FAQs

YES IF YOUR BMI IS > 27 and atleast one health related condition such as High Blood pressure, High Cholestrol, Diabetes mellitus or Sleep Apnea.

Weight loss is usually achieved by a combination of dietary changes, exercise and behavior modifications. However, quite a few patients are not able to achieve desired weight loss (> 5% from baseline) even after adhering to diet and exercise regimens. This is where medical weight loss treatment can help.

Prescription drugs are medicines that a health care provider prescribes for you. You can’t buy them off the shelf in a drug store like you can buy nonprescription medicines.

Just know that you need to use prescription weight-loss drugs in addition to — not instead of — a healthy diet and exercise.

Your health care provider may suggest a weight-loss drug for you in some cases. These include if you haven’t been able to lose weight through diet and exercise and your:

  • Body mass index (BMI) is greater than 30. This means you’re living with a condition that involves having too much body fat, called obesity.
  • BMI is greater than 27. You also have a serious medical problem linked to obesity, such as diabetes or high blood pressure.

Before choosing a medicine for you, your health care provider thinks about your history and health challenges. Then your provider talks with you about the pros and cons of prescription weight-loss drugs.

These drugs aren’t for everyone. For example, you shouldn’t take prescription weight-loss drugs if you’re trying to get pregnant, are pregnant or are breastfeeding.

Prescription weight-loss drugs that you can use for more than 12 weeks, called long-term use, lead to major weight loss compared with an inactive treatment that doesn’t use medicine, called a placebo. The combination of weight-loss medicine and lifestyle changes leads to greater weight loss than do lifestyle changes alone.

Taking these drugs for a year can mean a loss of total body weight of 3% to 12% more than that lost with lifestyle changes alone. That may not seem like a lot. But losing 5% to 10% of your total weight and keeping it off can have important health benefits. For example, it can lower blood pressure, blood sugar levels and levels of fats in the blood called triglycerides.

How long you take a weight-loss drug depends on whether the drug helps you lose weight. If you’ve lost enough weight to improve your health and you haven’t had serious side effects, your health care provider may suggest that you take the drug long term.

If you haven’t lost at least 5% of your body weight after taking the full dose of a drug for 3 to 6 months, your health care provider will probably change your treatment. They may switch you to a different weight-loss drug.

Mild side effects, such as nausea, constipation and diarrhea, are common. They may lessen over time. Rarely, serious side effects can happen. That’s why it’s important to ask your health care provider about all treatment choices. And ask about the possible benefits and risks of each drug.

Weight-loss drugs can be expensive and aren’t always paid for by insurance. Ask your insurance company about your coverage.

Many people gain back some of the weight they lost when they stop taking weight-loss drugs. But practicing healthy lifestyle habits may help limit weight gain.

Six weight-loss drugs have been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for long-term use:

  • Bupropion-naltrexone (Contrave)
  • Liraglutide (Saxenda)
  • Orlistat (Xenical, Alli)
  • Phentermine-topiramate (Qsymia)
  • Semaglutide (Wegovy) (Ozempic)
  • Setmelanotide (Imcivree)

Most prescription weight-loss drugs work by making you feel less hungry or fuller. Some do both. The exception is orlistat. It affects the way your body absorbs fat.