A few years ago my wife Clare was startled when a patient came into her GP surgery and said lightly, “My husband is beating me.”
Fortunately, this was not a case of domestic violence.
What the patient was really complaining about was that she and her husband had gone on the 5:2 diet at the same time and he was losing more weight than her.
Clare pointed out that although men do typically lose more weight when they go on a diet, women experience similar health benefits, certainly when it comes to key measures such as blood sugar control, even when they don’t lose as much weight.
But surprisingly, new research shows that women seem to do better than men when given new weight-loss drugs, such as semaglutide (brand names Wegovy or Ozempic).

This is important given that earlier this week Rishi Sunak announced a $74 million AUD pilot scheme to allow GPs to prescribe them.
So why do men lose more weight when they go on a diet?
It’s probably because we tend to be musclier and have a higher metabolic rate, which means we are burning more calories when sitting down and even when asleep.
Having higher levels of testosterone also helps. Studies have shown that if you give men with low testosterone levels a hormonal boost, this leads to significant weight loss.
But curiously, recent research has shown that with the new weight-loss drugs, the situation is reversed, with women losing a higher percentage of body weight than men.
Drugs such as semaglutide work by mimicking the action of the GLP-1 hormone, which is released in your gut in response to eating.

It prompts your body to produce more insulin, which reduces blood sugar levels. This is why it was originally developed for people with type 2 diabetes.
But these drugs also act on your brain, suppressing appetite.
People who’ve tried them say one of the biggest changes is the drugs stop cravings.
The result is impressive weight loss, though once you stop taking the drug there is often significant weight regain.
One of the first big studies that looked at semaglutide found that the men and women given the drug had, over 66 weeks, lost an impressive 15.3 kg.
But less positive was a follow-up study, published this April in the journal Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism, which found they had regained two-thirds of that weight within a year of stopping the drug — whether this means people should be on the drugs for ever is clearly going to be an issue.
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