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Coffee warning for anyone using new weight-loss drugs
A pharmacist says people may not be fully aware of the rules they have to follow
News
ByNeil ShawAssistant Editor
- 07:32, 14 JUL 2026
A pharmacist has warned that patients interested in the new Wegovy pill may not be getting the full picture on the strict rules, side effects, and safety risks linked to the once-daily tablet. The tablet, which contains semaglutide, has been approved in the UK for weight loss and weight management, creating a new oral form of a prescription-only GLP-1 medicine
But Hira Malik, superintendent pharmacist of Oushk Pharmacy, sauis peopkle are overlooking the practical realities of taking the medicine safely. “The new Wegovy pill sounds simple because people are used to taking tablets,” Hira said. “But this is not a normal morning tablet you can take with coffee, breakfast, or your other medicines. It has strict instructions; it can still cause side effects, and switching from injections should never be treated as a DIY decision
“The danger is that patients hear ‘needle-free’ and assume ‘easier’. For some people, a tablet may fit their routine well. For others, it could actually be easier to get wrong.”
Hira added: “We must remember that this is not just an over-the-counter ‘slimming pill’,” she said. “It is a prescription medicine that should only be supplied after appropriate assessment by a qualified healthcare professional.Patients should be told how to take it, what side effects to watch for, how switching works, and how to avoid illegal or unsafe sellers
“The biggest danger is not the tablet itself, but poor information, rushed decisions and patients being made to feel that weight-loss medication is just another online purchase.The safest providers will be those that slow the process down enough to ask the right questions before treatment begins, and continue supporting patients after treatment starts.”
Hira has shared five things patients may not be told clearly enough about the new Wegovy pill
1.Your morning coffee could affect the dose you actually absorb
“The morning routine is one of the biggest barriers to taking the new Wegovy pill effectively. The tablets need to be taken on an empty stomach, swallowed whole with a small amount of plain water, and followed by a waiting period of at least 30 minutes before eating, drinking tea or coffee, or taking other oral medicines
“Semaglutide is difficult for the stomach to absorb because it is a peptide-based medicine. The tablet includes an absorption enhancer to help it pass through the stomach lining, but food, drink, and timing can all interfere with that process
“This leaves much less room for everyday disruption. Coffee first thing, other morning medication, eating before leaving the house, shift work or regular travel can all make the routine difficult to follow
“Not following the instructions once is not something to panic about, but if it happens repeatedly, the medicine may not be absorbed as expected, and patients may not get the treatment effect they think they are getting.”
2.Needle-free does not mean side-effect-free
“Another misconception is that a pill will automatically be gentler. The tablet removes the needle, but it does not remove the medicine’s side-effect profile. Patients may still experience nausea, diarrhoea, constipation, vomiting, indigestion or reflux, especially when starting treatment or moving through dose changes
“Patients need to know what can be managed, what needs pharmacist or prescriber advice, and what should be treated as urgent. Severe or persistent abdominal pain, repeated vomiting, signs of dehydration, fainting, or symptoms that feel unusual should not be ignored.”
3.You cannot simply swap from the injection to the tablet by matching the numbers
“An important fact is the body absorbs 100% of an injection, whereas an oral tablet only gives around 2% of the medication – so the dose numbers do not compare simply. A patient cannot look at the milligrams on their pen and decide what tablet dose they should take. A prescriber needs to review the patient’s current medication, dose, side-effect history, medical background, weight-management progress and daily routine before deciding whether a switch is appropriate
“Patients should not overlap treatments, double up doses, skip prescribed steps, or follow switching advice from forums or social media. Any change in formulation, dose or schedule should be made through their prescriber.”
4.Fake Wegovy pills may be harder for patients to spot
“Fake weight-loss injections have already been identified in the UK, but tablets may create a different kind of risk. Pharmacy bodies and policymakers have warned that weight-loss pills could be easier to copy, easier to ship, and easier to sell discreetly online. A patient may think they are buying a legitimate weight-loss pill, but counterfeit medicines can contain the wrong ingredient, too little active ingredient, too much active ingredient, no active ingredient at all, or substances that should never be swallowed.
“With an injection pen, there may be packaging, device, and handling details that make a fake easier to question. With a tablet, patients may simply be looking at a blister pack and a small pill, which can make identifying a counterfeit much more difficult
“Always remember to pause before you buy. Unusually low prices, no proper consultation, pressure to buy quickly, sellers on social media or marketplace platforms, poor packaging, spelling mistakes, no pharmacy registration details, or a provider that does not ask proper clinical questions should all be treated as red flags
“If something feels rushed, unusually easy, or too cheap for a prescription medicine, patients should step back and check they are dealing with a legitimate, registered pharmacy.”
5.A pill still needs a proper care plan
“The tablet does not replace the need for safe prescribing, monitoring and long-term support. GLP-1 treatment should sit within a wider care plan that considers nutrition, hydration, protein intake, fibre, physical activity, side effects, dose changes and maintenance. Reduced appetite can be part of how these medicineswork, buteating too little or skipping meals can leave people feeling weak, tired, nauseous or light-headed. Responsible care is not just about issuing a prescription. Patients need to understand how to take the medicine, what to expect, when to ask for help and how to protect their longer-term health.”
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