Options
for Treatment
Weight Loss Surgery
Diet & Behavior Modification
Exercise
Over-the-Counter & Prescription Drugs
Options for Treatment
For anyone who has considered a weight
loss program, there is certainly no
shortage of choices. In fact, to qualify
for insurance coverage of weight loss
surgery, many insurers require patients
to have a history of medically
supervised weight loss efforts.
Most non-surgical weight loss programs
are based on some combination of
diet/behavior modification and regular
exercise. Unfortunately, even the most
effective interventions have proven to
be effective for only a small percentage
of patients. It is estimated that less
than 5% of individuals who participate
in non-surgical weight loss programs
will lose a significant amount of weight
and maintain that loss for a long period
of time.
According to the National Institutes of
Health, more than 90% of all people in
these programs regain their weight
within one year. Sustained weight loss
for patients who are morbidly obese is
even harder to achieve. Serious health
risks have been identified for people
who move from diet to diet, subjecting
their bodies to a severe and continuing
cycle of weight loss and gain known as
"yo-yo dieting."
The fact remains that morbid obesity is
a complex, multifactorial chronic
disease.
For many patients, the risk of death
from not having the surgery is greater
than the risks from the possible
complications of having the procedure.
That is the key reason that in 2000,
approximately 40,000 weight loss
surgical procedures were performed and
why the American Society for Bariatric
Surgery estimates that 50,000 weight
loss surgical procedures will be
performed in 2001. Patients who have had
the procedure and are benefiting from
its results report improvements in their
quality of life, social interactions,
psychological well-being, employment
opportunities and economic condition.
In clinical studies, candidates for the
procedure who had multiple
obesity-related health conditions
questioned whether they could safely
have the surgery. These studies show
that selection of surgical candidates is
based on very strict criteria and
surgery is an option for the majority of
patients.
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Weight Loss Surgery
Weight loss surgery is major surgery.
Its growing use to treat morbid obesity
is the result of three factors:
Our current knowledge of the significant
health risks of morbid obesity
The relatively low risk and
complications of the procedures versus
not having the surgery
The ineffectiveness of current
non-surgical approaches to produce
sustained weight loss
Surgery should be viewed first and
foremost as a method for alleviating
debilitating, chronic disease. In most
cases, the minimum qualification for
consideration as a candidate for the
procedure is 100 lbs. above ideal body
weight or those with a Body Mass Index
of 40 or greater. Occasionally a
procedure will be considered for someone
with a BMI of 35 or higher if the
patient's physician determines that
obesity-related health conditions have
resulted in a medical need for weight
reduction and, in the doctor's opinion,
surgery appears to be the only way to
accomplish the targeted weight loss. In
many cases, patients are required to
show proof that their attempts at
dietary weight loss have been
ineffective before surgery will be
approved. More important, however, is
the commitment on the part of the
patient to required, long-term follow-up
care. Most surgeons require patients to
demonstrate serious motivation and a
clear understanding of the extensive
dietary, exercise and medical guidelines
that must be followed for the remainder
of their lives after having weight loss
surgery (see Life After Surgery).
Diet & Behavior Modification
There are literally hundreds of diets
available. Moving from diet to diet in a
cycle of weight gain and loss - yo-yo
dieting - that stresses the heart,
kidneys and other organs can also be a
health risk.
Doctors who prescribe and supervise
diets for their patients usually create
a customized program with the goal of
greatly restricting calorie intake while
maintaining nutrition.
These diets fall into two basic
categories:
Low Calorie Diets (LCDs) are
individually planned so that the patient
takes in 500 to 1,000 fewer calories a
day than he or she burns.
Very Low Calorie Diets (VLCDs) typically
limit caloric intake to 400 to 800 a day
and feature high-protein, low-fat
liquids.
Many patients on Very Low Calorie Diets
lose significant amounts of weight.
However, after returning to a normal
diet, most regain the lost weight in
under a year. Ninety percent of people
participating in all diet programs will
regain the weight they've lost within
two years.
Behavior modification uses therapy to
help patients change their eating and
exercise habits. Like low-calorie diets,
behavior modification, in most patients,
results in short-term success that tends
to diminish after the first year.
If diet and behavior modifications have
failed you and surgery is your next
option, it is important to understand
that diet and behavior modification will
be instrumental to sustained weight loss
after your surgery. The surgery itself
is only a tool to get your body started
losing weight - complying with diet and
behavior modifications required by most
surgeons would determine your ultimate
success.
Exercise
Starting an exercise program can be
especially intimidating for someone
suffering from morbid obesity. Your
health condition may make any level of
physical exertion next to impossible.
The benefits of exercise are clear,
however. And there are ways to get
started.
A National Institutes of Health survey
of 13 studies concludes that physical
activity:
results in modest weight loss in
overweight and obese individuals
increases cardiovascular fitness, even
when there is no weight loss
can help maintain weight loss
New theories focusing on the body's set
point (the weight range in which your
body is programmed to weigh and will
fight to maintain that weight) highlight
the importance of exercise. When you
reduce the number of calories you take
in, the body simply reacts by slowing
metabolism to burn fewer calories. Daily
physical activity can help speed up your
metabolism, effectively bringing your
set point down to a lower natural
weight. So when following a diet to
attempt to lose weight, exercise
increases your chances of long-term
success.
Examples to get you started:
Park at the far end of parking lots and
walk
Take the stairs instead of the elevator
Cut down on television
Swim or participate in low-impact water
aerobics
Ride an exercise bike
Overall, walking is one of the best
forms of exercise. Start out slowly and
build up. Your doctor, or people in a
support group, can offer encouragement
and advice. Incorporating exercise into
your daily activities will improve your
overall health and is important for any
long-term weight management program,
including weight loss surgery. Diet and
exercise play a key role in successful
weight loss after surgery.
Over-the-Counter & Prescription Drugs
New over-the-counter and prescription
weight loss medications have been
introduced. Some people have found them
effective in helping to curb their
appetite. The results of most studies
show that patients on drug therapy lose
around 10 percent of their excess weight
and that the weight loss plateaus after
six to eight months. As patients stop
taking the medication, weight gain
usually occurs.
Weight loss drugs can have serious side
effects. Still, medications are an
important step in the morbid obesity
treatment process. Before insurance
companies will reimburse/pay for weight
loss surgery, you must follow a
well-documented treatment path.
"Since many people cannot lose much
weight no matter how hard they try, and
promptly regain whatever they do lose,
the vast amount of money spent on diet
clubs, special foods and
over-the-counter remedies, estimated to
be on the order of $30 billion to $50
billion yearly, is wasted." (New England
Journal of Medicine)