Medical Procedures an Option for Severe Obesity
Medical Procedures an Option for Treating Severe Obesity
WELLINGTON, May 11 /MediaNet International-AsiaNet/ --
Embargoed to 12am Wednesday
11 May 2005
People who are severely obese rarely find
diet, exercise and medication
alone are effective in the
long term and may need to look to medical procedures
as
an effective treatment, according to Dr Richard Stubbs from
the Wakefield
Gastroenterology Centre in Wellington. Dr
Stubbs is speaking at the RACP Annual
Scientific Meeting
today in Wellington.
“Severe obesity (body mass index of
over 35) drastically impacts on an
individual’s quality
of life and length of life. Severe obesity is becoming a
huge burden for society and the health system in both
direct and indirect
economic terms,” Dr Stubbs
said.
“Dieting and exercise rarely work alone for severely
obese individuals and
if they do work the results may
not endure. While medication is moderately
successful
and improving it is not capable of achieving the degree of
weight
loss required in these severely obese individuals
(the sentence grammar is
odd). Therefore, we need to
look to medical procedures as one of the best
method of
long term weight loss for the severely obese.”
“Medical
Procedures for obesity have dramatically improved in terms
of
safety and results since its beginnings in the 1950s.
New Zealand doctors use a
mix of gastric bypass
procedures and gastric banding procedures. In Australia,
the simpler gastric banding procedure has been preferred
and is more commonly
used,” Dr Stubbs said.
“With the
Fobi pouch gastric bypass the operation provides substantial
and
enduring weight loss together with a cure for some
85% of patients with type 2
diabetes and around 60% of
patients with hypertension. Like all surgery, there
are
risks involved but the operation can now be achieved with
high levels of
safety and success.”
“As the safety of
these procedures and its effectiveness has improved, more
people should look to it as a viable treatment for
severe obesity. Evidence
shows that after a procedure a
patient’s life is extended by as much as 10 to
15 years.
Furthermore, considerable medium and long term savings can
be made by
the Government and health sector as a result
of patients' decreased reliance on
health
services.”
The RACP is responsible for training, educating
and representing over 9,000
physicians in Australia and
New Zealand. The RACP represents 23 medical
sub-specialities including paediatrics, public health
and occupational
medicine. Physicians are often called
specialists and are doctors who have
completed an extra
six years or more of training after their initial medical
training and choose to specialise in a particular area
of
medicine.
ENDS