Calm woman injecting Ozempic in a kitchen with Rutgers study papers visible, symbolizing reduced impulsivity.
Calm woman injecting Ozempic in a kitchen with Rutgers study papers visible, symbolizing reduced impulsivity.
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Rutgers study finds GLP-1 drug use is tied to a weaker link between impulsivity and self-reported violence

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A study from Rutgers University reports that adults currently using GLP-1 receptor agonist medications—including semaglutide brands Ozempic and Wegovy—showed a substantially weaker association between impulsivity and self-reported violent behavior than former users. The research, published June 17, 2026 in the journal Criminology, was based on a 2025 U.S. survey and does not establish cause and effect.

Researchers analyzed responses from a 2025 survey of 7,521 adults across the United States, focusing on 821 respondents who reported having used a GLP-1 receptor agonist at some point.

In the study’s main comparisons of current versus former GLP-1 users, the authors reported that the relationship between impulsivity and violent behavior was about 62% weaker among current users. The association between alcohol use and violent behavior was also reported to be about 52% weaker among current users, though the researchers said those alcohol-related results were less consistent in additional sensitivity analyses.

“The strongest finding in the study was that the well-established link between impulsivity and violent behavior was substantially weaker among current GLP-1 users compared to former users,” said Daniel Semenza, the study’s lead author and director of research at Rutgers’ New Jersey Gun Violence Research Center.

Christopher Thomas, an assistant professor at Rutgers University–Camden and a coauthor, said the findings are consistent with the idea that GLP-1 medications could act in a way similar to cognitive behavioral therapy by weakening the pathway from impulse to action, rather than eliminating impulsivity.

The researchers emphasized that the study is observational and cross-sectional, meaning it can identify associations but cannot prove that GLP-1 medications directly reduce violent behavior. They called for longitudinal and experimental research to test whether the relationship holds over time and to clarify potential biological or behavioral mechanisms.

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Initial reactions on X highlight the Rutgers study's findings on GLP-1 drugs weakening impulsivity-violence links, with journalists sharing detailed summaries, users expressing skepticism about causality and crime implications, and neutral comments on brain mechanisms like dopamine effects.

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Illustration of high-risk patients benefiting from GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic with reduced heart risks
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Review finds GLP-1 drugs linked to lower risk of heart attack, stroke and death in high-risk patients

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A large review of cardiovascular outcome trials found that people taking GLP-1 receptor agonists—drugs that include semaglutide (sold as Ozempic)—had a lower risk of major heart-related events than those given placebo. The analysis pooled results from 11 trials involving more than 90,000 participants, with an average follow-up of nearly three years, and reported benefits across patient subgroups including those with and without diabetes.

A large study tracking nearly 100,000 people in Sweden found that GLP-1 receptor agonists like semaglutide, sold as Ozempic and Wegovy, are associated with significantly fewer psychiatric hospital visits and reduced sick days due to mental health issues. Researchers observed drops of up to 47% in various mental health risks during drug use periods. The findings appear in The Lancet Psychiatry.

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A year-long observational study in Japan suggests that people with type 2 diabetes who tend to overeat in response to tempting food cues such as sight and smell may see greater weight loss—and possibly better blood-sugar improvement—after starting GLP-1 receptor agonists, while those with primarily emotional eating patterns show less consistent links to long-term outcomes.

Researchers at Aarhus University report that the hormone GLP-1—mimicked by drugs such as Wegovy—can be measured in the joint fluid of patients with inflammatory arthritis, but only at very low levels. The findings, published in The Lancet Rheumatology, suggest GLP-1–based medicines might eventually be studied for potential direct effects on joint inflammation, though the researchers say clinical trials are needed to show whether such treatment works.

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A new analysis of clinical trials indicates that semaglutide, the active ingredient in Ozempic and Wegovy, helps older adults with obesity lose substantial weight and improve heart health markers. The findings come from data on participants aged 65 and above who received the once-weekly medication alongside lifestyle changes.

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