ASMBS Calls for Resumption of Bariatric Procedures

Recently, ASMBS, which I am a Fellow of, called for resumption of Bariatric Procedures. Read more

COVID19: Staying Healthy At Home

Before & After Sleeve Gastrectomy: Down 153 Pounds!

Why I decided to have WLS Surgery: Before & After VSG with Khaleesi Sleeved

Simple… to save my life! My name is Jaclyn, and I am a 37-year-old single mother who has been obese since I was about 10 years old. No matter what I did, however many fad diets I was put on, the weight just kept piling on. At my heaviest, I weighed in at 360 lbs. I didn’t realize I weighed that much as I never stepped on the scale. I was 311 lbs when I got pregnant with my son 10 years ago, and I gained weight after he was born. I did Weight Watchers, Atkins, South Beach, BeachBody, you name it I had it; even Richard Simmons videos… I was sweatin to the oldies and still gaining weight.

I was always a confident woman. I carried my weight well and that is perhaps the reason my weight ballooned as it did because I was able to dress myself and look presentable. I was always the “fat” friend in the group, never been a bridesmaid, always the funny outgoing one in the bunch. My mother underwent gastric bypass surgery when I was 16 and at that time it was still fairly new and scary. She became very ill and I swore I would never do surgery, that I can get the weight off on my own.

Well about two years ago, I took my son to a birthday party with go-karts and I couldn’t fit in the cart. I had to be helped out of it as I was stuck. I embarrassed my son in front of his friends and parents. I was mortified and he didn’t even realize it. He just said its “ok mom, I don’t wanna go anyway.” The very next day I set up an appointment with my PCP, and they directed me to JFK for Life in Edison NJ.

My Surgery and Post-Op Life

I met with a nutritionist, behavioral therapist and the INCREDIBLE surgeon Dr. Aram Jawed. He stated that I had not a single pre-existing medical condition other than obesity and that I was a perfect candidate for VSG ( verticle sleeve gastrectomy ) surgery. He also said that it was very brave of me to decide to change my life BEFORE a medical issue should arise, that I was young and my son needed me. My son even said he had some “questions” for the doctor and he actually sat down with my 8-year-old and answered all his questions and eased his mind.

Then 6 months after that, I joined the loser’s bench. I went into surgery at 340 lbs 9/18/18 and today I am at 187 lbs and still losing. The energy and life I have now is something I can never find the words to thank Dr. Jawed for.

He saved my life, gave me more time with my son and allowed me to be a better version of myself. I am currently 16 months post-op and I’ve lost 154 lbs. I still follow my bariatric meal guidelines and I workout 3-4 days a week to continue a healthy lifestyle.

My son who has seen this journey is also so much more health-conscious and that is a huge reward. I have the opportunity to give my child something I never had; the gift of knowledge, nutrition and healthy, WHOA!
Special Milestones & Non-Scale Victories

My first NSV is that I would need to say is being able to run with my son and not be winded… we were playing with exercise dice and we raced and I didn’t need to stop or catch my breath. I was able to keep up with him, his smile when I actually beat him was priceless.

A special milestone I reached along the way was being able to sit in a stadium seat and watch a football game with my son. We have suite tickets to a football stadium so we sit in comfy couches never the standard stadium seats… to be able to share a stadium seat experience is a moment I won’t soon forget!

I want to thank Dr. Jawed again as if it wasn’t for him and his ability to perform this surgery who knows where I would be.

Comorbidities, and Outcomes Among 5700 Patients Hospitalized With COVID-19 in NYC Area

I, among many Americans, especially medical professionals, read the article, published in JAMA (Journal of American Medical Association). It showed that 88 % of coronavirus patients in NYC from March to April of 2020, who were placed on the ventilators, didn’t make it. Data also indicated that average age was 63, 57% had HYPERTENSION, 41% were OBESE, 34% had DIABETES! The message here is very clear, at least my message to our current and prospective future patients: Please, don’t wait any longer to get the surgery done! You waited long enough, especially those of you who had to do insurance-required medically supervised weight loss program for 3-6 months, before being approved. Our society, as a whole, has a very high prevalence of these comorbid conditions, listed above, therefore we are ALL at risk of higher mortality, especially knowing that the virus is coming back next year, before the vaccination is available.

How can we at Advanced Laparoscopic Surgeons of Morris help you to be Safe and get your life back? Please know that bariatric surgery, such as vertical sleeve gastrectomy, gastric bypass, can cure or improve Hypertension in 60-70% of patients, bring BMI (Body Mass Index) down to Normal numbers in at least 50-80% of patients, and cure or improve Diabetes in 50-75% of patients. It is the best “diet tool” you can reward yourself with.

We are open for business during the Covid19 epidemic, running Virtual Telemedicine visits, support groups and looking forward to helping patients to get their lives back.

Please call us 973-410-9700, or email us at info@alsnj.com.

Alexander Abkin, MD, FACS, FASMBS.

To read the full article, click here to download.

Why Are Still Less Than 1% of Eligible Patients Undergoing Bariatric Surgery Each Year?

The latest estimates from the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery (ASMBS) show that in 2017, 228,000 Americans underwent bariatric surgery—a 44% increase in procedures since 2011. Sleeve gastrectomy leads the way as the most common procedure, and has overtaken Gastric bypass, as more patients embrace weight loss surgery. These statistics hold true in our practice, Advanced Laparoscopic Surgeons of Morris, LLC.

Although many outside the bariatric community may view this growth as explosive, we view it as sad and tragic, given the fact that in the big picture, less than 1% of people with severe obesity undergo bariatric surgery in any given year. According to a recent study in Annals of Surgery, utilization increased from 0.07% in 1993 to 0.62% in 2004, and to slightly lower than 0.5% in 2016.

The bariatric surgery utilization rate has barely budged despite a rise in severe obesity and an avalanche of data demonstrating it to be the most effective treatment with a complication rate comparable to laparoscopic gallbladder surgery and hysterectomy, and a mortality rate similar to total knee replacement.3 The question is, why? More importantly, what can be done about it?
Imagine if 99% of patients with diabetes, cancer, or heart disease did not seek or receive medical treatment because the barriers were too high. The outcry would be unimaginable. But somehow it is more acceptable to treat the devastating consequences of obesity rather than the disease of obesity itself.

Health professionals represent many different specialties, backgrounds, and perspectives, but they all treat the same disease. The good news is there is growing interest in working together to better help patients with obesity.
This has led to a more collaborative and systematic effort to tear down the barriers and create a more favorable environment for obesity care. But there are no easy or magic formulas to create the watershed moment that is needed to turn a 1% lifesaving procedure into standard practice.

Barriers to Care Fueled By Misunderstanding

The barriers to obesity treatment are interconnected: Misunderstanding, social stigma, and bias about obesity and bariatric surgery negatively affect insurance policies and benefit design, doctor–patient interactions, and public policy, and discourage patients from even exploring surgical treatment.

When people fail to recognize obesity as a chronic disease and health professionals fail to treat it as such, the stigma surrounding it endures and patients are left facing more obesity, diabetes, heart disease, stroke, sleep apnea, and cancer, as well as reduced quality of life and shorter life spans.

Public Stigma and Misperceptions Are Pervasive

According to a national survey commissioned by the ASMBS and NORC at the University of Chicago in 2016, while there is growing public concern about the dangers of obesity—81% said obesity is as serious as cancer—only 1 in 3 of those with obesity reported that they have ever spoken with a doctor about their weight. Additionally, only 12% with severe obesity said a doctor had ever suggested consideration of bariatric surgery.

While scientific research shows that diet and exercise alone are largely ineffective for treating obesity and severe obesity, the survey found that more than three-fourths of Americans (78%) believe individuals with the disease should have the willpower to lose weight on their own, noting that diet and exercise is the most effective method for long- term weight loss—more effective than bariatric surgery (60%) and prescription obesity drugs (25%). This belief contradicts the evidence. The annual probability of achieving even a 5% weight reduction without bariatric surgery was 1 in 8 for men and 1 in 7 for women with severe obesity.

Stigma Surrounds Obesity And Bariatric Surgery

One of the realities of living with obesity is that there’s not only stigma about having obesity, but there’s also stigma around needing help to treat it. A recent study in JAMA Surgery found almost half of the 948 respondents (49.4%) believed most people had bariatric surgery for cosmetic reasons, and nearly 40% thought that people who underwent bariatric surgery chose “the easy way out.”

It has been about 6 years since the American Medical Association officially recognized obesity as a disease, but its full impact is yet to be realized. In a survey of more than 3,000 adults with obesity, 65% recognized obesity as a disease; yet, 82% felt “completely” responsible for weight loss. What a disconnect! There is no other life- threatening disease of which patients feel completely responsible for their own treatment.

Insurance Coverage

Insurance coverage is the price of admission for surgery, and misunderstanding and stigma are literally written into the insurance policies of millions of Americans. Although most would agree that coverage has improved, real access remains challenging. Co-payments may be as high as 50% of the cost of the procedure. Small and medium-sized companies must select bariatric surgery as an option, and some carriers offer bariatric surgery as a “rider” available at substantially increased cost to the insured.

Real Progress Across All Barriers to Care

Education and advocacy backed by data are leading to good progress in all areas. According to the ASMBS, just this year, some insurers, including UnitedHealthCare, dropped its arbitrary 6-month preoperative dietary requirements, and others have reduced other hurdles or even expanded indications for bariatric surgery.

Plan of Action – Where Do We Go From Here?

Public and Professional Education And Awareness

We must continue our efforts to educate both public and health professionals about obesity and bariatric surgery. We know misconceptions and bias persist. The best weapons we have against that are data and you.

Do not wait for the referral. Make connections with local orthopedic surgeons, gynecologists, primary care providers, and other specialists. Familiarize them with national obesity guidelines and the key clinical evidence demonstrating the safety and effectiveness of bariatric surgery. Then tell them about your bariatric program, the experience of your multidisciplinary team, and share your specific patient outcomes.

Surgeons must improve educational efforts with other health care providers. They should encourage every medical practice to include the following question on intake forms for new patients: “Is it OK if we talk about your weight today?” If a patient answers yes, permission is granted to start a conversation that will help a patient get treatment. Most patients and doctors today avoid the subject.

Insurance Coverage and Access

We must continue our work with insurers and employers to have a uniform single benefit for the entire country. Work is being done to create a model benefit that could be adopted by insurers nationwide. This would enable payers and the country to reap the health and cost benefits of bariatric surgery no matter how long a patient remains with one insurance provider.

Advocacy and Public Policy

The ASMBS, medical societies, advocacy organizations, and industry leaders are working to shape federal, state, and local government policies; pro- mote the approval of safe and effective treatment options; improve funding for obesity research; expand patient access; and fight stigma wherever it exists.

It is important for all of us to challenge people and organizations around the barriers to care and help them understand whether their views or policies are based on bias or misinformation or actual evidence and good science. This has changed many a payer’s perceptions about obesity care.

We also must stop the spread of stigma in mass media and social media and counter inaccurate and hurtful portrayals of obesity and its treatment with greater humanity, sensitivity, and evidence-based messages. Each negative portrayal is an opportunity to educate.

A Call for a National Obesity Strategy and a Patient Bill of Rights

The moment is now for a national obesity strategy. We as a nation must change our thinking about obesity and begin to remove the policy, social, medical, discriminatory, economic, and perceptual barriers that deny people appropriate treatment and support. The state of America’s health and wealth is at stake. We cannot keep doing the same things fighting a losing war against the obesity epidemic and expect a different result.

Some new thinking is required including the creation of a patient bill of rights that would ensure access to care is not limited by a person’s size, weight, or economic status and a national obesity strategy that encompasses both prevention and treatment. This national initiative could be headed by a newly created obesity czar tasked by the federal government to bring the public and private sectors together on prevention and treatment strategies and policies that destigmatize the disease and do not unnecessarily deny, delay, or defer proven evidence-based treatments across the continuum of care.

In this environment, the most effective treatment for severe obesity will no longer be reserved for less than 1% of the patients who could benefit.

We at Advanced Laparoscopic Surgeons of Morris, LLC, are here to help, to get you started in reclaiming your life back, your health back! It is even more important now, during and after the COVID-19 epidemic, which showed that OBESITY is a MAJOR factory in mortality from the virus, in addition to age over 60, Diabetes, Coronary Artery Disease, Obstructive Sleep Apnea, Chronic Kidney Disease. Please call us (973) 410-9700, or email us at info@alsnj.com or visit us on the web at www.alsnj.com.

Alexander Abkin, MD, FACS, FASMBS.

COVID-19: American College of Surgeons releases new guidance for resuming elective surgery

I recently read the article, which we atAdvanced Laparoscopic Surgeons of Morris will be using to guide our patients, waiting to have Gastric Sleeve, Gastric Bypass, Revisional Weight loss surgery or General surgery, such as Gallbladder removal or Hernia repair. The documents speaks to the need to be careful, when it comes to re-starting the elective surgeries, and additional steps, which we may have to take, including COVID-19 testing for the patients and healthcare providers.

In the interim, we want you to stay safe, but please be in touch with US, – we are open for business, via Telemedicine, Virtual appointments, support groups, etc.

Together, we will get through this period in history and we will be better equipped in the future.

Click here to download the article.

Recidivism Is Not A Failure

I just read a very good, inspirational article about human history of obesity. it specifically speaks to recidivism of it, but also compares it to other common, deadly diseases, such as diabetes, cancer and cardiovascular and its recidivism.

Not surprising to me, nobody shames medical doctors or surgeons for failure to control diabetes or cancer or cardiovascular diseases, but when it comes to Obesity and surgery for it, we or the patient get blamed for recidivism? Totally wrong and unfair. I think the opposite is true.

When we, bariatric surgeons, perform gastric sleeve or gastric bypass, or even bariatric revision surgery, and our respective patients diabetes, or sleep apnea or hypertension goes away or its management is improved for many years to come, we contribute not just to the obesity treatment of human race, but to other conditions and should not be discriminated against, but instead rewarded or applaud for it.

We at Advanced Laparoscopic Surgeons of Morris have been doing it for 2 decades and proudly helped thousands of patients!

Click here to read the article.

Pain and Nausea Protocols After Bariatric Surgery

Recently I read the article from ACS (American College of Surgeons), describing a protocol to reduce postoperative pain, nausea and re-admissions after gastric bypass and sleeve gastrectomy. It shows that with good patients education, proper pre, post and intraoperative management patients can be safely discharged in 1 day.

To my satisfaction and to the benefit of our patients I must say, that everything that is described in the article has been in use by my practice at Advanced Laparoscopic Surgeons of Morris, LLC, for many years.

So our patients, who undergo gastric sleeve surgery or gastric bypass can be rest assured that they are getting the best care and have been for many years.

Click here to read to full article.