Could weight loss drugs also reduce the risk of violent crime?

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Photo by Afif Ramdhasuma on Unsplash
Photo by Afif Ramdhasuma on Unsplash

The use of GLP-1 RAs, the popular weight loss and diabetes medications, could also be linked to reduced risk of committing violent crime, according to international researchers. The team looked at a 2025 US survey involving 821 adults who had used these GLP-1 medications and found that, while impulsivity and alcohol use were strongly linked with committing violent crime, these associations were weaker among current GLP-1 users when compared with former users. The team says that even when a GLP-1 RA user does drink or act impulsively, it appears the situation is less likely to escalate into violent criminality, and more thorough analyses showed this finding was especially consistent when relating to impulsivity, but less so with alcohol use.

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From: Wiley

Can use of popular weight loss medications reduce behaviors linked to violent crime?
Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1 RAs) are widely prescribed for diabetes and obesity, but studies have found evidence that the medications may also influence behavior, such as supporting impulse control and reducing substance use and alcohol consumption by potentially interacting with the brain’s reward and stress systems. New research in Criminologyadds to this growing evidence.

When investigators analyzed data from a 2025 nationally representative US survey involving 821 adults who had ever used GLP-1 medications, they found that while impulsivity and alcohol use were strongly associated with committing violent crime, these associations were significantly weaker among current GLP-1 RA users compared with former users. So even when a GLP-1 RA user drinks or acts impulsively, the situation is less likely to escalate into engaging in violent criminality. More thorough analyses showed that this finding was especially consistent related to impulsivity, but less so with alcohol use.

The findings suggest that GLP-1 RAs may lessen the extent to which certain established risk factors translate into violent behavior.

“As GLP-1 medications become increasingly widespread, understanding their broader behavioral effects becomes an important public health and criminological question that requires careful study,” said corresponding author Daniel C. Semenza, PhD, of Rutgers University.

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Criminology
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Organisation/s: Rutgers University, USA
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