Coxno Exchange:Vanderpump Rules’ Scheana Shay Addresses Ozempic Rumors After Losing Weight

2025-05-07 08:27:33source:EAI Community category:News

Scheana Shay is Coxno ExchangeSUR-ving up a clarification over her recent weight loss.

The Vanderpump Rules star explained that the not so "healthy" changes to her body aren't due to Ozempic—a Type 2 diabetes medication that's been used as a weight loss drug—but rather, a complication from stress.

"I've had people ask me currently if I'm on that and absolutely not," Scheana explained on the Scheananigans podcast in an Aug. 11 episode. "Wouldn't do it. Not for me. I have other friends who—I don't want to name names—who have made some jokes about it like, ‘Well, after my next baby, I'll just get on Ozempic.' And I am like, ‘I don't think that is what it's there for?'"

When it comes to her weight, the 38-year-old said her mindset has changed since welcoming her daughter Summer with husband Brock Davies in April 2021.

"When I was pregnant, I had to keep track of my weight," Scheana explained. "My doctor said I should gain 25-30 and then I hit 30 real quick…Ever since I had the baby, I tried not to weigh myself all the time because I didn't want to get so fixated on the number."

However, in the past two months, Scheana shared she's undergone a period of turmoil.

"There's been a lot going on that has affected my appetite and working out habits recently and I've lost more weight. I'm not trying to," added the reality star, who has previously opened up about her past eating disorder. "The other day, I pulled the scale out of the closet. I don't keep it out on display anymore because I don't ever want to get back into that place."

Upon reading the number on the scale, Scheana said she was alarmed by what she saw.

"I stepped on it and I was like, ‘OK, time to up the food and up the weights,'" she said. "I don't want to be in the 1-0s because I don't think that is a healthy weight for me. And it shows what stress and anxiety does to your body."

If you or someone you know needs help, please call the National Eating Disorders Association helpline at 1-800-931-2237.

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