Singer Avery fights back tears revealing deadly disease she got after 'taking Ozempic for a year'

The singer made her claims on Instagram

Warning: This article contains discussion of eating disorders which some readers may find distressing.

American singer-songwriter Avery posted two videos on her social media accounts warning fans ‘to be careful’ with Ozempic unless prescribed it.

Avery – whose real name is Anna Iannitelli – recently shared a video to Instagram, where she claimed she had been diagnosed with osteoporosis after allegedly taking Ozempic for a year.

Ozempic comes in the form of a weekly injection that helps lower blood sugar levels in your body by assisting the pancreas in producing more insulin, and It was approved in the US back in 2017 for use in adults with type 2 diabetes.

According to UC Davis Health – the University of California’s medical center – Ozempic isn’t approved for weight loss, but a drug under the name Wegovy is approved that contains a greater dose of semaglutide – which Ozempic and Wegovy both cover.

Avery says she had been taking Ozempic for a year before stopping (Instagram/@averyofficial)

Avery says she had been taking Ozempic for a year before stopping (Instagram/@averyofficial)

According to Diabetes UK, adults with type 2 diabetes can take Ozempic, with guidelines from the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) recommend it be prescribed if ‘using three medications have not been effective’ or ‘you have not been able to take the medications’.

In her first social media post, Avery said that she had been for a checkup as she’d ‘been off of Ozempic for two months now’ and wanted to see if her body was in ‘better condition’.

However, she says she’s been left ‘in shock’ after being told she has osteoporosis, which, according to the Mayo Clinic, can causes bones to ‘become weak and brittle — so brittle that a fall or even mild stresses such as bending over or coughing can cause a break’.

Adding that she ‘wasn’t expecting this’, she says: “I guess Ozempic can cause bone density loss, and I didn’t think that that would happen to me, because I was only on it for a year, but I have significant bone loss.

“I have osteoporosis and osteopenias that I don’t know. There’s, like, several of them that I have, and I just wasn’t… I just wasn’t, like, expecting… I wasn’t expecting that.”

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *