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I'm hoping some surgery residents or attendings could give me some perspective on the future of bariatric surgery and also how to get into this area of practice. (I'm also considering bariatric medicine as an alternative but medical interventions for obesity are currently limited)
First what I know: I understand the roux-en-y is gold standard (with AGB also an option) and nothing else can cure diabetes in a week. I also understand that the severely obese are a high risk surgical population and have a number of psychiatric comorbidies which some surgeons hate.
First, do you think that this procedure is just a pill (or even a vaccine which seems in the works) from becoming obsolete or is there a real future in this type of procedure? Since I am interested in weight loss treatments more generally, I would not want to do a 6 year grueling GS residency and find that I am obsolete. Aside from the obvious demographics, how promising is weight loss surgery in the future?
Also, is General Surgery the only route to do bariatric surgery? I would really want to focus on this one area if I did GS. Could I do any of the other surgical sub-specialties (neouro seems the most interesting but any others?) and then train in bariatrics if it's still the best treatment for obesity? My reasoning would be I'd much rather be a neurosurgeon as a backup than do GS and see cases which don't interest me. Also, do you learn enough about bariatrics during GS or would you have to do an additional year training in bariatrics? If so, Is this a formal competitive sort of fellowship or just something anyone can do after residency under the supervision of someone in the field?
Thank you very much for any insight!
First what I know: I understand the roux-en-y is gold standard (with AGB also an option) and nothing else can cure diabetes in a week. I also understand that the severely obese are a high risk surgical population and have a number of psychiatric comorbidies which some surgeons hate.
First, do you think that this procedure is just a pill (or even a vaccine which seems in the works) from becoming obsolete or is there a real future in this type of procedure? Since I am interested in weight loss treatments more generally, I would not want to do a 6 year grueling GS residency and find that I am obsolete. Aside from the obvious demographics, how promising is weight loss surgery in the future?
Also, is General Surgery the only route to do bariatric surgery? I would really want to focus on this one area if I did GS. Could I do any of the other surgical sub-specialties (neouro seems the most interesting but any others?) and then train in bariatrics if it's still the best treatment for obesity? My reasoning would be I'd much rather be a neurosurgeon as a backup than do GS and see cases which don't interest me. Also, do you learn enough about bariatrics during GS or would you have to do an additional year training in bariatrics? If so, Is this a formal competitive sort of fellowship or just something anyone can do after residency under the supervision of someone in the field?
Thank you very much for any insight!