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Weight loss jabs could be prescribed to children as young as six after trials found they slashed obesity and other health problems. Those who took liraglutide for just over a year reduced their BMI by more than seven per cent and had lower blood pressure and blood sugar levels. Experts suggest the discovery could one day help to turn the tide on the nation’s childhood obesity crisis, helping them to ‘lead healthier, more productive lives’. More than one in five children in England are overweight when they start school, rising to one in three by the time they leave for secondary school.
Professor Claudia Fox, of the University of Minnesota Medical School, Minneapolis, said the drug could help where lifestyle interventions have failed. She said: ‘The results of this study offer considerable promise to children living with obesity. To date, children have had virtually no options for treating obesity. They have been told to ‘try harder’ with diet and exercise. ‘Now with the possibility of a medication that addresses the underlying physiology of obesity, there is hope that children living with obesity can live healthier, more productive lives.’
However, side effects such as nausea, vomiting and diarrhoea, were common, occurring in eight out of ten children receiving liraglutide half in the placebo group. More serious reactions were had by 12.5 per cent of those on the drug, compared to 7.7 per cent in the control group, causing one in ten on the jab giving up before the end of the trial.
originally posted by: ColeYounger2
a reply to: Shoshanna
When you have time, watch this:
youtu.be...
Would you give your obese child weight loss drugs?