This article may save your life. Counterfeit Ozempic and Mounjaro pens have been confirmed in Nigeria and across West Africa. In some documented cases, fake pens were found to contain insulin — injecting this can cause life-threatening hypoglycaemia. In other cases, pens simply contained saline or nothing. Do not skip this guide.

The combination of high demand, high prices, and a fragmented pharmaceutical supply chain has made GLP-1 medications one of the most counterfeited drug categories in Nigeria. Fakes range from inert (saline-filled) pens that simply waste your money, to genuinely dangerous products containing incorrect active ingredients.

This guide gives you a systematic, step-by-step approach to verifying any GLP-1 pen before you inject it.

Why Counterfeit GLP-1 Pens Are Especially Dangerous

With most counterfeit medications, the risk is that the product simply does not work. With GLP-1 pens, the risk is more serious:

The 7-Point Pre-Injection Checklist

Before using any pen — including ones purchased from pharmacies — run through this checklist:

Genuine vs Counterfeit: What to Look For

✓ Signs of a Genuine Pen

  • Box seal intact, no re-gluing
  • Batch number on pen matches box
  • Clear, crisp manufacturer printing
  • Clear, colourless solution
  • Correct dose colour coding (Mounjaro)
  • Precise moulding — no rough edges
  • Comes with cold packaging
  • Pharmacist can confirm supply chain

✗ Red Flags for a Counterfeit

  • Broken or missing box seal
  • Batch numbers don't match
  • Blurry, uneven, or smudged printing
  • Cloudy or discoloured liquid
  • Wrong colour scheme for dose
  • Rough seams or poor moulding
  • Arrived at room temperature
  • Price significantly below market rate

High-Risk Purchase Channels in Nigeria

Counterfeits are most commonly encountered in the following channels — this does not mean every product from these sources is fake, but the risk is significantly elevated:

NAFDAC tip: You can report suspected counterfeit medications to the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) via their toll-free line: 0800-162-3322. Reporting helps protect other Nigerian patients.

What to Do If You Have Already Injected a Suspect Pen

If you have injected a product you now suspect was counterfeit:

  1. Monitor yourself closely for the next 4–6 hours — symptoms of hypoglycaemia include shakiness, sweating, confusion, palpitations, and weakness. If you experience these, consume fast-acting sugar immediately (a sugary drink or glucose tablets) and call a doctor.
  2. Seek medical evaluation — a blood glucose test will quickly confirm whether insulin or another hypoglycaemic agent was present.
  3. Preserve the pen — keep the pen and all packaging for analysis.
  4. Report to NAFDAC — your report can help trace and remove the product from circulation.

The Safest Way to Buy in Nigeria

Purchase from a PCN-registered pharmacy with a documented cold chain supply, where a licensed pharmacist is responsible for dispensing and can provide you with the batch number, expiry, and supply chain documentation on request. At WeightLoss NG, every order includes pharmacist verification, temperature-monitored storage, and cold-chain delivery.

Buy Verified, Safe GLP-1 Medications

Every pen we dispense is cold-chain verified, batch-traceable, and dispensed by a licensed pharmacist. No shortcuts.