What did @realdrbae actually say?
The creator recommends a specific Starbucks cold brew order for people on GLP-1 medications like semaglutide or tirzepatide. The pitch: cold brew reduces acidity, which may ease GLP-1-related heartburn, and swapping creamer for a protein shake helps hit your protein targets first thing in the morning. They also flag that these medications can cause "loss of muscle and bone" and that protein intake matters during treatment.
To be fair, this is a practical, low-stakes tip, not a medical protocol. But practical tips spread fast on TikTok, and when 1.8 million people watch something, the details matter. So let's go through it piece by piece.
Does the science back this up?
Partly, yes. The protein argument is the strongest part of this video, and it's grounded in real evidence. The cold brew acidity claim is more speculative than it sounds. And the framing of protein as a solution to GLP-1-related muscle loss is directionally right but oversimplified.
On muscle loss: a 2021 trial by Wilding et al. in the New England Journal of Medicine showed that semaglutide produced significant weight loss, but lean mass loss accompanied it, consistent with what happens in other caloric restriction contexts. A 2023 paper by Colleluori and Villareal in Nutrients confirmed that protein intake and resistance exercise are the two most evidence-backed strategies for preserving muscle during weight loss. So the creator's push for morning protein is not wrong.
On cold brew and acidity: cold brew does have a higher pH than hot-brewed coffee, meaning it's less acidic. A 2020 study by Fuller and Rao in Scientific Reports confirmed this. Whether that translates into meaningfully less acid reflux for GLP-1 users specifically has not been studied. GLP-1 medications slow gastric emptying, which is a major driver of their GI side effects, and acidity is only one piece of that picture.
What did they get wrong (or right)?
They got the protein priority right. They got the muscle loss framing mostly right. Where things get shaky is the cold brew heartburn claim, which is presented as more established than it is, and the implicit suggestion that this coffee order is a meaningful clinical intervention for GLP-1 side effects.
Heartburn on GLP-1 medications is primarily driven by delayed gastric emptying and increased esophageal acid exposure time, not just the pH of your morning drink. Switching to cold brew when you're already dealing with gastroparesis-like slowing is unlikely to move the needle much. If heartburn is significant, that's a conversation for your prescriber, not your barista.
The phrase "Sima Glutan, and to your zepitan expert" in the transcript appears to be a speech-to-text error for semaglutide and tirzepatide. The creator likely said those drug names correctly. But the transcript reminds us that social media content often loses precision in translation, and precision matters with prescription medications.
One thing they didn't say, and should have: protein shakes vary enormously in quality, added sugars, and caloric density. "A protein shake of your choice" is too loose for a medical audience. Some popular Starbucks-adjacent protein options are heavily sweetened and not ideal for people managing blood sugar or caloric intake on a GLP-1.
What should you actually know?
Protein intake is genuinely important during GLP-1 treatment, and most patients don't hit adequate targets. Current clinical guidance generally recommends 1.2 to 1.6 grams of protein per kilogram of body weight per day during active weight loss, based on work by Stokes et al. (2018, Nutrients). Getting protein at breakfast is a reasonable strategy. The coffee delivery mechanism is irrelevant to that goal.
If you're experiencing heartburn or significant GI side effects on a GLP-1, the right move is to talk to your provider. Dose timing, injection site, meal composition, and medication adjustments are all evidence-backed options. Cold brew is not on that list. It's also worth noting that caffeine itself can relax the lower esophageal sphincter, potentially worsening reflux regardless of the coffee's pH.
- GLP-1 medications slow gastric emptying, which drives most GI side effects including heartburn. Coffee acidity is a minor variable in that equation.
- Protein preservation during GLP-1-assisted weight loss requires consistent dietary protein and ideally resistance training, not just one morning drink.
- If your heartburn on Ozempic or Wegovy is bad enough to change your coffee order, it's probably bad enough to mention to your prescriber.