Lottie Moss, the sister of Kate Moss, recently recounted her experiences with the drug Ozempic, as reported by MorningHoney.com. Lottie cautioned against using the drug following an experience that led to her hospitalization. Lottie took Ozempic for two weeks after feeling unhappy about her weight, and obtained it through a questionable source rather than a proper medical prescription. “I had a friend, and she could get it for me,” Lottie said. “It was kind of below board… It was from a doctor, but it wasn’t like you go into a doctor’s office, and he prescribes it for you, he takes your blood pressure and takes tests, which is what you need when you go on something like Ozempic.” Ozempic was “not really meant for weight loss of people that aren’t of a very large size,” Lottie noted. Lottie acknowledged that the dosage she took was intended for individuals weighing over 220 pounds, while she is in the 110-pound range. “When I was taking it, the amount that I was taking was actually meant for people who are [220 pounds] and over, and I’m in the [110] range,” Lottie admitted. “So, it’s these small things that I wish I’d known before taking it.” She described her experience as the worst decision she ever made, suffering from severe nausea and losing nearly 20 pounds in a short period. “When I tell you it was the worst decision I ever made, so if this is a warning to anyone: Please, if you’re thinking of taking it, do not take it, it’s so not worth it,” Lottie said. “I would rather die any day than take that again. It made me feel so nauseous.” Ultimately, she was hospitalized after experiencing dehydration and a seizure, emphasizing that taking Ozempic was not worth the negative effects. “I think I started at about [132 pounds], and I went down to [125 pounds] with the first dose, then I went down to like [119 pounds]. It was crazy. I think my lowest was [116 pounds]. In terms of a few weeks, that’s not a healthy weight loss, and that’s not a healthy drop.” “When I was in bed for those two days, and it was sort of the end of it, and I was just wanting to come off it – because it’s not like you can stop taking it, it’s not like a pill or something that you don’t take when you wake up in the morning, it’s in your system, and it’s there,” Lottie concluded.