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Mayo Clinic Minute: Weight-loss medications alone are not a quick fix

Mayo Clinic News Network

One of the most common New Year’s resolutions is to lose weight. Many may be wondering if weight-loss medications can help them reach their goal.

Medications called semaglutides — better known by the brand names Ozempic and Wegovy — have been shown to help people lose about 15% of their body weight.

But as Dr. Andres Acosta explains in this Mayo Clinic Minute, these medications alone are not a quick solution.

Watch: The Mayo Clinic Minute

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“What we need to know about taking any intervention for obesity, including these two new medications, is that they’re not a quick fix. They’re not a magic pill or, in this case, a magic injection,” says Dr. Acosta, a Mayo Clinic expert in treating obesity and co-author of “The Mayo Clinic Diet Rx.”

He says in order to achieve healthy, long-term weight loss, tools like weight-loss medications need to be part of a multidisciplinary program that includes diet and exercise routines.

“The diet is still key. What this medication is doing is suppressing our appetite, so I don’t feel that hungry, so I can eat less. So, diet is important,” says Dr. Acosta.

Dr. Acosta recommends sticking to a healthy, low-calorie, high-protein diet to ensure healthy weight loss.

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“When the medications or effects are coming off, or we want to stop the medications, it’s important that we consider what diet intervention I’m going to do — what changes I’m going to do to my lifestyle, to my diet, in my exercising, my physical activity — in order to keep that weight off for a longer period of time.”

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