RPT-INSIGHT-How well-off Brits still buy Ozempic online for weight loss

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(Repeating Nov. 18 item with no changes to text)

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Despite curbs, people with means still buy diabetes drug for weight loss online

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Loophole allows clinicians to prescribe any drug they think will help their patient

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Total costs run into thousands of pounds from regulated online outlets

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Diabetes, obesity both significant health problems in UK

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Novo and government say shortage to last until at least mid-2024

By Maggie Fick

LONDON, Nov 18 (Reuters) - John, a tech executive who has been battling weight gain since his 30s, has a nine-month supply in his refrigerator. Kim Gradwell, a retired receptionist who developed type 2 diabetes nearly 20 years ago, isn't sure where she'll find her next dose.

The medicine is Ozempic – designed for type 2 diabetes, a life-threatening condition. It's so effective at helping people lose weight that supplies of the active ingredient, semaglutide, have run short in countries including Britain and the United States.

The contrast in access sheds light on the scramble for semaglutide in Britain, a country famed for its free public health system, showing how those with money are able to access treatments that run short on the National Health Service (NHS), despite government efforts to prioritise supplies for the NHS.

In July, the British government declared a shortage of semaglutide and intervened to prevent Ozempic reaching people who want to lose weight. But Reuters interviews with more than a dozen medical professionals and patients show people like John, who says he is obese and "well off," can still pay thousands of pounds online to stockpile it for weight loss, while diabetics who depend on the NHS struggle to get government-paid prescriptions filled.

John shared an Oct. 26 email from private online pharmacy Rightangled, advertising Ozempic.

"Look what's back," it said. "Grab yours before it's gone again." Rightangled offered the drug for 299 pounds ($366) for a month's supply of weekly injections.

NHS diabetes patients – including Gradwell, who went for weeks without full medication – pay nothing for their medication. Gradwell, 64, says she couldn't afford to seek private treatment.

One reason such two-tier access continues is a loophole that means the government can't ban clinicians from prescribing a drug that they think will help their patient, four medical experts said. The shortage persists even after Ozempic's manufacturer Novo Nordisk launched Wegovy, a semaglutide drug solely for weight loss, in September.

"There is a loophole," said Penny Ward, visiting professor in pharmaceutical medicine at King's College in London.