Document Type

Capstone Project

Comments

Submitted to William Palm, Ph.D. Director, University Honors Program and Saeed Hydaralli, Ph.D. Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology + Sociology.

In fulfillment of the requirements for the University Honors Program Capstone.

Abstract

Over the last few years, there has been a frenzy of media outlets, celebrities, and influencers publicizing the effectiveness of semaglutides, like Ozempic, for an off-label use: weight loss. With the larger presence and availability of these medications for off-label use instead of diabetes management, outsiders believe that obese and overweight people who begin to look different are cheating. The public nature and visibility of weight loss subject the people losing weight to much speculation and scrutiny. In the past, many weight loss “solutions” have been proposed, diets created, and even surgeries performed, but these “solutions” have proven temporary. Most individuals who struggle with weight loss are unable to maintain any progress they make and end up putting all of the weight back on. However, these semaglutides have proven to be an effective treatment plan, and yet there has never been such a debate surrounding this issue. Why is the use of weight loss medications like Ozempic considered cheating? Why is there a “right way” to lose weight, and where does this idea come from?

Share

COinS