And the gut-first protocol an OB-GYN is now recommending in her practice — without prescription drugs, without 4-pill-a-day hair vitamins, and without giving up the medication that's actually working.

Marcia Thompson had always assumed the hair loss was just part of getting older — like every woman in her family had told her.
The 49-year-old Houston school administrator had been dealing with the shedding for nine months, ever since she started her GLP-1 medication. The hairbrush. The pillow. The shower drain that looked like a small animal had fallen in it. The ponytail that wrapped one and a half times more than it used to. The stylist whose first words at every appointment were now, "honey, what is going on with your hair?"
"I just figured this was the trade-off," she admits. "I had finally lost the weight. My A1C was the best it had been in a decade. I was supposed to just be grateful, right?"
It turns out Marcia's hair loss wasn't a trade-off at all. And what was actually causing it had nothing to do with her hair.
And, as a growing body of research suggests, she's far from alone.
Do any of these sound familiar?
Most women on GLP-1s experience at least three of these regularly. They blame age, stress, postpartum-but-late, or just bad luck. They try biotin, hair gummies, expensive shampoos, scalp serums — each one aimed at the hair, not at the actual cause.
But what if all of those problems traced back to a single hidden source — twenty inches below your scalp?
If you recognised two or more of those symptoms, here's what may actually be going on.
Your hair is starving — twenty inches below your scalp.
According to peer-reviewed research, GLP-1 medications work by suppressing appetite — which means smaller meals, less protein, and dramatically less of the dietary fiber your gut bacteria need to survive. Within months, the bacterial populations in your large intestine shrink dramatically. Most women never connect this to their hair.
What's actually happening in there
Researchers studying women on GLP-1 medications have shown that depleted gut bacteria can no longer absorb the biotin, iron, zinc, B-vitamins, and protein your hair follicles depend on. The vitamins you swallow simply pass through. Your follicles, downstream of the absorption pathway, slowly starve. Around month three, the shedding starts. By month twelve, dormant follicles can begin to scar — particularly in Black women, whose follicles face an elevated genetic risk per the Black Women's Health Study.
Every day. As long as the medication is in your system.
Key takeaway: the hair loss most women blame on age or stress shares a single, identifiable cause — gut absorption breakdown. And that cause is reversible inside the recovery window.

The unsettling part isn't that the gut bacteria are depleted.
It's that nobody is treating it.
The broken-pipe problem
Dr. Sarah Williams, an OB-GYN treating women in this exact phase, uses an analogy that lands every time she says it: "It's like pouring water into a pipe with holes in it. The biotin isn't broken. The supplement isn't broken. The pipe — your gut absorption — is broken."
That broken pipe makes biotin and most hair vitamins almost completely useless on a GLP-1. Your body cannot absorb what your follicles need.
Yes, you read that right. Useless. Until the pipe is repaired.
It's like watering a plant whose roots can't absorb water. You can pour all day. The plant doesn't grow. That's the reason most off-the-shelf hair vitamins don't work for long on a GLP-1. They simply can't get past the absorption breakdown.
Key takeaway: hair vitamins don't fail because they're weak. They fail because, on a GLP-1, your gut can no longer absorb them.
Which is why so many of the standard approaches don't work on a GLP-1:
Get absorbed by gut bacteria you no longer have. The pill goes in, the pill comes out, your hair sees nothing.
More vitamins, same broken absorption pathway. 4 horse pills a day, $88/month, zero impact.
Wrong floor. The problem is in the gut, twenty inches down. Not on top of the scalp.
On a GLP-1, the underlying cause doesn't stop until the medication does. Waiting can be permanent.
Women on GLP-1 medications are spending $80–$1,000+ on hair products that mechanically cannot work for them. The real problem isn't the hair. It's twenty inches below it.

This is where Marcia's story takes a turn.
In her words, the moment that "changed everything" was an annual visit to her OB-GYN.
While she sat in the exam chair filling Dr. Sarah Williams in on her GLP-1 progress, the doctor stopped her mid-sentence and asked: "How's your hair?" Marcia started crying.
The gut-first protocol
Dr. Williams pulled her chair around to the same side of the desk as Marcia, looked at her, and said: "I want to explain something to you that nobody has explained, because they don't know." She drew it on a piece of paper. Appetite goes down on the GLP-1. Fiber intake drops. Gut bacteria starve. Absorption pathway breaks. Hair follicles stop getting fed.
By week three on the protocol Dr. Williams recommended, the shower drain wasn't full anymore.
Not reduced. Not improved. Slowed.
By month two, baby hairs along Marcia's part for the first time in over a year. By day ninety, her hairdresser stopped mid-blow-dry and asked, "Marcia. What are you doing differently? Your hair is coming back." The protocol was simple: address the gut first. Two prebiotic fibers. Four probiotic strains. Two capsules a day.
Key takeaway: by day ninety, on the gut-first protocol alone, Marcia's hairdresser noticed without her saying a word.
What I tell every one of my patients on a GLP-1 is this: your hair is the symptom, not the problem. The problem is twenty inches down — in your gut.
Here's the part almost no one is talking about.
The formula Dr. Williams recommends isn't ordinary off-the-shelf.
The active mechanism is gut-first repair. Most retail hair vitamins skip the gut entirely — they pile in more biotin and more iron, assuming your gut is normal. Yours isn't normal anymore. Adding more vitamins to a depleted absorption pathway is like trying to clean an oven with washing-up liquid. It's a "cleaning product," but it's the wrong tool for the actual mess.
The formula uses two prebiotic fibers (800 mg XOS + 500 mg resistant dextrin) plus four targeted probiotic strains delivering 10 billion CFU per day. It is the only formula Dr. Williams has found that addresses the gut first, before adding any nutrients on top of it.
At that profile, the formula rebuilds the absorption pathway itself, opening the way for the body to absorb the protein, iron, biotin, and B-vitamins your hair needs. Think of it like this: pouring more biotin onto a depleted gut is gentle rain on cracked soil. Rebuilding the gut bacteria is rainfall plus actual roots. Once the roots are restored, the nutrients reach the follicle.
Repopulating the gut bacteria is only half the story.
If the bacteria don't have anything to eat once they're back, they shrink right back down. That's why the most effective protocol uses prebiotics and probiotics together:
Used together, the two ingredient classes give the body something most hair supplements miss entirely: feed the bacteria, then rebuild them, so the absorption pathway works again. A one-two punch that biotin alone cannot match.
I'd tried biotin, Nutrafol, three expensive shampoos, even $54 scalp oil. None of it worked, because none of it was fixing the gut. Three weeks after starting Herflow, the shower drain wasn't full anymore. By month two, baby hairs at my part for the first time in over a year.
One of the more interesting follow-ups to Dr. Williams' clinical reasoning came not from a pharmaceutical company.
It came from a small, GLP-1-specific supplement brand.
Their team built a formula using the exact prebiotic and probiotic profile Dr. Williams described — two prebiotic fibers and four targeted probiotic strains. They sell it as Herflow, in two small capsules a day. No biotin in it, which is good, because biotin would have caused the jawline acne her patients tell her about, and would not have absorbed anyway.
It's not a panacea. It's not a 30-day miracle.
But it is the first off-the-shelf product we've come across that's actually built for the gut-absorption mechanism, in the dosing range a clinician would recommend.
What sets it apart
Built specifically for women on GLP-1. Not retrofitted from generic hair-loss formulas — designed from day one for the gut-absorption mechanism.
No biotin. Won't trigger the jawline acne almost every woman gets from biotin gummies.
90-day use-the-bottle guarantee. Most hair supplements require unopened bottles within 30 days. Herflow lets you use the entire bottle and still get a full refund — no questions, no calls.
90-day money-back guarantee · use the bottle · full refund
"By week three, the shower drain wasn't full anymore. By month two, baby hairs at my part for the first time in over a year. My hairdresser noticed before I did."
"What sold me was that the OB-GYN explained the gut piece. The biotin people were just selling me biotin. Dr. Williams was teaching me what was actually wrong."
"My doctor told me to wait it out. I waited a year. Wish I'd done this nine months earlier. Started Herflow at month thirteen — finally seeing baby hairs at month eighteen."
One quick word on what to expect. Real recovery takes time. Week three, less shedding. Month two, baby hairs. Day ninety, your stylist notices. Anyone selling you a 30-day miracle on a GLP-1 is selling you something that doesn't work.
Left alone, the trajectory goes the other way. Every month you wait on a GLP-1:
The contrast, on the other side of a recovery protocol, is what most women describe as the real surprise: a shower drain that isn't full, baby hairs at the part, a ponytail that wraps the right number of times, and the kind of mirror-recognition you almost forgot was possible.
Marcia, six months in, sums it up like this: "I almost waited too long. If you're at month three or four — please don't make my mistake."
Look, the gut depletion isn't going to fix itself on its own. As long as you're on a GLP-1, the underlying cause is still active. You can keep buying biotin and waiting it out, or you can address the actual mechanism — and inside the recovery window, most women fully recover.
The brand sells direct, ships free in the US, and is small enough that they answer email themselves. We mention this because, for an advertorial, the bar should be: would we recommend it to a sister, a mother, an aunt? On this one — yes.
Try Herflow for 90 days. Use the entire bottle. If it doesn't work, email us and you get every dollar back — no return required, no shipping fee, no minimum. The strongest guarantee in the category.
90-day money-back guarantee · use the bottle · full refund
Where the figures and claims in this article come from. We've kept the list short on purpose — these are the references we leaned on most.
Reader comments
248 commentsWish I'd read this a year ago. The shower drain thing especially — exactly what I went through. Three months on Herflow and the shedding is fully under control. My OB-GYN was the one who finally connected it for me too.
Bookmarking this. Bought a 3-month bundle last week after my sister forwarded the article. I'm not on a GLP-1 — I'm on Metformin for PCOS. Same gut absorption issue apparently. Day 12 and the shedding has noticeably slowed. My edges are filling in for the first time in three years.
Thank you for naming the OB-GYN. So tired of articles where "a doctor recommends" is some anonymous person who could be anyone. Dr. Williams' practice is real and so is the mechanism.
Helen, appreciate that. The references are at the bottom of the page if anyone else wants to dig in. We try to link wherever possible.
Fair warning to anyone starting: take this with food. Took mine on an empty stomach the first day and it was a bit much. After that, no problems at all. Two months in and the bloating is gone, and the belly is finally moving.
I'm a sceptic by nature, especially with anything that gets called a "natural protocol." But this is the only thing that's actually shifted my afternoon brain fog. Three weeks in.