


Ozzy Osbourne is not a fan of his wife Sharon’s new slimmed-down look.
“The Talk” alum, 71, opened up about her new appearance after she lost over 30 pounds by using Ozempic, a decision she now regrets.
“Ozzy doesn’t like it,” Sharon said on “Good Morning Britain” Friday. “He’s scared. He thinks something is going to happen to me. It’s too good to be true.”
Sharon turned to Hollywood’s favorite weight loss drug in Dec. 2022 and is still feeling the weight loss effects despite stopping it in April.
And even though she now wants to pile “a few pounds” back on, Sharon says her body simply isn’t “listening.”
“It’s easy to say, ‘This is it. I can eat what I want and keep taking this injection,'” she said, warning parents of teenagers who have access to the drug.
“I think it needs to be in the hands of older people [who] totally understand that there can be side effects to this.”
“I don’t want young girls [to take it] because the world we live in today, everyone wants to be skinny,” she added.
Sharon previously admitted she “played the odds” when she turned to the drug in a desperate bid to lose weight.
In May, Sharon suffered numerous side effects after taking Ozempic for four months.
“I was very sick for a couple of months,” she shared on the UK’s “The Talk.” “The first couple of months, I just felt nauseous. Every day I felt nauseous, my stomach was upset, whatever.”
Sharon isn’t the only member of her family facing health issues as Ozzy is battling health woes of his own and now relies on the help of a cane and a wheelchair to get around.
The Black Sabbath frontman, 74, was pictured being pushed in a wheelchair last week as his health woes continued to take a toll on him.
In recent months, he was seen relying on the help of a cane on multiple occasions.
Last June, the “War Pigs” rocker underwent “life-altering” surgery to remove and realign pins in his neck and back from a 2003 quad biking accident that was exacerbated by a 2019 fall.
Ozzy has undergone three operations, stem cell treatments, physical therapy, and Hybrid Assistive Limb treatment.
Sharon described the surgery as “a major operation” that would “determine the rest of his life.”
Ozzy was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease in 2003 but waited to go public with his diagnosis in January 2020.
He described that living with Parkinson’s felt like he was “walking around in lead boots.”
In September, the Brit said he’s not looking to go under the knife anymore.
Sharon said the toughest thing has been seeing Ozzy succumb to his declining health.