Kris Jenner said her kris jenner ozempic experience lasted one try and left her feeling too sick to work. On Tuesday's episode of the She MD podcast, she said Ozempic made her feel nauseous, then she and Dr. Thais Aliabadi moved on to peptide injections and supplements instead.
Jenner's Ozempic account
"We tried it once when no one knew what it was," Jenner said on the podcast, adding that the nausea hit hard enough that, "I can't work anymore. I can't, I'm so sick. I can't like—nauseous."
The admission lands after months of speculation about Jenner and the drug, which is typically prescribed for weight management and Type 2 diabetes. For a public figure whose weight changes have drawn constant attention, the value of the statement is in the directness: she did not describe a long trial, a dose adjustment, or a switch after success. She described a stop.
Thais Aliabadi's response
Jenner said she called Dr. Thais Aliabadi for help after the side effects started, and the two decided to try peptide injections and supplements instead. "That actually bought me an extra couple hours at night," Jenner said, calling the new routine a "game-changer."
She also said, "I felt like I had more energy. And of course, it’s good for hair, and nails, and skin, and all of that stuff." Jenner added that she gets her blood drawn every three months to keep her hormones balanced, and tied that habit to a broader view of hormone health after she was 45.
Her 15-year-old facelift note
Jenner's comments also lined up with another recent appearance in which she said, "I had a facelift about 15 years ago, so it was time for a refresh," in an interview with Vogue Arabia. That detail is separate from the Ozempic admission, but it fits the same pattern: Jenner has been increasingly direct about the procedures and routines behind her appearance instead of leaving the speculation to fill the gap.
For readers watching the celebrity weight-loss conversation, the practical takeaway is blunt. Jenner says Ozempic did not work for her, the nausea was severe enough to interrupt work, and the next step was a different regimen built around peptide injections, supplements, and regular hormone checks every three months.





