Jackie Goldschneider at the ‘Legends Ball 2022 BravoCon’.Photo: Santiago Felipe/Getty

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - OCTOBER 14: Jackie Goldschneider attends ‘Legends Ball 2022 BravoCon’ at Manhattan Center on October 14, 2022 in New York City. (Photo by Santiago Felipe/Getty Images)

Jackie Goldschneideris criticizing the misuse of the type 2 diabetes drug Ozempic.

On Wednesday, theReal Housewives of New Jerseystar — who has been vocal about herrecovery from a 18-year eating disorder— commented on a recentPEOPLE articleabout Ozempic, an FDA-approved prescription medication for people with type 2 diabetes. It’s one of the brand names for semaglutide, which works in the brain to impact satiety.

Goldschneider, 46, wrote that Ozempic was “an eating disorder in a needle.”

Real Housewives of Orange CountystarTamra Judgequickly responded to her comment adding, “That’s what I said! I can’t believe anyone would put this in their body for anything other than diabetes. It’s not a forever thing and when these girls stop they will go into depression or severe eating disorder!”

Goldschneider said the current trend is “sad and sickening” and she “can’t imagine what will happen if people need to suddenly stop.”

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Jackie Goldschneider, tamra judge

Content creatorand modelRemi Baderrecently shared her own experience with Ozempic after her doctor prescribed her the medication in 2020 because she was pre-diabetic, insulin resistant and gaining weight.

However, Bader said on anepisodeof theNot Skinny But Not Fatpodcast that it wasn’t the best treatment for her as it eventuallyworsened her binge eating, which she’s struggled with for years. She explained that although she was able to lose weight from the medication, when she stopped taking it her binge eating immediately returned.

“They said Ineedthis. And I had a lot of mixed feelings,” she said of being prescribed Ozempic. “A few months later I went off it and got into the bad binging.”

“I saw a doctor and they were like, it’s 100% because I went on Ozempic,” Bader continued. “It was making me think I wasn’t hungry for so long, I lost some weight. I didn’t wanna be obsessed with being on it long term. I was like, I bet the second I got off I’m gonna get starving again. I did, and my binging got so much worse. So then I kind of blamed Ozempic.”

Bader added that she “gained double the weight back” after stopping the medication and she thinks it really should just be used for those with diabetes.

Man preparing semaglutide Ozempic injection.Getty

man preparing Semaglutide Ozempic injection control blood sugar levels

Ania Jastreboff, M.D., PhD., an obesity medicine physician scientist at Yale University, tells PEOPLE that for those who use drugs like Ozempic — or its counterpart Wegovy, which is prescribed for clinical obesity — they have to continue taking the medications if they want to maintain the weight loss because diabetes and obesity are chronic conditions.

Some doctors have expressed frustrationthat Ozempic and Wegovy aren’t getting to people who need them, and the FDA has listed ashortage for both drugs.

“The Hollywood trend is concerning,” Dr. Caroline Apovian, co-director of the Center for Weight Management and Wellness at the Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, recently told PEOPLE. “We’re not talking about stars who need to lose 10 pounds. We’re talking about people who are dying of obesity, are going to die of obesity.”

“You’re taking away from patients with diabetes,” she continued. “We have lifesaving drugs… and the United States public that really needs these drugs can’t get them.”

If you or someone you know is battling an eating disorder, please contact the National Eating Disorders Association (NEDA) at 1-800-931-2237 or go toNationalEatingDisorders.org.

source: people.com