About This Site

What this site is for

GLP-1 Refund is a public information site focused on serious GLP-1 injury issues. It explains current warning language, keeps the public sourcing visible, and gives people a straightforward way to start documenting what happened.

Coverage centers on the issues that usually turn on records and a real medical timeline, including severe GI injuries, pancreatitis, sudden vision problems, pregnancy exposure questions, thyroid warning issues, and certain product-specific safety problems.

This site is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. It is also not a medical provider and does not offer medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Urgent symptoms should always go to a licensed clinician or emergency care first.

In Short

Public information, not legal advice.

Current labels, agency material, and court sources where relevant.

Serious injury topics only, with direct source links.

Revised when source material changes in a meaningful way.

Coverage

What you will find here

The pages are organized by injury and warning topic so stomach symptoms, vision problems, pregnancy questions, and product-specific warnings stay distinct.

Severe GI injuries

Gastroparesis, pancreatitis, dehydration, bowel-obstruction questions, and severe vomiting timelines.

Vision injuries

Retinopathy, NAION, sudden vision changes, and the records that usually matter most.

Warnings and exposure issues

Pregnancy timing, thyroid boxed-warning language, rash, and product-specific questions.

Product and market issues

Ozempic, exenatide, counterfeit-product warnings, and changes in current FDA guidance.

Editorial Standards

How the information is prepared

The aim is to keep the public pages current, specific, and easy to check against the source material behind them.

Current labels first

Public pages start with current FDA or DailyMed labeling, then add NIH or agency material where it clarifies symptoms, evaluation, or records.

Claims stay narrow

If a label or regulator uses narrow warning language, the site stays with that language instead of stretching it into something broader.

Sources are visible

The main pages link directly to the public sources they rely on so the warning language can be checked against the original material.

Pages are revised when needed

When labeling, regulator guidance, or key court information changes in a meaningful way, the affected pages are updated.