- Joined
- Jan 7, 2010
- Messages
- 9,852
- Reaction score
- 6,934
This is a bit off topic, but have you done bariatric surgery evals, or worked in a setting where they were done?
I'm not trying to be snarky or argumentative, but I would like to provide some information from the standpoint of someone who has worked in such a setting. Granted, this was several years ago, but I can speak to my own experience.
Gastric bypass surgery is not an "easy fix." Not by any stretch of the imagination. It requires major, lifelong modifications in eating behaviors. Any reputable surgical center provides extensive education about this (at my center, this included several months of weekly classes), and does not allow surgery to be scheduled until it is clear that the patient is willing and able to make these changes, both before and after surgery.
I have to disagree with your assumption that patients just up and decide to pursue bariatric surgery without having tried to lose weight by any other means. In my experience, this just doesn't happen - ever. The overhwhelming majority of patients seen at my center had tried every weight loss strategy imaginable, often multiple times, over the course of years or even decades. Diets, exercise programs, pills, herbal supplements, self-help books, support groups, hypnosis...you name it, they'd tried it. Did our patients sometimes benefit from some basic education about nutrition and physical activity? Yes. Were they lazy individuals who'd just never bothered to try losing weight before? No. Like I said, that just didn't happen. In fact, insurance companies generally won't approve surgery unless the patient has made serious, long-term attempts to lose weight in the past under medical supervision.
Contrary to popular belief, people do not just sit around getting fat for years under the assumption that they'll just pop into surgery when they hit a certain point.
As it likely was in your case, that was a big part of what our evals were supposed to help the physicians figure out (e.g., has this person tried other methods first, are they educated about the surgery, are they actually able to handle and adhere to the aftercare requirements, and even in some cases, are they ok with actually losing as much weight as they stand to lose, etc.). I believe our patients were actually required to go through a hospital weight management program beforehand, at least in many cases, before being considered for surgery. If it wasn't the hospital requiring it, I believe insurance companies may require something similar prior to authorizing it.