Isabel Hardman Isabel Hardman

Will Britons be injecting their way out of obesity?

Is it right that the government is going to let more people use weight-loss jabs on the NHS? Anti-obesity jabs, such as Ozempic, are one of the hottest talking points right now. How fat we are has long been one of those problems that people think can be solved by ‘one quick trick’.

But these solutions are often a complete and improbable overhaul of our entire society. People can’t eat the highly palatable, highly calorific, highly processed foods that are so easy and cheap to access. This week’s announcement is a trendy one: around £40 million to expand access to the ‘game-changer’ injections such as Semaglutide (or Ozempic). There’s also some new weight management services that are going to help patients trim in the long-term. 

Health Secretary Steve Barclay has been emphasising that the main reason for the pilot is to improve the health of people struggling to control their weight.

Isabel Hardman
Written by
Isabel Hardman
Isabel Hardman is assistant editor of The Spectator and author of Why We Get the Wrong Politicians. She also presents Radio 4’s Week in Westminster.

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