Just say no – weight loss surgery

This is an interesting article on weight loss surgery. It has a dark side. Check out the URL for some powerful pictures.

Life After the Knife

Here are a few quotes I found to be very interesting:

The modified stomach naturally expands a bit over time, most substantially in patients with a penchant for overeating, so weight loss can be hard to maintain in some cases.

Scant research has been done on the psychological impacts of bariatric surgery, and what does exist isn’t particularly conclusive. One study, published last March in the journal Obesity Surgery, surveyed people when they applied for a weight-loss procedure. Two-thirds of them wound up having the surgery. When surveyed four and a half years later, patients in both groups had lost weight, but there was no reported difference between them in terms of psychological well-being — although the bariatric patients lost far more weight on average, both groups showed fewer problems. Nor was there was any correlation between weight loss in bariatric patients and their ultimate levels of anxiety, depression, binge eating, and psychosocial stress.

Yet the potential downsides are also astonishing. The risk of death, depending on which study you’re looking at, ranges from 0.2 to 2 percent — arguably high for an elective procedure. The popular Web site ObesityHelp.com hosts a memorial page listing 132 members who have died since 2000, a mere fraction of the total post-surgical deaths. Up to 20 percent of patients require subsequent operations to address complications. Common side effects include diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, lactose intolerance, signs of nutrient deficiency such as anemia and hair loss, agonizing stomach pain, and shockingly pungent gas and stool. And those who lose weight successfully often have huge folds of excess skin to deal with.

These post-surgical ordeals, and the accompanying emotional adjustments, can persist for many years. Then there’s the cost: Even if insurance covers the initial surgery, the price of subsequent cosmetic procedures and myriad dietary supplements required for optimal health can add up quickly. To top it all off, there’s no scientific evidence that weight-loss surgery makes people any happier in the long run.

Similar Posts:

    None Found

3 thoughts on “Just say no – weight loss surgery”

  1. youch! i had a friend a few years back who was considering that as a solution to her overeating problem, and i had to talk her out of it…

  2. When I was fat I was seriously considering gaining a few lbs so I would be eligible for the surgery.

    GEEZ I WAS STUPID!
    I would have made my tummy problems much much much worse!

    I’m glad it all worked out…they should just go vegan…

    PW

  3. The trouble is that the surgery does nothing except make it hard for you to eat and makes it so your body has trouble digesting the little you do eat. You could accomplish as much by putting a padlock on your refrigerator. Many people do gain the weight back after the surgery even.

    Every article I read on bypass says “Bobby has tried every diet out there and can’t lose any weight.” I think did he try being vegan? I don’t think so.

    All of us have to wrestle our demons eventually, even when those demons are a food addiction. It’s a hard one cause you can’t quit food “cold turkey” but dealing with the underlying issue is a better answer than self mutiliation.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.