Starting a GLP-1 Weight Management Programme: A Practical Patient Guide
Considering semaglutide for weight management? Here's what to expect in week 1, month 1, and beyond — from dose titration to side effects to lifestyle pairings.
If you're thinking about starting a GLP-1 weight management programme — Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro, or one of the authorised generic alternatives now available — there's a lot of noise out there and not a lot of practical, honest information about what the experience actually looks like from week one.
This guide is designed to tell you what to expect. Not in a scary way, not in a hype way, just honestly, the way a doctor friend would explain it to you at dinner if you asked.
Important before we start: nothing in this article replaces a conversation with a licensed doctor. GLP-1 medications are prescription-only for a reason. Your specific situation — medical history, medications, goals — may change what's appropriate for you. Use this guide to inform your questions, not to replace the consultation.
Who GLP-1 medications are actually for
GLP-1 receptor agonists, including semaglutide and tirzepatide, are approved for weight management in adults who meet one of these criteria:
They are not approved for cosmetic weight loss, for people already in a healthy BMI range, or for adolescents (except in specific paediatric indications). A responsible doctor will decline to prescribe them outside these parameters, and you should be cautious of any provider who doesn't ask careful questions about your health before prescribing.
They also have important contraindications. You should not take a GLP-1 medication if you or a close family member has a history of medullary thyroid carcinoma or multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2 (MEN2). If you have a history of pancreatitis, severe gastrointestinal disease, or are pregnant or trying to become pregnant, you need to discuss this with your doctor — these situations may rule out GLP-1 therapy or require special monitoring.
How a typical programme is structured
Most GLP-1 weight management programmes follow a similar four-phase structure:
Phase 1 — Assessment (Day 0). You complete a medical questionnaire covering your health history, current medications, allergies, weight goals, and lifestyle. A licensed doctor reviews this and decides whether GLP-1 therapy is appropriate for you. If not, they should tell you why and suggest alternatives. If yes, they prescribe and explain the plan.
Phase 2 — Titration (Weeks 1–16). You don't start at the full dose. You start at a very low starting dose — 0.25 mg per week for semaglutide — and increase it gradually. This is the single most important part of the whole programme. The purpose is to let your body adapt and minimise side effects. Rushing the titration is the #1 mistake patients make.
A typical semaglutide titration schedule looks like this:
| Weeks | Dose |
|---|---|
| 1–4 | 0.25 mg weekly |
| 5–8 | 0.5 mg weekly |
| 9–12 | 1.0 mg weekly |
| 13–16 | 1.7 mg weekly (if needed) |
| 17+ | 2.4 mg weekly (maintenance, if needed) |
Not everyone goes all the way to 2.4 mg. Many patients see meaningful weight loss at 1.0 mg or 1.7 mg and stay there. Your doctor decides based on your response and side effects.
Phase 3 — Maintenance (Months 4–12+). Once you reach your target dose, you stay on it for as long as it is working for you and tolerable. Most weight loss happens in months 3–9. After that, weight tends to stabilise.
Phase 4 — Long-term management (Year 2+). This is the part that most programmes don't talk about honestly. GLP-1 medications are not a cure. When you stop, weight generally returns over 12–24 months. Long-term management is either (a) staying on a lower maintenance dose indefinitely, or (b) tapering off while aggressively protecting the lifestyle changes you built during treatment. Both are legitimate. Neither is easy. Discuss your long-term plan with your doctor before you start, not after.
What to expect: week by week
Week 1. You take your first injection — usually on the same day of the week you'll take it long-term (many people pick Sunday or Monday). Most people feel nothing unusual on day 1 or day 2. By day 3 or 4, you may start noticing a subtle but definite change in appetite. Food becomes slightly less interesting. The "food noise" in your head — that background hum of wanting snacks — begins to quiet down. Some people describe it as a relief. A small percentage feel mild nausea, usually manageable with timing (inject in the evening so nausea hits while you sleep) and diet (avoid greasy food for the first few days).
Weeks 2–4. Your first dose is low, so side effects are usually mild. You might lose 1–2 kg in the first month, but honestly the weight loss at this stage is less important than whether your body is tolerating the medication. The appetite change continues to build. You find yourself eating less without trying. Plates you used to finish seem like too much. You leave food on your plate for the first time in years.
Weeks 5–8 (dose increase to 0.5 mg). The dose doubles, and many people feel the effects more strongly here. Nausea is more common in this phase than any other. Most people experience it for 2–4 days after the first 0.5 mg injection, then it fades. Some experience it longer. If it's severe, this is the moment to talk to your doctor — there are strategies to manage it, and sometimes a slower titration is the right answer.
Weeks 9–12 (dose increase to 1.0 mg). By now, meaningful weight loss is usually visible. Most patients are down 4–8% from starting weight. Clothes fit differently. The psychological shift — feeling like the medication is "working" — becomes real and sustains motivation.
Month 4 onwards. This is where the long game starts. You may continue to escalate to higher doses or hold at 1.0 mg. You'll start having conversations about your sustainable target weight, not just your initial goal. Many patients find that their appetite regulation has normalised to a new equilibrium — they eat enough, but not more than enough. If you've been pairing the medication with lifestyle changes (more on this below), those changes are starting to feel automatic.
Managing side effects
Nausea is the number-one side effect and the number-one reason people stop GLP-1 medications. Here's what actually works:
Other common side effects include: constipation or diarrhoea (usually manageable with fibre and hydration), mild fatigue in the first month, and occasional mild injection-site irritation.
Call your doctor immediately if you experience: severe abdominal pain (possible pancreatitis), sudden vision changes, persistent vomiting, signs of allergic reaction, or symptoms of gallbladder disease.
Lifestyle pairings that actually matter
The evidence is unambiguous: patients who pair GLP-1 medications with lifestyle changes lose more weight, keep it off longer, and feel better throughout the programme. Specifically:
Red flags that mean you should rethink
Not everyone responds well to GLP-1s. If any of these happen to you, have a serious conversation with your doctor:
There are alternative GLP-1 medications (tirzepatide, liraglutide) and non-GLP-1 options. GLP-1 doesn't work for everyone, and a good doctor will help you figure out a different path if it isn't working for you.
The uncomfortable truth about stopping
When you stop a GLP-1 medication, the appetite regulation effect ends. Within a few weeks, you'll likely notice food interest returning. Within 12–24 months, most patients regain a significant portion of the weight they lost — unless they have successfully built new habits during the programme that stick.
This is not a failure of the medication. It's how the medication works. It is a tool that gives you a window of reduced appetite and improved metabolic function, during which you can build the habits (eating patterns, exercise, sleep, stress management) that will sustain your health long-term. The medication creates the window. You have to do the building.
Some people will choose to stay on a low maintenance dose indefinitely, and this is a reasonable choice for many patients. Others will taper off and rely on their new habits. Either path should be a deliberate decision, not a default. Talk to your doctor about what the long-term plan looks like before you start, and revisit it every few months.
Before you start: questions to ask your doctor
Bring this list to your consultation:
A good doctor will answer every one of these directly. If they get defensive or vague, that's information too.
This article is educational and not a substitute for medical advice. GLP-1 medications are prescription-only and should only be used under the supervision of a licensed healthcare provider. Individual experiences vary widely. Always discuss your specific situation with a qualified doctor.
Related reading:
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