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South Africans Warned: Fake Ozempic Copies Recalled, Check Your Prescription

South African health regulators have ordered a recall of some products being sold as copies of Ozempic. In plain terms, officials found certain medicines on the market that claim to be Ozempic (a popular prescription drug) but are not approved or may be unsafe, so they told sellers to pull those products from stores and online. Ozempic is the brand name for semaglutide. Semaglutide is a lab-made version of a natural hormone that helps control blood sugar and appetite. Doctors prescribe Ozempic for type 2 diabetes, and a related dose and brand (Wegovy) is used for weight loss. The real drug is made under strict rules so doses are accurate and the product is sterile and safe to inject. The report says regulators in South Africa identified counterfeit or unofficial versions being marketed as Ozempic and issued a recall. The source does not give details about how many products, where exactly they were sold, whether anyone got sick, or whether the recalled items actually contained semaglutide. It also doesn’t say if the fakes were ineffective, contaminated, or simply mislabeled. That means the action is precautionary: officials want to prevent harm while they investigate. This matters because many people seek out Ozempic for diabetes or weight loss, and counterfeit or unapproved medicines can be dangerous. If someone buys medication outside a pharmacy or without a prescription, they risk getting the wrong dose, harmful additives, or a product made in unsanitary conditions. Patients who need semaglutide for medical reasons should get it through licensed healthcare providers and pharmacies so they can be sure of what they’re injecting. Caveats: the snippet is short and doesn’t spell out whether anyone was harmed, what the specific problems were, or whether the recall covers a single brand or many sellers. If you use Ozempic, don’t stop or change your treatment without talking to your doctor. Avoid buying prescription injections from unauthorized online sellers or social media. Regulators will usually follow up with lab tests and public updates; watch for official guidance from South African health authorities or your local regulator. Bottom line: South Africa has pulled some products sold as Ozempic because they may be fake or unsafe — get prescription medicines from legitimate sources and check for official updates.

Source: WTVB

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