Health
Decline in Birth Rate in the UAE
Dr. Ramya Raj, Specialist Obstetrician and Gynecologist
International Modern Hospital Dubai
Official statistics released by the Ministry of Health and Prevention show a significant decline in the number of births among Emirati citizens over the past decade, prompting concern from a parliamentary committee about the long term demographic and social implications.
Data obtained by Emarat Al Youm indicate that the number of births to UAE citizens fell by 13.55 per cent between 2014 and 2023, from 34,618 in 2014 to 29,926 in 2023.
1)Reasons
1.Later marriages-“Behind every data point is a young couple making decisions about marriage … A working mother balancing ambitions with nurturing. A father wanting to give more time but stretched by economic pressures. These are not only social realities – they are policy challenges, and more importantly, national opportunities.”
2.Health issues- “Even among younger patients, we’re seeing low ovarian reserves, obesity, diabetes and poor nutrition. These all impact fertility. We’re also seeing a sharp rise in secondary infertility among men, often linked to smoking or the use of unregulated performance-enhancing substances.”
3.Lifestyle changes-including increased consumption of processed foods, widespread vitamin D deficiency associated with limited sun exposure, and lifestyle patterns that contribute to hormonal imbalance and conditions like PCOS,Endometriosis.
4.Thoughts on Family size-very personal andcan vary alot depending on values,circumstances,lifegoals. In the past, most Emirati families had five or more children. Now, most couples want two or three. It may seem reasonable, but if you compare it to previous generations, the demographic impact is significant,”
2)yes for sure-“Ten years ago, most of our patients were under 35 and already married,” he said. “Today, we see women in their late thirties and early forties coming in to freeze eggs – not necessarily because they have fertility issues, but because they’re not ready to marry. They’re busy with work or studies.”
3)Fertility declines with advancing age, beginning as early as the middle of the third decade. Women who do conceive at an advanced maternal age (traditionally defined as age 35 years or older) are at greater risk of early pregnancy-related complications including miscarriage, aneuploidy, and ectopic pregnancy. Other obstetric complications linked to older age include gestational diabetes, hypertension, preeclampsia, placenta previa, placental abruption, dysfunctional labor, cesarean delivery, postpartum hemorrhage, and maternal mortality; fetal complications include congenital anomalies, prematurity, growth restriction, macrosomia, and stillbirth. Increased paternal age is also associated with lower fertility, an increase in pregnancy-associated complications and an increase in adverse outcome in the offspring.
4)US data on delayed motherhood are the effect of a strong social pressure: a constant economic and social pressure to delay pregnancy without any perspective to invert this trend . This is a paradox. On one side scientific literature more and more clearly says that the less risky range of maternal age to bear babies is 20-30 years as it is associated with a lower likelihood of non-chromosomal problems in babies and on the other side, people perceive they should postpone pregnancy.Thus, the best age to become parents is a compromise between two poles, and women as well as couples find it hard defending their right to having babies when young.
5)Modern lifestyle refers to the contemporary ways of living, characterized by factors such as sedentary behavior, poor dietary habits, stress, and exposure to environmental pollutants, which can impact reproductive health and fertility.1.A poor diet can significantly impact female fertility. Consuming low amounts of fruits and vegetables can disrupt hormone regulation and ovulation due to the lack of essential nutrients, antioxidants, and fiber. Additionally, a high intake of processed foods can lead to insulin resistance, inflammation, and hormonal imbalances, all of which can negatively impact fertility. Inadequate omega-3 fatty acids can also affect hormone production, ovulation, and embryo implantation. Furthermore, excessive caffeine and sugar intake can disrupt hormone balance, ovulation, and fertility.2. A sedentary lifestyle can lead to insulin resistance and metabolic disorders, which can disrupt hormone regulation and ovulation. However, physical inactivity can lead to chronic inflammation, which can negatively impact fertility and reproductive health.3. Stress can also significantly impact female fertility. .4 .Exposure to environmental pollutants can also significantly impact female fertility. Endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs), such as BPA and phthalates, can mimic or interfere with hormones, disrupting ovulation and fertility. Air pollution, particularly particulate matter (PM), has also been linked to reduced fertility, increased risk of miscarriage, and birth defects. Furthermore, exposure to heavy metals, such as lead and mercury, can disrupt hormone regulation, ovulation, and fertility
6) yes, Long working hours can significantly have impact on fertility by disrupting harmonal balance and leading to various reproductive health issues. Chronic Stress can disrupt hormone production, including cortisol, insulin, and thyroid hormones, which can impact ovulation and fertility. Chronic stress can also delay or prevent ovulation, making it challenging to conceive. Stress can also disrupt the balance of the gut microbiome, which is essential for hormone regulation, immune function, and fertility. In Men its associated with low sperm quality.
7). Despite medical progress, Misinformation around natural conception keeps many couples from conceiving naturally. Busting these misconceptions can help couples identify real pregnancy delay reasons and take the right steps early.
1.Many couples think that having sex at any time can lead to pregnancy. This misunderstanding can lead to disappointment when pregnancy does not happen, even with regular sexual activity.
Fact: Conception only occurs during ovulation, about 12 to 14 days before the next period begins. The fertile window lasts about six days: the five days before ovulation and the day of ovulation.
2.Couples often assume that increasing intercourse frequency directly increases conception probability. This leads to scheduled sexual activity that creates stress and reduces spontaneity.
Fact: Daily intercourse may lower sperm quality and reduce sperm count per ejaculation. Sperm concentration and motility remain optimal with intercourse every two to three days during the fertile window.
3.Popular culture suggests that some positions, especially those that allow deeper penetration or gravity assistance, can increase the chances of fertilisation. Couples often spend time and energy trying these methods that lack clear evidence.
Fact: No medical evidence links sexual positions to conception rates. Sperm reaches the cervix within seconds of ejaculation, regardless of position during intercourse.
4.The common advice to “just relax” implies that psychological stress is the primary pregnancy dilemma. This oversimplification dismisses legitimate medical causes of infertility.
Fact: Stress can affect hormones, but rarely causes infertility on its own in healthy individuals. Managing stress through rest and balanced living supports overall well-being, but does not guarantee conception.
5.Cultural biases and old beliefs place most of the responsibility for fertility on women. This leads to women undergoing extensive testing, while their male partners face little to no evaluation.
Fact: Male factors account for up to 50% of infertility cases. Common male issues include low sperm count, poor sperm motility, abnormal sperm morphology, and complete absence of sperm in the ejaculate. Both partners should undergo evaluation when conception delays occur beyond the expected timeframe.
6.Women experiencing a delayed period no pregnancy often assume conception has occurred. This leads to confusion when pregnancy tests return negative results.
Fact: A delayed period could stem from hormonal imbalance, stress, thyroid issues, or diet changes that affect the menstrual cycle, Polycystic ovary syndrome ,Premature ovarian insufficiency, excessive exercise, substantial weight fluctuations, and certain medications also disrupt menstrual regularity.
7.The widespread belief that fertility ends abruptly at 35 causes panic and hasty decisions. Women abandon attempts at natural conception prematurely based on this arbitrary age marker.
Fact: Fertility decreases with age, but pregnancy is still achievable naturally with healthy habits and timely medical guidance. Egg quantity and quality decline progressively from the late 20s onward, with acceleration after 35 and more decline after 40. Many women achieve successful pregnancies in their late 30s and early 40s without medical intervention.
8.Internet sources promote various home remedies to get pregnant quick, from specific foods to herbal supplements. Couples invest money and hope in unproven methods based on anecdotal claims.
Fact: Remedies like herbal teas or special diets can support reproductive health, but do not guarantee conception on their own. No natural fertility remedies have rigorous scientific evidence proving they cause pregnancy or increase conception rates. While good nutrition supports overall reproductive health by providing sufficient vitamins and minerals, supplements
8)couples advised to Consult Specialist for Medical evaluation is important for couples who experience delay in getting pregnancy longer than 12 months, or six months for women over 35.
9)Assisted reproductive technologies (ARTs):
The landscape of ARTs has undergone transformative changes driven by innovations such as in vitro fertilization (IVF) and egg freezing. These advancements have emerged as powerful tools, granting individuals unprecedented control over their reproductive timelines. ARTs can sometimes inadvertently contribute to a delay in childbearing.
1. For instance, IVF combines eggs and sperm outside the body, enabling fertilization before transferring embryos to the uterus. It can also assure individuals that they can conceive at a later age. This confidence may lead some people to delay starting a family, believing they can always turn to IVF when ready.
2.Similarly, Egg Freezing technique involves extracting a woman’s eggs, freezing them, and storing them until a later time. This innovation is particularly significant for individuals facing medical treatments that may compromise their fertility, such as chemotherapy, or those navigating career trajectories that necessitate delaying childbearing. Egg freezing, a pivotal aspect of ARTs, empowers women by allowing them to preserve their eggs at a younger age when fertility potential is higher. These preserved eggs can be thawed, fertilized, and implanted, offering women a means to extend their childbearing years and pursue life goals before embracing. However, this option can inadvertently encourage women to postpone childbirth while focusing on career advancement or other life pursuits, assuming their fertility remains preserved. In practical terms, consider a scenario where a woman in her late twenties decides to freeze her eggs to ensure her fertility.
With this safety net in place, she may delay starting a family and instead invest more time in her career or personal development, knowing she can rely on her preserved eggs later. While this is a valuable choice, it exemplifies how ARTs, like egg freezing, can influence the timing of childbearing decisions.
By leveraging the advances in reproductive science, these technologies have allowed individuals to conceive beyond what nature’s timeline might otherwise allow. This extension of the biological clock is flexible, as fertility naturally declines with age. However, technological strides have created an avenue for individuals to pursue parenthood later in life, blurring the lines of traditional age-related constraints and offering new horizons for those who wish to optimize their reproductive potential.
10)Early Screening and Medical Consultation to Protect Future Fertility
For individuals planning to delay pregnancy, early screening and medical consultation are crucial to protect future fertility.
• 1.Fertility Testing: It’s recommended to seek fertility testing if you have been trying to conceive for a year or more without success. Early diagnosis can lead to quicker solutions and reduce emotional stress.
• 2.Signs to Seek Evaluation: Look for signs such as irregular or absent periods, painful periods or intercourse, or a history of miscarriages. These could indicate issues with ovulation, hormonal imbalances, or other reproductive conditions.
• 3.Preconception Counseling: Preconception counseling can help women prepare physically, emotionally, and medically for a future pregnancy. It includes a detailed medical review, fertility and cycle discussion, condition management, lifestyle and nutrition guidance, vaccination and infection screening.
• 4.Genetic Testing: Mandatory genetic testing will be introduced as part of the premarital screening program for Emiratis planning to marry, starting early January 2025. This will help identify potential risks of passing on genetic disorders.
• 11)Health awareness before marriage is essential for several reasons:
• 1.Preventive Measures: It allows couples to take preventive measures for potential health risks, ensuring a healthier future together.
• 2.Family Planning: It aids in informed decisions about family planning, including the use of assisted reproductive technologies.
• 3.Early Detection: It enables early detection of health issues, which can lead to prompt medical intervention and management.
4.Genetic Testing: In some regions, genetic testing is part of the premarital screening process, which can significantly improve family planning by reducing congenital disabilities.
• 5.Public Health: In the UAE, premarital screening is mandatory to protect public health by detecting and addressing infectious and hereditary diseases before marriage.
Couples should consider these factors when deciding to undergo premarital health screening to ensure a healthy and informed marriage.
• 12)Young couples trying to balance work and starting a family can benefit from the following advice:
• 1.Communicate openly: Discuss work and family needs with your partner, listen with empathy, and create joint routines that deepen trust.
•
• 2.Prioritize quality time: Make time for regular, quality time together and small, shared moments that reinforce love, safety, and closeness.
•
3.Set boundaries: Establish boundaries for work to avoid being overwhelmed and to ensure both partners feel supported.
4.Limit nonessential activities: Minimize time spent on activities that do not contribute to your work or family responsibilities.
5.Learn to say no: Be prepared to say no to tasks that may take away time from work or family.
By implementing these strategies, young couples can create a harmonious balance that allows both to thrive in their careers and personal lives.
•
Health
Support for a Loved One With Metastatic Breast Cancer
Annie Bond, 37, was diagnosed with metastatic breast cancer in August 2015. Shortly after sharing her diagnosis, some of her friends sent miracle cures and wigs in the mail.
“That was weird because I didn’t even know if I was going to lose my hair,” Bond says.
Bond has lived with metastatic breast cancer for over a decade and has lost friends who were not comfortable with the way her life has changed.
“The best thing anyone ever did was just stick around and stay open-minded. Just remember everything that’s true about your friend or your loved one is still true after they’re diagnosed,” she says.
When someone you love is diagnosed with metastatic or stage 4 breast cancer, you may struggle to find the right words or wonder what kind of support will actually help.
A stage 4 diagnosis will drastically change your loved one’s life. Before you try to help, remember that they are still a full, complete person, not just a cancer patient. Continuing to show up can make a meaningful difference as they navigate their life with metastatic disease. Focus on what you can do to help, rather than retreating from the relationship out of fear.
Do: Respect Boundaries
Every person with metastatic breast cancer is different; some people want to share updates, while others prefer to keep their journeys private.
Frances Malinis, 42, who was diagnosed with triple-negative metastatic breast cancer, says she was very selective about who to share information with initially. She knew some people would not handle it well, and others would try to make themselves part of the “drama.”
“Don’t try to get information out of [your loved one] that they’re not already wanting to give. Because what are your intentions? Are you just looking for entertainment?” Malinis says.
Try not to get offended if your loved one seems distant because they may not have the energy or emotional bandwidth to respond to every message you send.
“One of the main things families can do is to be incredibly patient and understanding with the level of anxiety and fear that patients live with,” says Ian Sadler, PhD, an assistant professor of medical psychology at Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons.
Do: Try to Educate Yourself About Breast Cancer
Metastatic breast cancer means the cancer has spread to the bones, lungs, liver, or other parts of the body. While it is not yet curable, it is manageable for many people.
“Modern developments in cancer treatment have turned metastatic breast cancer into a chronic disease for many patients,” says Swati Sikaria, MD, an oncologist at a Cedars-Sinai affiliate in Torrance, CA.
Prognosis varies person to person, but new treatments have significantly extended survival rates and quality of life for many people with metastatic breast cancer.
Malinis says some friends would ask how much time she had left, and others would send messages that felt like a eulogy. “I get that they wanted to express their care and love for me, but don’t write me off yet,” she says.
Do: Provide Practical Support
People living with metastatic breast cancer have to fit frequent healthcare appointments into their schedules. Sometimes, it’s best to offer to help with specific chores or errands rather than saying, “Reach out if you need anything.”
“As a patient, I don’t really know what I could ask for from people,” Malinis says.
Some useful things to suggest might be rides to and from the doctor’s office, pet or babysitting, house cleaning, meal prepping or grabbing groceries or other household items while running your errands.
Malinis says sending flowers, comfort food, or food delivery gift cards also shows you are thinking of your loved one. If you want to drop gifts off, leave them on the doorstop. Don’t expect to socialize if your loved one does not feel ready to welcome guests.
Do: Honor Your Loved One’s Independence
If your friend or family member asks you to join them at a doctor’s appointment, show up in a way that honors their independence.
“The support of family and friends is pivotal in the life of someone with metastatic breast cancer, but it’s important to come in with the goal of supporting that individual and not trying to assume control or take over the situation,” Sikaria says.
If you want to support your loved one, Sikaria says you can:
- Help them write down their questions prior to the appointment.
- Talk to them before the appointment to learn if they even want to ask the oncologist about their prognosis.
- Provide an extra set of ears and take notes during the appointment.
- Trust that the oncologist is developing the best care plan for the patient, rather than offering your own ideas on supplements or treatments.
Don’t: Offer Diet Advice
You may be inclined to investigate whether diet or other lifestyle factors contributed to your loved one’s diagnosis, but this is not helpful.
Breast cancer development is complex, and as many as 10% of breast cancer cases are hereditary. Age, being born female, dense breast tissue, and genetic factors all increase risk. While certain lifestyle factors also contribute to breast cancer risk, having a poor diet does not automatically mean someone will develop cancer.
“All of us will blame ourselves first, so please do not do anything to help us blame ourselves,” Bond says.
Don’t: Pretend Like They Don’t Have Cancer
Metastatic breast cancer is a permanent part of your loved one’s life. You will have to balance acknowledging their disease while also respecting their boundaries.
“We didn’t ask to have this disease,” Bond says. “It doesn’t mean that we did something wrong, but the truth is the truth, which is that we have this disease forever.”
Even if your loved one is in remission or has no evidence of disease, like Bond, cancer still touches every aspect of their life.
“I just wish that people would stop expecting us to forget about the cancer and be done with it when we’re metastatic,” Bond says. “Sorry, we don’t get that option.”
PEOPLE
Health
Three keys to cutting your risk of heart attack and stroke
Sleep, physical activity and diet are key lifestyle behaviours that influence the risk of cardiovascular disease and premature death.
Most cardiovascular prevention guidelines – such as recommendations to get at least 150 minutes a week of moderate‑intensity exercise or to follow a healthy dietary pattern like the DASH diet – have been built largely on evidence from studies in which these lifestyle behaviours were examined in isolation.
In real life, though, sleep, physical activity and nutrition are tightly interconnected, with changes in one often affecting the others.
Poor sleep, for example, can disrupt the secretion of appetite hormones, influencing food choices and calorie intake. Lack of sleep can also reduce the motivation to exercise as a result of fatigue.
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Diet, too, can influence sleep quality and energy for physical activity.
Now a new study, published March 26, investigated the relationship between all three lifestyle behaviours simultaneously and the risk of a major cardiovascular event, including heart attack, stroke and heart failure.
Turns out, you don’t need to completely overhaul your lifestyle to improve your cardiovascular health.
According to the findings, making small concurrent changes to daily sleep, physical activity and diet can have a surprisingly positive impact – one that’s at least as powerful as much larger changes to a single behaviour alone.
The latest research
The new study, published in the European Journal of Preventive Cardiology, set out to determine how combined variations in sleep, physical activity and diet influence the risk of heart attack, stroke and heart failure.
The researchers also aimed to identify the minimum combined improvements in these lifestyle behaviours associated with a clinically meaningful reduction in cardiovascular risk.
To do so, they analyzed data from 53,242 UK Biobank participants, average age 63, who were followed for eight years. The UK Biobank is a large-scale biomedical database and research resource containing health-related information from 503,317 participants across the U.K.
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Sleep (hours/day) and moderate- to vigorous- intensity physical activity (minutes/day) were measured using wearable devices.
Diet was assessed through a food frequency questionnaire; the data was then used to calculate participants’ diet quality scores.
The scoring system emphasized a higher intake of vegetables, fruit, whole grains, fish, dairy and healthy oils and a lower intake of refined grains, red and processed meats and sugary beverages.
Scores for each food category ranged from 0 (unhealthiest) to 10 (healthiest) for a total possible diet quality score of 100 points.
The findings
During the eight-year follow-up period, 2,034 major cardiovascular events occurred, which included 932 heart attacks, 584 strokes and 518 heart failure events.
A combined daily increase of as little as 11 minutes of sleep, 4.5 minutes of moderate- to vigorous-intensity physical activity and a modest increase of three diet quality score points (an additional one quarter-cup of vegetables) was tied to a 10 per cent lower risk of a major cardiovascular event.
This was in comparison to people with the lowest levels of sleep (5.5 hours/day), physical activity (7.9 minutes/day) and diet quality score (37 points).
The researchers also identified an “optimal” lifestyle behaviour combination that offered substantial cardiovascular risk reduction.
Compared to the least healthy levels, getting eight to nine hours of sleep per night, at least 42 minutes of moderate- to vigorous-intensity physical activity per day and having a moderate diet quality score was associated with 57 per cent lower risk of major cardiovascular events.
The findings held even after accounting for a wide range of factors, including age, sex, smoking, alcohol use, education, socioeconomic status, medication use and overall health.
Strengths, caveats
The study is credited for analyzing all three lifestyle behaviours together, reflecting how they interact in real life.
As well, sleep and physical activity were measured using wrist‑worn accelerometers, which provide much greater precision than self‑reported data.
By identifying the minimum combined changes in sleep, physical activity and diet linked to a clinically meaningful reduction in major cardiovascular events shifts the emphasis to feasible lifestyle improvements.
How much do you know about healthy eating? Take our nutrition quiz
The study’s main limitation was its observational design which can’t prove making these lifestyle changes will directly lower the risk of heart attack, stroke or heart failure.
The researchers noted that multibehaviour lifestyle intervention trials are needed to evaluate the effectiveness of small, achievable lifestyle changes for preventing major cardiovascular events.
Key takeaways
Even so, the new findings are relevant because they show that heart health isn’t all‑or‑nothing.
Small, doable changes in sleep, exercise and diet can add up, making cardiovascular prevention feel more achievable and less overwhelming for many people.
The findings don’t contradict established advice such as exercising regularly or following heart‑healthy eating patterns, though. Instead, they help explain why people may benefit even when they fall short of prescribed targets, and why partial adherence still matters.
What’s more, the findings align closely with guidance from the Canadian Heart and Stroke Foundation and the American Heart Association, which emphasizes that small, sustainable lifestyle changes add up over time and can meaningfully reduce cardiovascular risk.
Heart health improves through cumulative progress, not daily perfection.
The Globe and Mail
Health
What you need to know before taking weight-loss drugs
Weight-loss drugs are not the quick fix solution that many people believe, especially if you hope to keep the pounds off in the long-term.
Sarah Le Brocq has direct experience of the transformative effects of weight-loss drugs. She has lived with obesity for most of her adult life and tried numerous diets. “Anything that came out, I thought, ‘I’ll try that because that might work for me’.” Unfortunately, the weight always came back, she told the BBC’s Inside Health.
After taking weight-loss drugs for more than two years, she has lost almost eight stone (51kg/112lb). “All of a sudden I wasn’t thinking about food anymore,” she says. “I’ve just got more energy, I’m doing things I couldn’t do before… it’s kind of given me a new freedom in life again.”
Millions of people like Sarah are now accessing medications like semaglutide and tirzepatide, better known by their popular brand names Ozempic and Mounjaro. The numbers of people on weight-loss medication is only likely to increase as new drugs appear on the market too, including pills rather than the current jabs.
It’s clear that these drugs are opening up a new era in the treatment of obesity. The condition, is now a “mitigatable” issue, David Cummings, professor of medicine at the University of Washington tells me. “They are the closest thing I’ve seen to miracle drugs”.
Other academics, however, warn that we risk losing sight of the need for behavioural change, especially as weight tends to be regained quickly when people stop taking the drugs.
So what should anyone planning to use weight-loss medication consider before they start?
How they work
Weight-loss drugs work by suppressing an individual’s appetite by mimicking hormones that tell our body when it is full. The most common are known as glucagon-like peptide 1, or GLP-1, and glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide, or GIP.
The drugs bind to specialised molecules on the surface of our cells known as GLP-1 and GIP receptors, which play a key role in telling our body when it has had enough food.
Typically someone taking these drugs will begin to lose weight within the first few weeks. Although the drugs are only approved for weight loss in people with obesity, there is a rapidly growing private market for those not considered clinically obese.
Their popularity has been rising because they are extremely effective, with weight loss of between 14-20% in 72 weeks. But about 10-15% of people lose very little weight, so called “non-responders“.
GLP-1s are like “a chemical shield” that protects individuals against our “modern obesogenic environment, filled with cheap, calorie-dense foods”, says Naveed Sattar, a professor of cardiometabolic medicine at the University of Glasgow and leads the UK Government’s Obesity Healthcare Goals programme. He has also consulted on medical trials with several companies who produce weight-loss drugs but does not own any shares.
“There’s food everywhere,” he says – and within half an hour anyone “can pick up the phone and order 10,000 calories of food”.
If you stop, you’ll gain weight
If someone living with obesity starts to take weight-loss drugs, they need to consider that they may be on the drug long-term, says Cummings, who runs a weight management programme for individuals with obesity who have BMIs of 50 and above.
A common question he is asked by his patients before they start taking a weight-loss drug is how long they will be on it. Typically, they stop taking the drugs after about a year, he says. One analysis of scientific studies involving more than 9,000 patients indicated the average treatment duration was 39 weeks. People believe they can continue to lose weight using their willpower, he says, but the evidence suggests that is not the case.
People stop for various reasons, either due to the expense of treatment, their insurers stopping coverage or individuals not wishing to be on drugs for a prolonged period of time, Cummings has found.
And when people do stop the drugs, their weight tends to rebound. A recent study found that weight regain happens up to four times more quickly after stopping weight-loss drugs compared to someone ending a weight-loss programme that focuses on changing their behaviour.
Another study found that those on weight-loss drugs gained 1.5kg (3.3lbs) eight weeks after they stopped the medication, with their weight continuing to climb with the more time that passed. The same study also found that other health concerns, such as high blood pressure, also returns. New research has also found that people who stop taking weight-loss drugs gain back around 60% of the weight they lost a year later.
It returns quickly because of something researchers call “food noise“, which consists of persistent and intrusive thought around food, says Sattar.
Hormones play a role too. When an individual tries to lose weight, it triggers a powerful hormonal response that tells your body to regain the weight you lost. Cummings explains that because of this, the brain interprets a calorie drop as an energy deficiency, so after stopping weight-loss drugs, hormones that stimulate appetite increase while the rate at which you burn energy – the metabolic rate – decreases. “If these biological defences are strong enough, they can blunt the drug’s effectiveness,” he says.
Lifestyle change
Sattar has observed that for a small proportion of people who make lifestyle changes, it may be possible to reduce the dose or use the drug intermittently instead. Some really do make “fundamental changes in their diet”, he says.
“Others might need it at a lower dose than they would when they started. But the majority will probably still need some dose of the drug because the [food] environment is still the same.”
There’s also increasing concern that individuals are taking weight-loss medication as a substitute for making life-style changes – even though evidence shows that modifying lifestyle in combination with weight-loss drugs is what will lead to greater weight loss.
Experts have recently cautioned in a scientific review of the evidence that when there’s a lack of behavioural and lifestyle support for those on weight-loss drugs, it can leave individuals vulnerable to nutritional deficiencies. “We need to make sure people are getting enough protein and are getting all the vitamins and minerals they need,” says Marie Spreckley a nutrition and behavioural scientist at Cambridge University and lead author of the report. “You don’t want to have longer-term unintended consequences, like frailty and muscle loss. We don’t want to replace one health concern with another.”
Because these medications cause a dramatic appetite reduction, patients tend to eat less overall, she and her colleagues note. This can lead to a “missed opportunity” if patients are not supported long-term and their food choices remain poor.
No quick fix
The World Health Organization has therefore stated that medication alone won’t “reverse the obesity challenge”. Early interventions, screening and creating healthier environments are also needed, the organisation has stated in its guidelines on using GLP-1 drugs.
This is easier when people are still taking the drugs, Sattar says. “You have more mental space to think about your diet.”
But behavioural change is extremely challenging, says Amanda Daley, a professor of behavioural medicine at Loughborough University in the UK. She says there needs to be better communication with patients about how quickly they can regain weight once they stop taking GLP-1 medication.
Obesity is a chronic, relapsing condition, she says, which means it cannot be “cured” with a drug alone. That’s why additional support and “wraparound care” is key to ensure patients make dietary changes as well as increasing their physical activity.
It’s unclear whether private providers are providing this crucial additional support, she says, which she finds concerning since so many people access the drugs privately and it is hard to monitor continuation of care.
Micro-nudges help change behaviour
To overcome some of this – researchers at Stanford have looked at how they can help support and encourage lifestyle changes. In one recent study, researchers tested whether small nudges – or “microsteps” – could help encourage healthy behavioural change for those taking GLP-1 medications.
The tiny changes focused on nutrition, physical activity, sleep and stress management. Crucially, the microsteps were small and manageable, such as swapping sugary drinks for water, no longer drinking coffee after lunch, taking a deep breath when stressed or popping outside for five minutes.
They found these helped improve behavioural expectations. It’s this “expectation” that’s a first necessary step for behavioural change, says Maya Adam, a clinical associate professor of paediatrics at Stanford School of Medicine, who was involved in the study.
“Achieving your best health involves a lot more than pharmacotherapy alone,” she says. “We found that giving people these little nudges may be very effective.” She calls these steps “too small to fail” because even small daily changes and habits make a real difference over time.
Side-effects
These kind of interventions are crucial to help give people the tools they need to enact change, Daley says, especially considering the known side effects. These include gastrointestinal issues. There has also been an observed increase in pancreatitis and gallstones. Muscle loss is another concern, especially among individuals who are not exercising. Recently a study found links to bone and joint conditions too.
While we now have several years of data on the effectiveness of GLP-1 drugs, we don’t yet know what the long-term outlook will be or whether the results will wear off over time. There is also a lack of data on how these drugs affect pregnancy outcomes or future generations, as the advice is not to take weight-loss drugs during pregnancy.
But given the negative health outcomes for those living with obesity, the side effects pale in comparison, both Sattar and Cummings say. This is particularly the case for individuals with multiple weight-related conditions. Heart disease, cancer and stroke are the leading causes of death worldwide – and all are linked to obesity.
A changing landscape
What is clear is that the landscape for weight-loss medication is rapidly evolving.
There are other health benefits too beyond weight loss. In one major study involving two million people, the drugs were linked to better heart health, fewer infections, lower risk of drug abuse and lower incidences of dementia. It’s also been shown to improve sleep apnoea, arthritis and substance abuse.
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