I think that regardless how she died, the weight loss, especially if it was quick weight loss would be a "contributing factor" that could make the gal in the beauty shop open to prosecution, even if there was nothing wrong with semaglutide.lessthanhalf said:While it is possible for her death to be due to semaglutide, both the presentation to hospital and her age, depression and obesity make death from other unrelated issues much more probable. I could not find any evidence that a cause of death has been released. Heart attack or pulmonary embolus are two common causes, in that age/risk group, that could give you pain and cyanosis and be fatal, but it could be due to a large number of other causes, including some that could be caused by semaglutide. The most likely semaglutide related causes would be pancreatitis or gallbladder stones with infection, but this does not fit as well with her described presentation to hospital. I guess sepsis from a subcutaneous injection is possible ( but very improbable ) but there would be obvious visible infection at the injection site. Semaglutide reduces the risk of heart attack, so it would be strange to blame it if that was the cause.
The thing that is odd is that someone, presumably the one giving the injection, has been charged with manslaughter. If her death were unrelated to her unlicensed treatment this would be hard to justify, and it indicates that the cause of death is known but they are not releasing it yet, and it is at least thought to be related to her treatment.
I may have helped a person obtain similar medication, as have many people on this forum. In the very unlikely, but possible, event of that person suffering a fatal adverse effect, having supplied a prescription medication to that person could leave you or me exposed to risks of prosecution. I am not sure how this would work in the US with their grey status but in places like the UK or Australia, they are definitely illegal to possess without a prescription. And giving or selling them to someone else would always be illegal.
On a side note, very sadly my brother died at age 40 of a massive heart attack. In the days prior to his death, he said that he felt a little poorly, sluggish, and tired. The fourth day after feeling poorly, the person talking to him said that all of a sudden his face turned purple/blue and he hit the ground instantly. He died instantly. Other than just a a few days of feeling off, there were no warnings at all. (I'm not telling this for sympathy.)
Like DoohDah said, it could have been any of the commodities that killed her. The beauty shop gal is probably going down regardless of what really caused it. I hope that there is some follow-up.


