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Weight Loss

  • Fact Check: January 2025 Study Did NOT Conclude Ozempic Causes Blindness

    Fact Check

    Did a study published in January 2025 definitively establish a link between Ozempic and blindness, as was implied in a post on X? No, that's not true: The study was a small observational analysis of just nine patients that did not establish that the weight-loss drug caused blindness but instead found an association between the two. In other words, it…

    • Feb 11, 2025
    • by: Madison Dapcevich
    Fact Check: January 2025 Study Did NOT Conclude Ozempic Causes Blindness Not Causation
  • Fact Check: Denmark Did NOT Announce 500% Export Tariff On Ozempic Sold In US In Response To Trump's Greenland Threats As Of January 31, 2025

    Fact Check

    Did Denmark announce a "500% tariff on exports of Ozempic to the USA" in January 2025? No, that's not true: The claim derived from a parody post on LinkedIn that was not labeled as such. There was no such announcement on Danish government websites and no media outlets indexed by Google News reported on any such story. The claim originated…

    • Jan 31, 2025
    • by: Uliana Malashenko
    Fact Check: Denmark Did NOT Announce 500% Export Tariff On Ozempic Sold In US In Response To Trump's Greenland Threats As Of January 31, 2025 Didn't Happen
  • Fact Check: Kelly Clarkson, Jimmy Fallon Did NOT Promote Weight Loss Gummies In 2024 Interview

    Fact Check

    Did singer Kelly Clarkson and "Tonight Show" host Jimmy Fallon promote weight-loss gummies in a 2024 televised interview, as a Facebook post claims? No, that's not true: Clarkson's publicist denied to Lead Stories that she has any connection with such gummies. A Google search showed there is no evidence that Fallon promoted any weight loss or gummy products. The claim…

    • May 17, 2024
    • by: Kaiyah Clarke
    Fact Check: Kelly Clarkson, Jimmy Fallon Did NOT Promote Weight Loss Gummies In 2024 Interview Faked Photo
  • Fact Check: FAKE Video Of Dr. Oz Promoting 'Fat-Dissolving Weight Loss Pills' Has AI Voice

    Fact Check

    Is a video showing Dr. Mehmet Oz promoting weight loss pills that help dissolve fat authentic? No, that's not true: The original video of Dr. Oz wearing the same outfit is available on the internet and he never mentions a deal for weight loss pills. The audio of his voice doesn't appear to match his lip movements, and according to…

    • May 1, 2024
    • by: Alexis Tereszcuk
    Fact Check: FAKE Video Of Dr. Oz Promoting 'Fat-Dissolving Weight Loss Pills' Has AI Voice Fake Audio
  • Fact Check: FAKED Video Shows Barbara O'Neill Advertising Diabetes Remedy

    Fact Check

    Was the controversial wellness coach Barbara O'Neill filmed touting a supposed natural cure for diabetes? No, that's not true: A video promoting an unspecified natural cure is not authentic. The voice resembling O'Neill's was determined to be AI generated, and the whiteboard from a pre-existing footage of O'Neill giving a lecture was edited to feature a different message. The promotion…

    • May 1, 2024
    • by: Sarah Thompson
    Fact Check: FAKED Video Shows Barbara O'Neill Advertising Diabetes Remedy AI Audio
  • Fact Check: Piers Morgan Did NOT Interview Barbara O'Neill About A Diabetes Remedy -- Fake Video

    Fact Check

    Did Piers Morgan interview controversial wellness coach Barbara O'Neill about a "Diabetes Solution" on his program "Uncensored"? No, that's not true: The video circulating on social media is fabricated, using an AI voiceover to simulate a conversation between Morgan and O'Neill. The Hive Moderation detection tool determined that the video's audio track was 100 percent likely to be AI. A…

    • Apr 29, 2024
    • by: Sarah Thompson
    Fact Check: Piers Morgan Did NOT Interview Barbara O'Neill About A Diabetes Remedy -- Fake Video AI Voice-Over
  • Fact Check: Weight-Loss 'Coffee Trick' Was NOT Promoted By Dr. Oz Or Endorsed By Adele -- Original Sound Was Replaced With AI-Generated Audio

    Fact Check

    Did Dr. Oz promote a weight-loss "coffee trick" endorsed by Adele? No, that's not true: A viral video making the claim utilized AI-generated sound. Lead Stories found no evidence confirming that Dr. Oz ever promoted this "coffee trick" or that Adele ever endorsed it. The claim appeared in a post (archived here) on Facebook on the page named "Transforming Women"…

    • Apr 24, 2024
    • by: Uliana Malashenko
    Fact Check: Weight-Loss 'Coffee Trick' Was NOT Promoted By Dr. Oz Or Endorsed By Adele -- Original Sound Was Replaced With AI-Generated Audio Fake Audio
  • Fact Check: Exercise And Diet Do NOT Cure Type 1 Diabetes

    Fact Check

    Can exercise and diet cure Type I diabetes? No, that's not true: At the time of this writing, there is no known cure for diabetes, medical experts told Lead Stories. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the Mayo Clinic both state that there is no cure for the disease as of April 2024. The claim appeared in a…

    • Apr 22, 2024
    • by: Alexis Tereszcuk
    Fact Check: Exercise And Diet Do NOT Cure Type 1 Diabetes No Cure
  • Fact Check: Lainey Wilson Has NOT Endorsed Weight-Loss Gummies

    Fact Check

    Did American singer-songwriter Lainey Wilson endorse weight-loss gummies in a video posted on Facebook? No, that's not true: The audio has been edited from a video originally posted on Wilson's Instagram page. In June 2023, Wilson issued a statement on her verified Instagram that these claims about her taking weight-loss gummies "ain't true." The claim appeared in a Facebook post…

    • Apr 22, 2024
    • by: Marlo Lee
    Fact Check: Lainey Wilson Has NOT Endorsed Weight-Loss Gummies Gummies Scam
  • Fact Check: Tamela Mann Has NOT Promoted Weight Loss Gummies

    Fact Check

    Did gospel singer Tamela Mann endorse weight loss gummies? No, that's not true: Mann publicly refuted that she promoted weight loss gummies. Mann and several other celebrities are falsely tied to weight loss or keto gummy endorsements. The claim appeared in a post (archived here) published on Facebook on March 23, 2024. The post included a video with narration that…

    • Apr 22, 2024
    • by: Christiana Dillard
    Fact Check: Tamela Mann Has NOT Promoted Weight Loss Gummies No Endorsement
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Lead Stories is a fact checking website that is always looking for the latest false, misleading, deceptive or inaccurate stories, videos or images going viral on the internet.
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    Fact Check: NO 'Epic Island Vacation' Email Thread With Elon Musk In Epstein Files Released In January 2026

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    Fact Check: Pro-Trump Cuban Singer is NOT 'Janet Correa', Whose Husband Later Faced Deportation

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  • Fact Check: Pro-Trump Cuban Activist Hector Luis Valdes Cocho Was Picked Up By ICE Detention And Is Awaiting Possible Deportation True

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    Fact Check: No Email In Epstein Files With Satoshi Nakamoto Telling Epstein To 'Go F*ck Yourself' Replying To Island Invitation

    Fact Check

    • Feb 1, 2026
    • by: Maarten Schenk
  • Fact Check: NO Email From Jeffrey Epstein About Satoshi 'Pseudonym' Or 'Little Digital Gold Mine' In Released Epstein Files Not In Files

    Fact Check: NO Email From Jeffrey Epstein About Satoshi 'Pseudonym' Or 'Little Digital Gold Mine' In Released Epstein Files

    Fact Check

    • Feb 1, 2026
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  • Fact Check: Claim That Encrypted Messages Were Found On Alex Pretti's Phone Showing He Was A 'Key Player' In Planning Chaos Is Fake Viet Spam Viet Spam

    Fact Check: Claim That Encrypted Messages Were Found On Alex Pretti's Phone Showing He Was A 'Key Player' In Planning Chaos Is Fake Viet Spam

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    • Feb 1, 2026
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  • Fact Check: NO 'Baal' Bank Account In Jeffrey Epstein Bank Transfer Document To JP Morgan -- Likely Scanning Error Bank Name

    Fact Check: NO 'Baal' Bank Account In Jeffrey Epstein Bank Transfer Document To JP Morgan -- Likely Scanning Error

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    • Feb 1, 2026
    • by: Maarten Schenk
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    Fact Check: No Video Emerged Of Alex Pretti Talking About How He Kicked Out A Federal Agents' SUV Taillight -- Claim Is Viet Spam

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    • Jan 31, 2026
    • by: Alan Duke
  • Fact Check: NO 'Epic Island Vacation' Email Thread With Elon Musk In Epstein Files Released In January 2026 Not In Release

    Fact Check: NO 'Epic Island Vacation' Email Thread With Elon Musk In Epstein Files Released In January 2026

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    • Jan 31, 2026
    • by: Maarten Schenk
  • Fact Check: Photo Does NOT Prove ICE Agent Stole The Bracelet He Was Wearing, As Social Media Post Suggests No Evidence

    Fact Check: Photo Does NOT Prove ICE Agent Stole The Bracelet He Was Wearing, As Social Media Post Suggests

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    • Jan 30, 2026
    • by: Sarah Thompson

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Lead Stories is a fact checking website that is always looking for the latest false, misleading, deceptive or inaccurate stories, videos or images going viral on the internet.
Spotted something? Let us know!.

Lead Stories is a:

  • Verified signatory of the IFCN Code of Principles
  • Verified EFCSN member
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