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“I thought this has got to be the way for me to go, because I used to go to the gym and I used to work out really, really hard to try to keep my weight down.”
“I was scared. The smell that was coming up was just shocking.”

Bans on compounding replicas of popular weight loss drugs like Ozempic came into effect on 1 October. Source: Moment RF / Iuliia Burmistrova/Getty Images
‘Sick the entire time’
Her GP said to try Ozempic, so she weighed up the risks and benefits and decided to give it a go after being prescribed it off-label.

Singer Shauna turned to Ozempic when she struggled to lose weight and suffered chronic side effects because of it. Source: Supplied / John McRae
“I was taking it for weight loss and I lost about approximately 21 kilos in about 10 or 11 months prior to having knee surgery,” Shauna told Insight.
“It wasn’t a fun way to be, but it certainly curbed my appetite,” she said.
The weight-loss ‘wonder drug’
It reduces appetite in the brain and slows down how quickly the stomach empties — triggering a feeling of feeling ‘full’.
It’s only prescribed for those living with obesity or who are overweight with at least one weight-related comorbidity, such as high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes or high cholesterol.
Increased demand for Ozempic leads to shortages
It’s estimated that at least 20,000 Australian patients are injecting compounded replica weight loss drugs with the majority using them for weight loss management.
The ban came into effect on 1 October.
Side effects ‘can be managed’
South said patients using these drugs for weight loss shouldn’t have to put up with side effects.

Dr Terri-Lynne South is a metabolic health specialist. Source: Supplied
“I think side effects, certainly in my experience, can be well managed.”
“In my experience, it’s about having the appropriate slow and holistic advice about not just the medication, but how to eat well, to manage side effects,” she said.
‘I didn’t want to be a slave to the drug’
The second time she didn’t see much weight loss so decided to stop because of the expense.

Shauna says despite not being on Ozempic anymore, the drugs helped her change her mindset when it came to food. Source: Supplied
She gave it one last try but after a few months decided that the cost and side effects of nausea were not worth it. Despite deciding that semaglutide wasn’t for her, Shauna says it has changed her attitude to food.