Anne Diamond, the television presenter, has said that gastric band weight loss surgery should be more widely available on the NHS to prevent people suffering botched surgery abroad.
She has launched a group known as experts in severe and complex obesity (ESCO) to lobby and advise the NHS on tackling obesity. The group was launched on Tuesday October 7th as she chaired the National Obesity Forum annual conference, of which she has been a patron for two years.
The broadcaster went to Belgium in 2006 where errors during her gastric band surgery meant the operation had to be corrected at a later date by UK British bariatric surgeons.
Speaking at the conference, at which Vita Clinics was exhibiting, she said it was important these treatments were available on the NHS to prevent obese people having unregulated bariatric surgery abroad.
“Surgery should by no means be the first choice, but it should be available to those who have reached the end of the line,” she said.
“I always had the willpower to lose weight and went on many successful diets but I always ended up putting the weight back on.”
“Before I had the band fitted my BMI (Body Mass Index) was over 35, which is what it has to be to make you eligible for surgery. I didn’t have diabetes or any other major health issues but I would have done if I’d carried on and not had surgery. ”
“The surgery changed my life but, not only can it have personal benefits there are also long term economical benefits.Having the surgery prevents future treatment as surgery is proven to be a more permanent solution as people like me are less likely to put the weight back on.”
“If it was more freely available it would stop people like me going abroad for potentially faulty surgery.”
Obesity is costing the NHS £4.2 billion-a-year and this figure is predicted to more than double by 2050.
The NHS carries out between 2,500 and 4,000 bariatric surgeries every year, but ESCO estimates there are currently 230,000 people both eligible and willing to have the surgery across the UK.
ESCO combines experts in fields including surgery, psychology and health economics and promotes high quality, long-term solutions to obesity.
Mr Alberic Fiennes, Vita Clinics’ UK Bariatric Surgeon Adviser and Secretary of The British Obesity & Metabolic Surgery Society (BOMSS), said: “These treatments can put problems like type II diabetes into remission.
“Each type II diabetes patient costs the NHS £2,500-per-year and bariatric surgeries cost £8,000 and 60-80% of patients with diabetes go into remission. This will start saving the NHS money within three years.
“ESCO is not just about losing weight it’s about treatment for the lethal consequences of being overweight.”
Vita Clinics offers surgery rescue for those patients who have gone abroad for cut price gastric band or gastric bypass surgery, and find they then have little or no essential aftercare. Contact us now for further information.