Illustration of a couple in a kitchen reviewing reduced grocery spending after starting Ozempic-like GLP-1 drugs, per Cornell study.
Illustration of a couple in a kitchen reviewing reduced grocery spending after starting Ozempic-like GLP-1 drugs, per Cornell study.
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Cornell study links GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy to lower household food spending

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Households that start GLP-1 appetite-suppressing medications such as Ozempic and Wegovy reduce food spending within months, including at grocery stores and limited-service restaurants, according to new research from Cornell University based on linked survey responses and transaction data.

New research from Cornell University suggests that GLP-1 receptor agonists—medicines originally developed for diabetes and now widely used for weight loss—are associated with lower household spending on food.

The study, published in the Journal of Marketing Research, linked repeated survey reports of GLP-1 use with transaction records from Numerator, a market-research firm that tracks grocery and restaurant purchases for a nationally representative panel of about 150,000 U.S. households. Researchers used the combined dataset to compare purchasing patterns before and after households reported starting the medications, and to benchmark adopters against similar households that did not report using the drugs.

Within six months of starting a GLP-1 medication, average household grocery spending fell by 5.3%, the study found. Among higher-income households, grocery spending dropped by more than 8%. Spending at fast-food restaurants, coffee shops and other limited-service eateries declined by about 8%.

“For households that stayed on the medication, lower food spending continued for at least a year,” said Sylvia Hristakeva, an assistant professor of marketing at Cornell, adding that the magnitude of the reduction “gradually became smaller” over time.

“The data show clear changes in food spending following adoption,” Hristakeva said. “After discontinuation, the effects become smaller and harder to distinguish from pre-adoption spending patterns.”

The declines were concentrated in categories often associated with cravings and high calorie density. Spending on savory snacks fell by about 10%, with similar reductions in sweets, baked goods and cookies, the study reported. Purchases of basic items such as bread, meat and eggs also declined.

Only a small number of categories showed increases, led by yogurt, followed by fresh fruit, nutrition bars and meat snacks.

“The main pattern is a reduction in overall food purchases,” Hristakeva said. “Only a small number of categories show increases, and those increases are modest relative to the overall decline.”

The findings add to growing interest among food manufacturers, restaurants and retailers in how rising GLP-1 use may reshape demand. The Cornell researchers said the results raise questions for companies that rely heavily on snack foods and fast food, and for policymakers weighing how medical treatments can influence eating behavior compared with tools such as nutrition labels or food taxes.

What people are saying

Initial reactions on X to the Cornell study focus on households using GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy reducing grocery spending by 5.3% and fast-food spending by 8% within months. Posts from the official Cornell account and users neutrally share the findings, with some highlighting positive economic implications for higher-income households and shifts away from snacks and sweets. No strong negative or skeptical sentiments directly tied to the study were prominent.

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Market data shows that users of GLP-1 weight loss drugs in the US are driving higher sales of premium chocolate, contrary to earlier expectations of declining demand. Households using these medications account for a larger share of chocolate purchases despite reduced overall appetite. This trend highlights a shift toward quality over quantity in indulgences.

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Three Cochrane reviews commissioned by the World Health Organization evaluate GLP-1 receptor agonists like tirzepatide, semaglutide, and liraglutide for weight loss in people with obesity. The drugs show substantial weight reduction compared to placebo, but researchers note limitations in long-term data and industry funding influences. Side effects such as nausea are common, raising questions about broader access and safety.

Researchers at Adelaide University report that salcaprozate sodium (SNAC)—an absorption enhancer used in oral semaglutide tablets—was associated with changes in gut bacteria and inflammation markers in an animal study conducted over 21 days. The authors said the findings do not demonstrate harm in humans but argue that longer-term research is needed as oral options for obesity treatment expand.

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In a rare deep-brain recording study of a woman with severe obesity and loss-of-control eating, tirzepatide — sold as Mounjaro and Zepbound — temporarily silenced activity in a key reward region linked to “food noise,” or intrusive thoughts about food. About five months later, those brain signals and intense food preoccupation reappeared, suggesting the drug’s effects on this patient’s cravings were short‑lived.

Former tennis star Andy Roddick has voiced support for Serena Williams' use of GLP-1 medication in her weight-loss efforts, suggesting it could aid a potential return to the court. Williams has shared how the treatment improved her health, while speculation grows following her inclusion in the anti-doping pool and practice sessions with younger players. Roddick emphasized the benefits for injury prevention during training.

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A prespecified analysis of the SELECT trial reports that weekly semaglutide lowered the risk of heart attacks and strokes by about 20% in adults with established cardiovascular disease and overweight or obesity—even when little weight was lost—suggesting benefits beyond slimming alone.

 

 

 

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