(Press-News.org) Academics at King’s College London and the University of East Anglia have released guidance for GPs on how to manage patients who may be privately accessing weight loss drugs.
The medications are not routinely prescribed for obesity management in primary care. But it is estimated 1.5million people used weight-loss jabs in March 2025 with 80% of purchases through online retailers. As these users are privately accessing the medication, providers do not always provide wrap-around care such as dietary advice or psychological support.
The authors of the guidance, published today in Obesity Facts, say the ten evidence-based tips aim to help GPs who see patients using these medications in primary care. Patients may not disclose the use of the jabs but may have a myriad of symptoms or signs of use.
Lead author Dr Laurence Dobbie, Academic Clinical Fellow in General Practice, from King’s College London, said: “More than a million people are taking these medicines privately and seeing GPs with lots of different problems. We want GPs to have the basic knowledge to prioritise patient safety and demystify side effects. I’ve seen patients in primary care who are clearly taking the medications, but they haven’t been given wrap-around care.”
Key recommendations include:
Ask about use: Adopt a non-judgemental approach to uncover undisclosed weight loss injection use when patients present with dizziness, falls, gastrointestinal symptoms or rapid weight change.
Review medicines early: Consider the need to downtitrate insulin, sulphonylureas and antihypertensives to avoid hypoglycaemia and postural hypotension as weight reduces.
Watch for red flags: Severe abdominal pain may signal acute pancreatitis or biliary disease; urgent assessment is advised.
Consider fertility and surgery: Advise women of child-bearing age to stop GLP-1 drugs two months before conception attempts, and stop weekly medications one week before surgery to lower the chance of liquid/food entering the lungs.
The guidance is the first output of Obesity Management Collaborative UK, a network set up in 2024 to support clinicians managing patients with obesity. The network is Chaired by Professor Barbara McGowan at King’s.
Professor Barbara McGowan from King’s College London and a Consultant Endocrinologist at Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust:
“OMC-UK was developed to provide education, professional development and support to healthcare professionals working in weight management services. These ten top tips aim to upskill GPs in the management and monitoring of patients on these medications. By embedding these recommendations into routine clinical practice, we can ensure patient safety and optimise the care of individuals living with obesity.”
Dr Helen Parretti, joint first author and Consultant Clinical Associate Professor in Primary Care at the University of East Anglia, said: “We hope that these ten top tips will help support GPs, and other healthcare professionals working in primary care, when managing patients on these medications. They offer practical, evidence-based guidance that has been designed to be easily accessible to busy healthcare professionals.”
The article was developed through collaboration between experts in primary care (Dr Laurence Dobbie, Dr Helen Parretti, Dr Ellen Fallows, Dr Stephanie De Giorgio), endocrinologists (Prof Barbara McGowan, Dr Dipesh Patel) and experts through lived experience (Sarah Le Brocq).
END
Guidance issued for GPs managing weight-loss injection patients
2025-06-25
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Low-cost carbon capture? Bury wood debris in managed forests
2025-06-25
CORNELL UNIVERSITY MEDIA RELATIONS OFFICE
FOR RELEASE: June 25, 2025
Kaitlyn Serrao
607-882-1140
kms465@cornell.edu
Low-cost carbon capture? Bury wood debris in managed forests
ITHACA, N.Y. – Taking carbon out of the atmosphere is essential for slowing global warming – and a team of Cornell University researchers has estimated “huge” potential for carbon capture using a method that is low-tech, sustainable and relatively simple: burying wood, especially the debris from managed ...
Scientists unravel mystery of Mycetoma grain formation
2025-06-25
Osaka, Japan – A groundbreaking study led by a global research consortium offers new hope for patients with mycetoma, a neglected tropical disease. Researchers using an insect model and transcriptome analysis have unravelled the mechanism of iron regulation between host tissue and the mycetoma grain, a fungal mass characteristic of the disease. This discovery illuminates how the causative fungus invades and develops these protective grains within subcutaneous tissue, paving the way for new drug development and less invasive treatment strategies beyond surgical removal, potentially reducing the burden on patients significantly.
Mycetoma, a chronic infectious ...
Exposure to particulate matter during pregnancy is associated with an increased risk of childhood obesity
2025-06-25
Exposure to air pollution during pregnancy, specifically to fine particulate matter (PM2.5), may increase the risk of childhood overweight or obesity. This is the conclusion of a large, pan-European meta-analysis study led by the Barcelona Institute for Global Health (ISGlobal), a center supported by the ”la Caixa” Foundation, and recently published in Environment International. The study examined the relationship between exposure to air pollutants during pregnancy and during childhood, and its impact on body mass index (BMI) and ...
How a propolis compound with health benefits interacts with cell membranes: Study reveals nymphaeol a in action
2025-06-25
A new study by Professor José Villalaín, Chair of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at the Miguel Hernández University of Elche (UMH), provides a detailed description of how nymphaeol A — a compound found in propolis — behaves when interacting with cell membranes. Based on molecular dynamics simulations, the research is featured on the June cover of the scientific journal Membranes.
Nymphaeol A is one of the main bioactive compounds in propolis, a resinous substance produced by honeybees and used since antiquity for its therapeutic effects. It has also been isolated from Macaranga tanarius, a tropical tree known as the parasol leaf macaranga, which ...
Flawed impact metrics jeopardize EU deregulation plans, study finds
2025-06-25
Flawed Impact Metrics Jeopardize EU Deregulation Plans, Study Finds
A newly published peer-reviewed study has raised concerns about the evidence base behind the European Union’s long-running efforts to reduce bureaucracy for businesses, suggesting that key measurement tools are methodologically flawed and have faced little scrutiny over the years.
The study, led by Academy Research Fellow Matti Ylönen of the University of Helsinki, traces the EU’s deregulation agenda back to the 1990s, focusing on its reliance on the Standard Cost Model (SCM)—a ...
New study calls for rethink on alcohol policy
2025-06-25
Policymakers and drinkers are speaking different languages when it comes to alcohol consumption, according to new research.
A new study by a team psychologists, linguists and policy experts from University of Staffordshire, University of Liverpool, Oxford Brookes University and London South Bank University reveals stark differences in the way that policymakers and the public talk about alcohol consumption – and argues for a new approach to alcohol interventions and health campaigns.
Using ...
New Danish research centre to make designed proteins with vast potential
2025-06-25
Proteins are the workhorses of biology. They perform virtually every important function in living organisms. They store, copy and protect our DNA, digest food to give us energy, and harness this energy to make our cells and muscles work.
But imagine if proteins could be specifically designed to provide even more versatile molecular toolboxes for science, technology and healthcare. In essence, this is what protein design is all about. It is a growing field that allows scientists to create entirely new proteins - including those that nature itself has not explored - and to tailor them to solve specific challenges.
Protein ...
Thin-film research enters new era with innovative AI approach
2025-06-25
Berlin, 25 June 2025 – The Paul Drude Institute for Solid State Electronics (PDI) in Berlin has announced a collaboration with scientific technology company Bizmuth MBE Ltd. to integrate intelligent automation into the growth of semiconductor materials. The six-month partnership, running from June to December 2025, is one of the first initiatives in Europe to apply large language models (LLMs) and multimodal AI to the autonomous control of molecular beam epitaxy (MBE).
MBE is a well-established method for producing tailored atomically precise ...
Smart amplifier enabler for more qubits in future quantum computers
2025-06-25
Quantum computers can solve extraordinarily complex problems, unlocking new possibilities in fields such as drug development, encryption, AI, and logistics. Now, researchers at Chalmers University of Technology in Sweden have developed a highly efficient amplifier that activates only when reading information from qubits. Thanks to its smart design, it consumes just one-tenth of the power consumed by the best amplifiers available today. This reduces qubit decoherence and lays the foundation for more powerful quantum computers with significantly more qubits and enhanced performance.
Bits, which are the building blocks ...
Following the tracks of an extremely adaptive bacterium
2025-06-25
Diversity in the genome reflects adaptability
The plant pathogen Pseudomonas syringae causes major damage in agriculture. However, it also produces a large number of biologically active natural products. These could help the bacterium to adapt to changing environmental conditions and displace competitors. In a comprehensive genomic analysis, the researchers examined 18 representative strains of the bacterial species and analyzed their genetic potential to produce natural products using state-of-the-art bioinformatics methods.
They were able to identify a total of 231 so-called biosynthetic gene clusters. These gene clusters ...