JAB ALERT

Women urged to use contraception as skinny jabs ‘fuel Ozempic baby boom’

Plus, the pros and cons of weight loss jabs explained

WOMEN taking 'skinny jabs' have been urged to pair them with effective contraception.

It follows claims that the weight loss drugs are fuelling a baby boom.

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Women using weight loss jabs have been urged to use contraception as well, after reports of GLP-1s fuelling a 'baby boom'Credit: Getty

Women using diabetes or weight loss medications like Ozempic and Wegovy have flocked to social media to report an unexpected side effect - surprise pregnancies.

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

But 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.

A number of other weight loss drugs have followed in their stead, including the "King Kong" of fat jabs Mounjaro and a recently trialled injection dubbed the “Godzilla”.

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Known as  (GLP-1 RA), the medications work by mimicking a hormone produced naturally by your gut when you eat food, to control blood sugar levels, slow down digestion of food and reduce hunger pangs.

Aside from helping users lose weight, it seems women using the drugs have also began falling pregnant unexpectedly.

Anecdotal evidence has cropped up across social media channels. A titled "I got pregnant on Ozempic" has gained almost 800 members, while others have taken to  to discuss unplanned pregnancies after using the jabs.

CAN OZEMPIC BOOST FERTILITY?

Scientific evidence on whether skinny jabs can actually help people get pregnant is currently lacking.

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But experts told that the drugs might help boost fertility.

Dr Karin Hammarberg of Monash University said: “Women with obesity often have irregular or no periods because they don’t ovulate.

"Once they lose some weight, ovulation becomes more regular and this is how their fertility improves."

As pregnant women were specifically excluded from early clinical trials for Ozempic and similar drugs, little is actually known about the effects of the drugs on expectant mums.

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