Staten Island residents deserve accurate, unexaggerated information about GLP-1 therapy — not inflated promises or cherry-picked results, but the actual peer-reviewed clinical data and a physician who honestly evaluates your health profile before prescribing. Every RealityPeptides patient in Staten Island starts with the same foundation: the exact numbers from the trials, and a frank conversation about what they mean for their specific situation.
Timeline reality for Staten Island patients: initial measurable loss begins at weeks 4–8. Maximum outcomes are reached at 12–18 months. Your medication ships from a PCAB-accredited pharmacy to your Staten Island address within 2–5 business days. Regular telehealth check-ins track your documented progress against the published trial benchmarks — honestly, not optimistically.
Medically reviewed by
Dr. Sarah Mitchell, MD, ABOM
Board-Certified in Obesity Medicine • Last reviewed: June 4, 2026
Physician-prescribed GLP-1 medications are supported by phase III randomized controlled trial data published in the New England Journal of Medicine — the standard of evidence in obesity pharmacotherapy:
GLP-1 receptor agonists are not controlled substances under DEA scheduling. They may be prescribed via telehealth consultation under New York law after a valid clinical evaluation by a -licensed physician.
Ozempic® / Wegovy® — NEJM 2021, n=1,961
Documented data for Staten Island patients: 14.9% average body weight reduction at 68 weeks (STEP 1 trial, NEJM 2021). Once-weekly injection. Trial participants averaged 33.7 lbs of weight loss from a mean starting weight of 232 lbs. The world's most prescribed GLP-1 with real-world outcomes consistent with its controlled trial data for Staten Island, NY residents.
Start Real Semaglutide in Staten IslandMounjaro® / Zepbound® — NEJM 2022, n=2,539
Documented data for Staten Island patients: dual GIP/GLP-1 agonist achieved 20.9% average at 15 mg and 22.5% in the highest-dose group over 72 weeks (SURMOUNT-1, NEJM 2022). Currently the highest-documented efficacy of any FDA-approved GLP-1 option. Your Staten Island physician will assess whether tirzepatide matches your clinical profile and contraindication history.
Start Real Tirzepatide in Staten IslandSaxenda® — SCALE Trial, 56 weeks
Documented data for Staten Island patients: 8% average body weight reduction at 56 weeks, daily injection (SCALE trial). Over a decade of post-market real-world safety data — the best-characterized long-term GLP-1 for weight management. An honest, well-evidenced choice when the newer agents are contraindicated or not preferred.
Start Real Liraglutide in Staten IslandThe documented trial averages for Staten Island patients: semaglutide produced a 14.9% average body weight reduction over 68 weeks (STEP 1 trial, NEJM 2021, n=1,961). Tirzepatide produced 20.9% at 15 mg and up to 22.5% in the highest-dose group over 72 weeks (SURMOUNT-1, NEJM 2022, n=2,539). These are population averages — your Staten Island physician will give you a personalized, honest projection based on your actual BMI, health profile, and starting point before you commit to a program.
Initial measurable weight loss for Staten Island patients typically begins within 4–8 weeks of starting GLP-1 therapy. The benchmarks from the clinical trials — the 14–22% figures — are reached at 12 to 18 months of consistent treatment. The dose-escalation period in the first 4–16 weeks is important: do not judge your results until you have reached your maintenance dose, as many Staten Island patients experience their most significant progress in the second half of treatment.
Clinical trial and real-world data show the most common side effects are gastrointestinal: nausea (up to 44% of semaglutide patients in STEP 1), vomiting, diarrhea, and constipation — particularly during dose escalation in the first 8–12 weeks. These resolve for most patients as the body adjusts. Less common but documented risks include gallbladder disease and pancreatitis. Your Staten Island physician will review the complete risk/benefit profile with you honestly at intake, not after you have already started.
The honest answer: research consistently shows significant weight regain after stopping GLP-1 therapy. A withdrawal study following STEP 1 found approximately two-thirds of weight regained within 12 months of stopping semaglutide. GLP-1 medications manage the biological drivers of obesity — they do not permanently resolve them. Your Staten Island physician will discuss long-term maintenance strategies, including continued low-dose therapy, as part of your honest, documented care plan.
Local weight loss and GLP-1 providers serving the Staten Island, New York area, based on Google Business listings.
88 New Dorp Plaza #301, Staten Island, NY 10306
(347) 871-3759
4.9/5 ★ (51 reviews)
Visit website →774 Manor Rd Suite 206, Staten Island, NY 10314
(718) 489-8392
5/5 ★ (2 reviews)
Visit website →450 7th Ave suite 704b
(646) 718-4799
5/5 ★ (5 reviews)
Visit website →Connect with experienced, US-licensed physicians specializing in metabolic health and GLP-1 therapy. All providers are board-certified and committed to evidence-based care.
Black Box Warning: In rodent studies, semaglutide and tirzepatide caused thyroid C-cell tumors. It is unknown whether GLP-1 receptor agonists cause thyroid C-cell tumors, including medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC), in humans. These medications are contraindicated in patients with a personal or family history of MTC or Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia syndrome type 2 (MEN 2).
Common side effects may include nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, constipation, abdominal pain, headache, and injection site reactions. These typically diminish as dosage is gradually escalated.
Serious side effects may include pancreatitis, gallbladder problems, kidney injury, hypoglycemia (with insulin), and allergic reactions. Consult your healthcare provider immediately if you experience severe symptoms.
Contraindications: History of medullary thyroid carcinoma, MEN 2, pancreatitis, pregnancy or breastfeeding, severe gastrointestinal disease. This is not a complete list — always discuss your full medical history with your physician.
Clinical References: