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ForumsInternationalSouth Korea Ozempic availability — 12 month update

South Korea Ozempic availability — 12 month update

greg_boulder Wed, May 21, 2025 at 6:58 AM 40 replies 1,750 viewsPage 1 of 8
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greg_boulder
Member
345
1,567
Jul 2024
Boulder, CO
May 21, 2025 at 8:23 AM#1

I've been on brand Ozempic for 8 months (currently at 1mg/week) and it's been amazing — down 45 lbs. But my insurance is changing in April and the new plan doesn't cover it. Out-of-pocket is $1,050/month which I absolutely cannot afford.

I'm considering switching to compounded semaglutide. For those who've made this switch:

  1. Did you notice any difference in effectiveness?
  2. Any difference in side effects?
  3. Was the transition smooth or did you have issues?

I'm nervous about messing up something that's been working so well. 😟

18 2denise_HTX, raj_cambridge, ingrid_STO and 15 others
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NurseLeah_Nash
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278
1,234
Sep 2024
Nashville, TN
May 21, 2025 at 8:40 AM#2

Made this exact switch 6 months ago. Brand Ozempic 1mg → compounded semaglutide 1mg. My experience:

Effectiveness: Identical. I continued losing weight at the same rate. My appetite suppression felt the same. My A1C continued to improve.

Side effects: Slightly more injection site irritation with the compounded version initially, which I attribute to the different formulation (compounded uses different excipients than the brand). This went away after a few weeks.

Transition: Completely seamless. I took my last Ozempic injection on a Thursday and did my first compounded injection the following Thursday. No gap, no issues.

The only adjustment was learning to reconstitute and draw up my own doses. After the second time it was easy.

15 12BiostatsBrad, PeptideSynthNJ, Dr.KarenChen and 12 others
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bri_stats
Member
789
3,456
May 2024
Seattle, WA
May 21, 2025 at 8:57 AM#3

I'll be the dissenting voice. I switched and DID notice a difference. My appetite suppression felt weaker on compounded, and I plateaued for about 6 weeks after switching. I eventually sent the vial to Janoshik and it came back at 91% potency — so I was effectively getting 0.91mg instead of 1.0mg.

Switched to a different compounding pharmacy and the second one tested at 99%. Problem solved. The lesson: not all compounded semaglutide is created equal. Quality varies by pharmacy.

37 13TomFromTexas, mike.trainer_LA, sarah_nash92 and 34 others
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tampaLisa73
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Oct 2024
Tampa, FL
May 21, 2025 at 9:14 AM#4
Previously posted:
it came back at 91% potency — so I was effectively getting 0.91mg instead of 1.0mg

This is a valid concern and illustrates why pharmacy selection matters. A 9% potency deficit probably IS noticeable for some patients, especially at the threshold where appetite suppression kicks in.

To Susan's original question — here's my clinical perspective as a pharmacist:

  1. The molecule is the same. Semaglutide is semaglutide. If the compounded version is properly made at accurate potency, it works identically to brand.
  2. The formulation is different. Brand Ozempic contains specific excipients (buffers, preservatives, tonicity agents) that Novo Nordisk optimized over years of development. Compounded versions use different excipients. This can affect injection site reactions and potentially absorption kinetics, though the latter hasn't been well-studied.
  3. The delivery method is different. Ozempic pen = precise dose every time. Compounded vial + syringe = you're responsible for accuracy. Most people do fine, but human error is possible.

My recommendation: make the switch, use a reputable 503B pharmacy, and give yourself 4-6 weeks to adjust before concluding it's "not working as well." 👍

38 3mike.trainer_LA, sarah_nash92, FitDadDave and 35 others
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MaxMetOK
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312
1,123
Dec 2024
Oklahoma
May 21, 2025 at 9:31 AM#5

This is really helpful. A few follow-up questions:

  1. Should I stay at 1mg or should I adjust the dose when switching?
  2. How important is the salt form? I've seen "semaglutide sodium" vs "semaglutide base" — are they equivalent?
Last edited: May 21, 2025 at 2:31 PM
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