Can Ozempic Cure Addiction?

Miracle fix or mood killer? Internet splits as booze cravings vanish

TLDR: A diabetes/weight-loss drug, Ozempic, may also quiet alcohol cravings, with one woman calling it “alcohol noise” turned down. The comments are split between miracle-cure hype and warnings it’s just temporary suppression, plus a spicy debate over whether GLP‑1s could become productivity boosters.

A viral story about Mary—the woman who says Ozempic turned down her “alcohol noise” and even gave her the courage to leave a bad marriage—has the internet clutching its bar carts. Ozempic (semaglutide), a GLP‑1 drug that started as a diabetes treatment and became a weight‑loss blockbuster, is now being gossiped about as an anti-addiction secret sauce. The receipts are flying: one user dropped an archive link, while another shared a Substack roundup saying the anecdotes are piling up.

Cue the split: Miracle believers are cheering “goodbye, nightly cocktails,” while skeptics hiss “temporary suppression,” warning old habits rocket back when the shots stop (the medicine shots, not the tequila). Some are spooked that GLP‑1s might also mute things you actually want—hobbies, joy, even motivation—turning it into the internet’s new “anti-fun pill.”

Then came the meme-y chaos: people joked it’s the ultimate “shots vs shots” hack, asked if this is Ritalin for procrastination, and debated whether CEOs will start handing it out as a productivity booster. For the uninitiated, GLP‑1 stands for “glucagon-like peptide 1,” a hormone that can dial down appetite—and maybe cravings. The drama is real, the data’s messy, and the comments are sizzling with hot takes, hope, and hangover humor.

Key Points

  • A woman with longstanding alcohol use enrolled in a blinded clinical trial of semaglutide for alcohol addiction after hearing about Ozempic’s effects on drinking.
  • Within weeks, she lost interest in alcohol and eventually stopped drinking, describing reduced “alcohol noise.”
  • Dose escalation led to profound appetite suppression and a 55-pound weight loss over five months, prompting early discontinuation of the drug.
  • After stopping, alcohol cravings returned but were more manageable; she maintained weight loss via diet and exercise.
  • Researchers expressed enthusiasm about GLP-1 drugs’ potential for addiction treatment; GLP-1s mimic a hormone linked to digestion and act on pancreatic and GI receptors.

Hottest takes

“It’s not the cure. It’s temporary suppression” — lnsru
“No one knows of course, but it’s looking likely — anecdotal data is piling up” — glp1guide
“are these drugs performance enhancers?” — geremiiah
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