MP abused by trolls loses 10 stone after taking Mounjaro

15 hours ago 11

Carolyn Harris MP Carolyn Harris wearing a sparkling sequin maroon dress. She is standing  in what appears to be a hotel bedroom in front of the door and has on oversized, sparkly glasses. Carolyn is wearing a rope-style necklace and dangly earringsCarolyn Harris

Carolyn Harris went from being a size 24 to a size 10 after taking the slimming drug Mounjaro in late 2024

An MP who lost nearly 10 stone on Mounjaro has said people who take unregulated weight-loss jabs are "playing Russian roulette with their lives".

Labour MP for Neath and Swansea East Carolyn Harris dropped from a size 24 to a size 10 after taking the slimming drug in October 2024 having developed mobility issues.

She also said she was fed up with the "relentless criticism" about her appearance from online trolls, but has urged others to ensure they use the proper regulated channels for health-related reasons only.

"I made sure I went to a GP to get mine, rather than just go online, because I really wanted to make sure all the correct medical checks were done," she added.

Harris had private treatment after increasingly struggling to walk around her constituency, which came to a head while walking around a lake in Swansea to celebrate International Menopause Day.

"I started having difficulty and had to stop a quarter of the way in," she said.

Another motivation was what she called the constant, cruel comments she received online.

"How I looked or what I was wearing had become more import than my politics, " the 65-year-old told BBC Radio Wales Breakfast.

"I can be bolshie if I'm fighting for a cause or for someone else, but deep down I'm very sensitive."

Carolyn Harris An overweight woman on a bus, with purple hair and a mustard-coloured dress.Carolyn Harris

Carolyn Harris, pictured here in June 2024, dropped from a size 24 to a size 10 after using weight loss jabs

But Harris said others opting to take weight-loss drugs should do so for health related reasons.

The National Pharmacy Association recently voiced concerns about the surge in demand for the likes of Mounjaro or Ozempic and how people were turning to beauty salons or social media to get them.

In England, anyone prescribing weight-loss injections must be registered with the Care Quality Commission.

But in Wales, only doctors are required to register with the Welsh equivalent, Healthcare Inspectorate Wales (HIW), meaning other healthcare professionals are not legally required to meet the same standards or be routinely inspected.

Some experts have described this as inadequate regulation, opening up an unsafe black market for such products.

"The people who elect to get these drugs from unlicensed places are playing Russian roulette with their lives," said Harris.

"They don't know what they might be injecting into themselves and that terrifies me."

The Welsh government said there was "considerable demand for weight management medicines and growing pressure for access through the NHS".

"To help meet demand in a sustainable way, we are undertaking work to develop a new model that considers access across settings and wrap around support to help and sustain weight loss.

"We have also put in place new arrangements for people with the most urgent clinical need to access the weight management medicines while arrangements for wider access are considered," they added.

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