Counterfeit warning. The US FDA, UK MHRA, EMA and WHO have issued multiple public alerts about counterfeit semaglutide and tirzepatide products sold through unregulated online pharmacies, social-media vendors, and some overseas providers. Counterfeit product has caused serious hypoglycaemia, hospitalisation, and death. Only obtain GLP-1 medication from a licensed pharmacy via a real prescription from a qualified physician.
Why GLP-1 Medical Tourism Is Booming
Semaglutide (brand names Ozempic and Wegovy, Novo Nordisk), tirzepatide (Mounjaro and Zepbound, Eli Lilly) and liraglutide (Saxenda) are the most impactful weight-loss medications approved in a generation. Global demand has badly outstripped supply. In many jurisdictions, patients face shortages, restrictive prescribing rules, narrow insurance coverage, or retail pricing above US $1,000 per month.
Countries where GLP-1 is more accessible, less restricted, or materially cheaper — Turkey, Mexico, India, Thailand, and several EU countries — have become destinations for a new category of medical traveller.
What You Are Actually Buying
Legitimate brand-name GLP-1
Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro, Zepbound and Saxenda manufactured by Novo Nordisk or Eli Lilly and distributed through licensed pharmacies. This is the same medication worldwide, with country-specific labelling. Safe provided the pharmacy is real, the cold chain is maintained, and the prescription is legitimate.
Compounded semaglutide or tirzepatide
Some overseas providers sell “compounded” versions prepared by compounding pharmacies. Regulatory status varies. The US FDA has signalled stepping-down allowances for compounded GLP-1 as supply improves. Quality varies dramatically between compounders.
Counterfeit product
This is the serious safety issue. Fake vials, mislabelled doses, non-sterile preparation, incorrect active ingredient, or entirely unknown substances have all been documented. Warning signs: vials offered without prescription, suspiciously low prices, sale via social media or messaging apps, unlabelled or mislabelled packaging.
Complications of GLP-1 Medication
Common side effects
- Nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, constipation, abdominal discomfort.
- Most resolve with time or dose adjustment.
Serious complications
- Acute pancreatitis — severe abdominal pain radiating to the back, vomiting. Requires hospitalisation.
- Gallbladder disease (cholecystitis, gallstones), potentially requiring cholecystectomy.
- Severe gastroparesis — delayed gastric emptying, sometimes persisting after discontinuation. A rare but well-documented complication.
- Ileus and bowel obstruction.
- Dehydration and acute kidney injury from protracted vomiting.
- Severe hypoglycaemia — especially with counterfeit product, mis-dosing, or concurrent insulin/sulfonylurea use.
- Medullary thyroid carcinoma signal in rodent studies — contraindicated in patients with personal or family history of MTC or MEN 2.
- Anaesthesia risk if you have surgery while on GLP-1; elevated aspiration risk if the drug is not stopped with appropriate lead time.
Tell every anaesthesiologist you are on GLP-1 medication. Delayed gastric emptying increases aspiration risk during general anaesthesia. Most anaesthesia societies now recommend holding GLP-1 for a week before elective surgery.
Where Coverage Falls Short
- Travel insurance excludes complications of elective treatment pursued during the trip.
- National health plans will treat acute pancreatitis, bowel obstruction or severe hypoglycaemia as emergencies but will not fund routine follow-up of privately-obtained overseas treatment.
- Private health insurance generally excludes overseas prescribed treatment and its complications.
- The overseas provider typically has no meaningful complication cover once you leave their jurisdiction.
How Medical Travel Complication Insurance Helps
Purpose-built for patients travelling for a planned medical intervention. Depending on the plan, covers hospitalisation abroad for covered complications, emergency medical evacuation, a post-procedure window after you return home, and specialist consultations tied to the complication.
Travelling for GLP-1 access or a supervised weight-loss program? Put medical travel complication insurance in place before you go.
Get Your Quote Ask AvaHow to Vet an Overseas GLP-1 Provider
- Real prescription from a licensed physician — not a nurse, coach, or wellness consultant.
- Licensed pharmacy dispensing the medication. Ask for the pharmacy’s licence number.
- Brand-name product from Novo Nordisk or Eli Lilly, with visible batch number and expiry. Avoid unlabelled or relabelled vials.
- Cold chain integrity. Ozempic and Wegovy require refrigeration. Ask how the product has been stored and transported.
- Supervised titration protocol starting at a low dose (0.25 mg weekly for semaglutide; 2.5 mg for tirzepatide) with gradual escalation.
- Follow-up labs at reasonable intervals.
- Clear contraindication screening — MTC history, MEN 2, pregnancy, severe gastroparesis, severe pancreatitis history.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I buy Ozempic abroad?
Yes, on prescription in many countries. Availability, cost and prescribing rules vary.
Is it safe?
Legitimate brand-name GLP-1 from licensed pharmacies is the same medication as at home. Counterfeits are a serious and documented hazard.
What side effects should I watch for?
Nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea (common); pancreatitis, gallbladder disease, severe gastroparesis, bowel obstruction, severe hypoglycaemia (less common but serious).
Does insurance cover GLP-1 complications from abroad?
Travel insurance and private health insurance typically do not. Medical travel complication insurance is the specific product category.
What about counterfeit product?
Only buy from licensed pharmacies with a legitimate prescription. Avoid social-media vendors, messaging-app sales, or unlabelled vials.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical, insurance or financial advice. Always consult a qualified physician before starting or stopping any medication.
Related reading: Bariatric Surgery Abroad · Gastric Sleeve in Mexico · Bariatric Surgery: Mexico vs Thailand · Medical Tourism Risks · Medical Tourism in Mexico · Medical Tourism in Turkey · Medical Tourism in India