Life without food noise gave Ellen the space to redesign her relationship with eating. She started to read up on nutrition and create a healthy diet that helped fuel her body.
She was on the medication for 16 weeks before she began to taper, cutting down over a period of six weeks. She lost 3st 7lb (22kg).
As she lost more weight, she found she could exercise more and when she was feeling “low”, instead of “going to to the cupboards and filling my face”, she would go for a run.
But when Ellen stopped taking Mounjaro, she began to see her weight creep up, which she says “messed my head up a little bit”.
This is why the right support is crucial, Dr Al-Zubaidi says. The UK’s medicine watchdog, Nice, has recommended that patients, external receive at least a year of ongoing advice and tailored action plans after they’ve stopped treatment, helping them to make practical changes to their lives so they can keep the weight off and most importantly, stay healthy.
But for those who pay for the drugs privately, like Tanya and Ellen, this kind of support is not always guaranteed.
For the past few months, Tanya’s weight has stayed the same, and she feels the medication is having little impact. But she’s not going to come off it, she says.
She’s finally at a weight she feels comfortable with and each time she’s tried to stop, the fear of putting the weight back on quickly becomes too great and she finds a reason to go back on the medication.
“For the first 38 years of my life, I was overweight – now I’m six stone (38kg) lighter,” says Tanya.
“Therefore, there’s part of me that feels like there’s an addiction to keep it going because it makes me feel the way that I feel, it makes me feel in control.”
She stops for a second. Maybe it’s the other way round, she muses, maybe it’s the drug that controls her.