Crime Demand for weight-loss drugs fuels global rise in counterfeits

LeonardoBjj

Professional Wrestler
@Brown
Joined
Jan 17, 2010
Messages
4,522
Reaction score
5,483
By Patrick Wingrove and Maggie Fick
October 20, 202312:58 PM GMT-

47454977902_ed2ed78659_k.jpg

Oct 20(Reuters) - Extraordinary demand for Novo Nordisk’s (NOVOb.CO) Ozempic and other drugs used for weight-loss is fueling a global surge in counterfeit versions, according to Reuters interviews with law enforcement, anti-counterfeiting and public health officials.

The U.S.-based Pharmaceutical Security Institute (PSI), an industry-backed organization that counts drugmakers Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly (LLY.N) as members, said it is working with agencies, including Europol, Interpol and U.S. Homeland Security, as well as companies that help identify counterfeit products such as Israel’s BrandShield.

maxresdefault.jpg

Their combined efforts include opening inquiries into complaints of fake drugs, trolling e-commerce and social media for purchase offers or advertisements and teaching customs officials how to spot counterfeits.

Novo’s Ozempic, approved to treat diabetes, contains the active ingredient semaglutide, which is also used in the company's weight loss drug, Wegovy.

Both are being used by people seeking to shed pounds, as is Lilly’s Mounjaro, which is currently approved for diabetes and expected to get a green-light from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to treat obesity in the coming months. All three medicines are in short supply amid a global obesity epidemic and high rates of diabetes.
hq720.jpg


“These weight loss drugs are a hot topic right now because they’re on TV and getting a lot of media attention. If I’m a criminal organization, that’s the next opportunity I go ahead and exploit,” said Jim Mancuso, director of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s Intellectual Property Rights Coordination Center.

Mancuso said the agency is also working with Europol, Interpol and around 23 other law enforcement agencies on tracking weight-loss drugs to quell what they believe could become the worst tide of counterfeit lifestyle medicines since erectile dysfunction drugs like
Viagra.
c226987ab805224d59efd11a237c9d25.jpg

Though Novo stresses that its medicines Ozempic and Wegovy are indicated for the treatment of diabetes and weight-loss, respectively, the weekly injection drugs have become household names in America for their use off-label as lifestyle treatments.

Novo said in a statement to Reuters that it works closely with PSI and other organisations to “share data accurately and provide an informed picture on the status of these crimes”, and collaborates with law enforcement and other authorities.

Lilly said its strategy includes deterring major counterfeiters of its products through investigations, internet monitoring and legal actions and partnering with government and non-government organizations and trade associations.
10260_alt16.jpg

@Sinister at the gym

'SO MANY CASES'

Ozempic is the biggest target so far in Europe, according to a Europol official who requested anonymity because he was not authorized to speak. Fake weight-loss drugs will be a key focus in the agency’s annual counterfeit medicines report, due next year, the official said.

“We have counterfeit products and stolen products,” the official said. “We have so many cases.”

Counterfeit Ozempic has already been found in at least 14 countries, including the UK, Germany, Egypt and Russia. Several have issued warnings to pharmacies and consumers to be vigilant about counterfeits, since it is not clear what they actually contain.

Germany's federal drug regulator last week urged pharmacies and drug distributors to be vigilant following the discovery of wholesale batches of fake Ozempic.

Britain’s regulator, the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA), then said on Wednesday that injection pens falsely labelled as Ozempic had been identified at two UK wholesalers.

A World Health Organization spokesperson said use of such drugs could pose significant health risks.
4fca41d7-28a9-4234-b312-842987457a58

"We will look online and if we find something that infringes (obesity drug trademarks) we'll get it taken down,” said Yoav Keren, BrandShield CEO. “Sometimes PSI and its members will do sample purchases," he said. When a consumer buys those fakes, “what you get are expired drugs, counterfeit drugs, or nothing,” he added.

An officer for Interpol said that counterfeit obesity drugs because of their high prices are largely being sold in affluent countries, including those in North America, Europe and the Middle East, unlike most fake drugs that tend to be marketed in poorer regions.

MHRA said reports related to potentially falsified GLP-1s, the class of drug that includes Wegovy, Ozempic and Eli Lilly’s diabetes drug Mounjaro, had risen from two in 2022 to as many as 20 this year.

Ireland’s Health Products Regulatory Authority told Reuters that it has confiscated 233 units of counterfeit semaglutide compared with 32 units in 2022.

maxresdefault.jpg

https://www.reuters.com/business/he...gs-fuels-global-rise-counterfeits-2023-10-20/


 
what are the health consequences of these weight loss drugs. I can't imagine it's good.
Depends from content.

In general if you are fit to train and do have a lot of free time you might cut weight without any diet or pills.
Part of fat will be used to generate energy....

If there are health problems to train hard ....then diet etc....why not.

Miracle pills are expensive and without any warranty....
 
what are the health consequences of these weight loss drugs. I can't imagine it's good.

The side effects sound awful but they're being reported by big fat people who lacked the will power to adjust their diet and get more exercise so it's hard to judge.

It sounds like it makes you feel sick if you eat too much so if you're someone with disordered eating where you're eating more for psychological reasons rather than feeling hungry, it must be hell as you'd be making yourself feel sick all the time.

I imagine it's great for someone who truly wants to lose the weight is doing everything right, and just wants a little help.
 
Any medicaments used by diabetics .....should be used only when doctor after lab work done had prescribed.
Otherwise they might wreck your health.....
Diabetes is 2 types and in one you usually have too high g ....levels, in other type you usually have too low level ....
Usually GPs are sending diabetics to do lab work and and endocrinologist is used too.
 
Semaglutide (Ozempic, Wegovy) and Tirzepatide (Mounjaro) are peptides suspended in sterile water. You can't "counterfeit" them, they're not even under patent. The production cost is nothing and these companies themselves outsource it to Chinese and Indian labs. There were no research costs either, they've been around forever. These companies only have the patent on the injector pens, their own brand name and the "formulation," which is literally just them adding sodium chloride, AKA table salt, to the sterile water solution.

What this is really about is that Big Pharma wants to go after compounding pharmacies offering affordable semaglutide / tirzepatide. These pharmacies do their own testing of the raw ingredient for purity and prepare the injections for you. You can also buy the peptides and do it yourself, but it needs some know-how. Glancing online, Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly have hordes of idiots literally paying $1K a month out of pocket for the name brand stuff and they want to keep it that way, you having access to compounding pharmacies or peptides themselves, which by right they don't own, cuts into their profit margins. They'll be pressuring the legislature to remove people's ability to access it and force their hand into paying $1K a month if they want it.
 
Semaglutide (Ozempic, Wegovy) and Tirzepatide (Mounjaro) are peptides suspended in sterile water. You can't "counterfeit" them, they're not even under patent. The production cost is nothing and these companies themselves outsource it to Chinese and Indian labs. There were no research costs either, they've been around forever. These companies only have the patent on the injector pens, their own brand name and the "formulation," which is literally just them adding sodium chloride, AKA table salt, to the sterile water solution.

What this is really about is that Big Pharma wants to go after compounding pharmacies offering affordable semaglutide / tirzepatide. These pharmacies do their own testing of the raw ingredient for purity and prepare the injections for you. You can also buy the peptides and do it yourself, but it needs some know-how. Glancing online, Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly have hordes of idiots literally paying $1K a month out of pocket for the name brand stuff and they want to keep it that way, you having access to compounding pharmacies or peptides themselves, which by right they don't own, cuts into their profit margins. They'll be pressuring the legislature to remove people's ability to access it and force their hand into paying $1K a month if they want it.

- I've read guys on BB forums saying they buy Semaglutide from peptides sites.

Glancing online, Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly have hordes of idiots literally paying $1K a month out of pocket for the name brand stuff and they want to keep it that way, you having access to compounding pharmacies or peptides themselves, which by right they don't own, cuts into their profit margins. They'll be pressuring the legislature to remove people's ability to access it and force their hand into paying $1K a month if they want it.

- I've heard\read to people here paying above 1000 reais for it.
Found some costing a little less:

https://www.drogariaspacheco.com.br...ema-para-aplicacao-0-25mg-e-0-5mg--6agulhas/p
 
Telling people that obesity was an uncontrollable disease probably didn't help much.

Some people have addictive tendencies, no different from old geezers that waste away in front of a slot machine in a casino.

These may not be uncontrollable, but a lot of people legit lack the willpower to control their urges.
 
Fvck em if they can't train and eat right lol
 
By chance do you listen to the podcast "stuff they don't want you to know"?

Earlier this week they were talking a little about this and the rise of groups competing with injectable equipment patents etc
 
Some people have addictive tendencies, no different from old geezers that waste away in front of a slot machine in a casino.

These may not be uncontrollable, but a lot of people legit lack the willpower to control their urges.

EVERYONE has addictive tendencies in one way or another. Lacking the willpower to curb them if they're negative, doesn't make it a "disease". I'd be more inclined to label hard drug addiction as a disease, since it has pretty significant side effects that keeps you addicted. I've never understood the people who claim they can't not eat an an entire pizza if they see it. That's just impulse control. You ain't gonna be climbing the walls, because you left a slice, or ate something healthy instead.

It's childish reasoning, that only hurts obese people and gives them an excuse not to turn it around.
 
Back
Top