
Gemma Collins's weight loss jab Instagram ad banned by watchdog
The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) ruled against the ads, making it 'crystal clear' that all injectable forms of weight-loss medication were prescription-only and therefore could not advertised to the public.
The crackdown has seen a total of nine rulings against the adverts, including one featuring TV personality Gemma Collins.
In December, the ASA warned businesses and individuals who were targeting members of the public with ads for the medicines.
It said no one operating in the industry could say they had not been warned that weight-loss prescription-only medicines 'must not be promoted to the public'.
The ads banned this week include an Instagram post by Collins, posted on January 6, which promoted the weight-loss service Yazen.
In a video, Collins said: 'I'm starting this year two sizes down, thanks to Yazen's weight loss app and medication. It's really quick and easy to get started with Yazen, it has absolutely changed my life… I finally found something that actually I lose weight on.'
She added: 'Yes, there's reports and stuff. And I'm not telling anyone to go on this medication, but it is prescribed on the NHS.'
Two complainants challenged whether the ad breached rules because it promoted prescription-only medication to the public.
Yazen said the post had been intended to share information about their 'holistic, responsible approach to weight loss', and had not been intended to focus solely on medication.
Following notification of the complaint, and in agreement with Collins, the post has been amended to remove any reference to prescription-only medications.
Yazen said they would ensure that future posts were compliant with the advertising code.
Collins said she took her responsibilities under the advertising code seriously and strove to comply with them.
She accepted that her posts had promoted the Yazen weight-loss service and app, and said Yazen would approve any marketing materials she might post in future, and she would follow any guidance that the ASA provided.
The ASA also banned an ad for prescription-only weight-loss medication posted by CheqUp, which read: 'No GP or pharmacy visit, just a 2-minute online consultation.'
CheqUp told the ASA that they believed the ad had been created in line with what had become widespread industry practice in the weight-loss sector.
They assured the ASA that the ad would not appear again.
Other providers who have had their ads banned include pharmacyonline.co.uk, HealthExpress.co.uk, Juniper UK, Cloud Pharmacy, and Phlo Clinic and SemaPen.
The ASA said the rulings established the advertising of named weight-loss drugs such as Wegovy, Mounjaro, Ozempic and Saxenda was banned, as was the use of various claims such as 'obesity treatment jab' and 'weight loss pen'.
In April, the ASA said a search in January found around 1,800 unique paid-for weight-loss ads which were identified as potentially advertising a prescription-only medicine.
It has published a joint Enforcement Notice with the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency and General Pharmaceutical Council, making clear that ads for named weight-loss prescription-only medications are prohibited, including online, on social media and by influencers.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
7 minutes ago
- The Sun
Wes Streeting offers resident doctors better work perks in last-gasp bid to avoid strikes
WES Streeting has offered greater work perks to junior doctors in a last-gasp bid to avert damaging NHS strikes - but is holding firm on pay. The Health Secretary wrote to the British Medical Association yesterday urging them to call off walkouts due to start Friday. 2 A quarter of a million appointments could be impacted if militant union bosses refuse to cancel their five days of industrial action. While their eye-watering 29 per cent pay demands have been rebuffed - along with any salary increase - The Sun understands concessions have been made on working conditions. It involves limiting the costs borne by resident doctors at work, with reports many were having to buy some their own hospital kit. Improvements to resident doctors' training rotations and faster career progression are also on the table - but wiping parts of their student debt has been ruled out. A source close to the dispute last night said the talks were 'finely balanced' and that negotiations would go down to the wire. The BMA is expected to respond to Mr Streeting's latest olive branch today. Analysis by the Policy Exchange think tank found that the five days of industrial action threatened by the BMA could reduce inpatient activity for the month of July by 4.5 per cent and outpatient activity by 8.7 per cent. The strikes would threaten Sir Keir Starmer's target of 65 per cent of patient treatment plans being completed within 18 weeks from next Spring. Meanwhile, the cost of paying consultants to cover resident doctor rotas could hit £87.46m. Resident doctors are clinging to demands for a 29 per cent pay rise, with the BMA having amassed a £1m war chest ahead of Friday's action. It comes despite the NHS staff having already received a staggering 22 per cent hike last year. Tory Shadow Business Secretary Andrew Griffith blasted: 'Labour has bent over backwards for the unions every chance they have got with no-strings-attached pay rises. 'It is no surprise they are now running riot. They are out of control. 'Thanks to Labour's weakness, we are now facing a summer of discontent.' Ex-Tory Leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith added: 'The unions are Labour's paymasters at the end of the day. 'They're getting their payback by being allowed to run riot.' 2


The Independent
13 minutes ago
- The Independent
The new changes to the infected blood compensation scheme that will benefit victims
Victims of the infected blood scandal will see new changes made to the compensation scheme, officials have announced. It follows a heavily critical report on the way people were being compensated. Earlier this month, the Infected Blood Inquiry made a series of recommendations to improve compensation for people who were both infected with contaminated blood and people affected as a result. Responding to the report, the government said that it was immediately accepting a number of the recommendations and will consult on others. It is not rejecting any of the recommendations. And the Infected Blood Compensation Authority (IBCA) announced it will accept all recommendations relating to the compensation authority. Earlier this month, the probe into the scandal said victims had been 'harmed further' by failures in the compensation scheme. And the process has begun to create a 'long overdue' memorial for thousands of victims of the scandal, dubbed the worst treatment disaster in the history of the NHS. Sir Brian Langstaff, chairman of the inquiry, said the number of people who have been compensated to date is 'profoundly unsatisfactory' as he called for 'faster and fairer' compensation for victims. He said all victims should be able to register for compensation and should not have to wait to be called forward to start their claim. The IBCA confirmed it will create a registration process. The Government has also accepted a number of recommendations including: Affected people 's claims will not 'die with them' and their payments will be passed on to their estates; People infected with HIV before 1982 will be compensated – they were previously ineligible; The requirement for people with hepatitis to provide a date of diagnosis will be abolished. Meanwhile, it said it will consult on a number of issues including: how the scheme recognises the impact of interferon treatment for hepatitis which has been linked to severe side effects; how the scheme recognises severe psychological harm; and it will also consult on the scope of how victims of unethical research are to be compensated. Elsewhere, the Government announced further interim payments to the estates of people who have died. And it also confirmed that Clive Smith, president of the Haemophilia Society, will be the chairman of the Infected Blood Memorial Committee. Mr Smith will lead the work to create a national memorial to the victims of the scandal and will 'support memorials in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland'. Cabinet Office Minister Nick Thomas-Symonds said: 'When I appeared before the inquiry in May, I said that I would take a constructive approach and, carefully, consider the issues that had been put to me. 'I have concentrated on removing barriers to quicker compensation, working with IBCA, and am determined to deliver improvements based on this new report. 'Our focus as we move forward must be working together to not only deliver justice to all those impacted, but also to restore trust in the state to people who have been let down too many times.' In a statement to the Commons, Mr Thomas-Symonds told MPs he would go further than the inquiry's recommendation on affected states. He said: 'The inquiry recommended that where someone who would be an eligible affected person sadly died or dies between the 21 of May 2024 and 31 of December 2029, their claim will not die with them, but becomes part of the estate. 'I'm actually going to extend that by a further two years to the 31st of December 2031.' David Foley, chief executive of IBCA, added: 'The community is at the heart of everything we do. We can only grow the service, and implement these new recommendations by listening to and acting on the views of the community. 'Some of the recommendations will take longer to implement, which we know may cause frustration and upset for some in the community. 'We will always act with transparency. That is why I can confirm that we will create a registration process, so that the community can tell us that they intend to make a claim. 'We will also develop the service for all groups, paying the first claims before the end of 2025. And we will improve transparency by sharing more of our processes, documents, data and plans on our website.' Incoming memorial committee chairman Mr Smith said: 'A memorial to the thousands who have died from the contaminated blood scandal is long overdue. 'It is a great privilege to be asked to lead this important work on behalf of the community. 'I look forward to working with the whole community across the UK on building an appropriate memorial to those we have lost and to act as a lasting memorial to the nation of what can happen when patient safety is not prioritised.' More than 30,000 people in the UK were infected with HIV and hepatitis C after they were given contaminated blood and blood products between the 1970s and early 1990s. More than 3,000 people have died as a result, and survivors are living with lifelong health implications. The Infected Blood Inquiry published its main report on the scandal in May last year, and a compensation scheme was announced a day later. But in the same week a general election was called and officials from the IBCA have described how in the early days of the organisation it consisted of two men, a laptop and a phone. Some £11.8 billion has been allocated to compensate victims, administered by the IBCA. As of July 15, 587 people have had their compensation paid totalling more than £400 million.


BBC News
35 minutes ago
- BBC News
Vaccine scepticism affecting bluetongue jab uptake for sheep and cows
Vaccine scepticism and misinformation is affecting uptake of bluetongue jabs needed to protect farm animals, senior vets have shared with the BBC suggest fewer than 1% of Wales' eight million sheep have been vaccinated so far against the potentially fatal of livestock from England into Wales has been restricted in recent weeks, with new cases of the disease subsequently found near the border in fear the impact could be "catastrophic" should bluetongue take hold in Wales, where livestock farms dominate the agricultural landscape. Spread by midges, bluetongue presents no threat to food safety or human health, but can have serious consequences for ruminant livestock like sheep and and farming organisations are using this week's Royal Welsh Agricultural Show in Llanelwedd, Powys, to push for greater uptake of available show - one of Europe's biggest agricultural events - has banned sheep and cattle from England and Scotland this year, as part of efforts to try and keep the virus out of Wales for as long as government restrictions also limit the movement of sheep across the border without a negative test, while cattle must be fully vaccinated. The latest bluetongue outbreak began in the Netherlands in 2023, where tens of thousands of sheep have blown over from the continent began infecting livestock in the south east of England restrictions helped slow the virus' spread, but as of 1 July the whole of England was classed as a restricted zone for temperatures mean the midge population is now active and the first cases this year were confirmed on 11 July after pre-movement tests on two cattle in has since been revealed these animals were due to be sent on to Wales. "It's been seen as something that's a long way away - but now there's a real possibility that it could get into Wales," warned Phil Thomas, of the Wales Veterinary Science Centre (WVSC)."There's been a lot of misinformation, a lot of downplaying of the disease and I think post-Covid there's also a lot of vaccine scepticism out there," he fact the virus had arrived in less livestock dense parts of the UK to begin with had helped limit the spread, he monitoring of affected farms in the south east of England had revealed worrying implications should the disease reach the UK's sheep and cattle farming heartlands.A recent WVSC webinar for Welsh vets heard of farms in Norfolk experiencing long term fertility issues in herds and flocks which had been infected."There was a sheep farm where 30% of their animals were sick, around 5% died but surviving rams were infertile and the ewes were giving birth to deformed lambs," Mr Thomas example involved a suckler herd of 120 cows where fewer than 60 calves were born the year after infection."It's a big economic loss, and that's a lot of dead stock if it gets into the stock-dense areas that we have in Wales and the borders," he added. An industry wide social media campaign has been launched in recent weeks, with Welsh vets and farmers making an appeal for others to consider vaccinating their livestock."There's been real concern over lack of uptake of the vaccine," explained farm vet Sara Pedersen and member of the Wales Animal Health and Welfare Framework were coming up against "quite a bit of misinformation" such as people saying "it's harmless and it won't reach Wales", she said."We really felt we needed to cut through that and make the most of the opportunity of keeping it out for as long as possible."When it comes it could have catastrophic effects," she warned. How many animals have been vaccinated? The latest figures shared with the BBC showed the vaccine had been prescribed by vets for 154,260 animals in Wales, including 103,970 cattle, 48,904 sheep, 200 camelids (llamas and alpacas) and 1,186 goats. Animal keepers themselves have reported vaccination of 79,694 animals, including 48,403 cattle, 30,898 sheep, and 393 others, including camelids and goats. At Llandovery livestock market in Carmarthenshire, none of the farmers BBC Wales spoke to had vaccinated their animals so far."I'm right down in west Wales so haven't thought of vaccinating yet," explained Alan Jones."But I am keeping an eye on it and reading the news all the time.""We're lucky that bluetongue hasn't affected this area yet," added Gruff Jones, who was worried about how much he would have to spend on vaccination."There are so many costs involved in farming now with fertiliser and feed and everything - add that on and there won't be any profit at all," he Page felt the Welsh government should offer to pay towards the costs of the jabs."There should be more help for farmers to vaccinate their sheep," he said. Jabs cost between £2.50 and £3 per sheep and between £5 and £6 for Roberts of the National Sheep Association (NSA) in Wales said the organisation was urging its members to consider vaccinating their flocks."Even if it ends up that there are not many outbreaks this year, you're still putting in protection for next year - it's well worth doing," she also called for research into whether the vaccines go further than alleviating symptoms in sheep and prevent viremia - circulation of the virus in the blood - to be might allow for the prospect of an easing of cross-border movement restrictions for vaccinated sheep."I'm hoping that information does come through sooner rather than later," she said, adding it would further incentivise uptake of the NSA is asking the Welsh government to set out a plan for how it intends to deal with the disruption to trade along the border as a result of the restrictions."It's coming into peak sales time now with breeding rams and ewes, we need an announcement soon," Ms Roberts said. Deputy first minister Huw Irranca-Davies said the Welsh government was doing its "very best to hold the disease back", buying time for farmers to vaccinate their he warned "the wolf is at our door". He said he was being updated daily by officials and Wales' chief veterinary officer and the Welsh government would keep movement restrictions under review throughout the summer. "But I just want to say very frankly and honestly that every time we make an adjustment it increases cumulatively the risk of bluetongue incursion into Wales," he said.