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HomeLocal News‘It felt shameful, as if I’d cheated!’ How Kent mum shed 112lbs

‘It felt shameful, as if I’d cheated!’ How Kent mum shed 112lbs

By Lucy Turquand-Young

A mum who turned to Mounjaro after years of unsuccessful diets says she is a “happier person and a happier mum” because of the weight loss drug.

Since starting it in June 2024, Hannah Hodgkiss, from Maidstone, who has battled with her weight since childhood, says her weight has dropped from 252 lbs to 140 lbs.

Since starting the drug, her weight has dropped from 252 lbs to 140 lbs. Picture: Cover Images
Since starting the drug, her weight has dropped from 252 lbs to 140 lbs. Picture: Cover Images

The 39-year-old said: “I’ve struggled with my weight from the beginning. Even when I was at primary school, I got bullied for my weight.

“When I was 18, I thought I was fat, but now looking back at photos, I wasn’t.”

Growing up in the 1990s, Hannah was surrounded by toxic messaging about body image and fad diets.

The legal secretary said: “I think it’s also growing up in the 90s that you had magazines where it’s like a circle of shame, and it was just constant weight, weight, weight, and saying people were fat when they actually weren’t.

“So I think that’s deeply rooted in a lot of women my age now.”

Hannah was diagnosed with gestational diabetes during her second pregnancy.

Then, in May 2024, she was told she was pre-diabetic, which was a turning point in her motivation to lose weight.

Determined to improve her health, she began walking 10,000 steps a day and tracking her calorie intake, but progress was slow.

After years of unsuccessful diets, she turned to Mounjaro, an antidiabetic drug also used for weight loss. Picture: Cover Images
After years of unsuccessful diets, she turned to Mounjaro, an antidiabetic drug also used for weight loss. Picture: Cover Images

“The weight was coming off very, very slowly,” she said. “I was putting a lot of work in and not getting much back.”

Frustrated by the slow results and aware of her pre-diabetes risk, she began researching weight loss medication.

“I heard it was on the NHS, but I wasn’t eligible because even though my BMI was ridiculously high, I was pre-diabetic,” she explained.

“And because I wasn’t full-blown diabetic, they wouldn’t prescribe it, and I would have had to have gone on to this weight management thing.”

She was advised that the weight management programme could take up to two years to produce results, which was time she feared could result in her developing diabetes.

After considering her options, Hannah chose to go private, and she hasn’t looked back since.

At first, she kept her use of Mounjaro to herself.

She explained: “It’s just because it almost makes you feel shameful because people see it as a way it’s cheating.

Hannah Hodgkiss has battled with her weight since childhood. Picture: Cover Images
Hannah Hodgkiss has battled with her weight since childhood. Picture: Cover Images

“But the way I now look at it is if you’ve got hay fever, you take a hay fever tablet. If you’re obese and struggle with all this eating, what’s the harm in it?”

She believes much of the stigma around weight-loss medication is rooted in sexism.

“It’s always like negative stories that the media highlight, and because it’s helping women, it’s negative,” she said

“It really grates on me that the amount of funding put into women’s health is minimal compared to men.”

Since starting Mounjaro, Hannah’s relationship with food has transformed.

She explained: “I would look at food differently because I would have a plate full of food and then not eat it all, whereas before I would just like force myself to eat it.

“Growing up when I did, it was like you always had to eat all the food off your plate, because ‘think of all the starving children in the world’, as my mum used to say.”

She also began to feel more confident as the weight started to come off.

In May 2024, Hannah was told she was pre-diabetic, which was a turning point in her motivation to lose weight. Picture: Cover Images
In May 2024, Hannah was told she was pre-diabetic, which was a turning point in her motivation to lose weight. Picture: Cover Images

Hannah says her improved health has positively impacted her family life, allowing her to be more active with her two young children.

“I’m a happier person, so I’m a happier mum,” she said. “And I’m getting up and doing things with the children and getting involved and being able to get more involved physically.”

She has only experienced mild side effects from the medication, including slight nausea and feeling cold.

This was a stark contrast to the horror stories she encountered online. She explained: “Another thing is that in the media, it’s all horror side effects.

“And so I know for myself, four of my friends are doing it and, other than slight nausea, they’ve not had the side effects either.”

“When I first started, I had a bit of a headache, but whether that’s from tension because of starting new, like my brain was going wild thinking what are you doing? So it could have been a mixture of that.”

Before her weight loss, she was worried about how others might perceive her, especially the parents at her son’s new school.

She added: “My little boy started school in September, another thing was I didn’t want to be the fat mum at the school gates because when you are bigger, you are treated differently.

Hannah Hodgkiss says she is a “happier person and a happier mum” because of the weight loss drug. Credit: Cover Images
Hannah Hodgkiss says she is a “happier person and a happier mum” because of the weight loss drug. Credit: Cover Images

“I want to be a good role model for them.”

In addition to the medication and a healthier approach to eating, Hannah has stuck to a regular fitness routine and has been doing “a lot of running”.

In recent months, she has spoken openly on Instagram about her use of Mounjaro.

While she’s faced some criticism, the response to her honesty surrounding the medication has largely been positive.

Regarding the negative comments, she said: “I find them quite funny, they amuse me. I had a recent one where they’re basically saying that it’s not me in the pictures.”

Some users even tried to compare her tattoos in before-and-after photos to suggest they weren’t the same person, but it doesn’t bother her.

Now, after a year on Mounjaro, she is beginning to think about the future.

“I don’t want to lose any more weight. I want to maintain,” she said.

“But a lot of people are asking me now, ‘So because you lost the weight, you’re going to come off the drug?’

“I’m not coming off it straight away. I’m going to sort of learn to live my life maintaining myself at this weight.”

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