weight, which the pharma giant has said could be directly behind the reduction in nighttime disturbances.

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It may ward off Alzheimer's...

Medications like Ozempic and Wegovy could affect cognitive disorders and even ward off Alzheimer's.

The thought stems from a that followed people with type 2 diabetes for five years.

The scientists found those on weight loss jabs were less likely to develop dementia compared to those not on the drug.

However, obesity - which is associated with type 2 diabetes - is already known to increase the risk of Alzheimer's, according to the Alzheimer's Society.

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