Expert panel on weight loss surgery: Executive report update

George L. Blackburn, Matthew M. Hutter, Alan M. Harvey, Caroline M. Apovian, Hannah R.W. Boulton, Susan Cummings, John A. Fallon, Isaac Greenberg, Michael E. Jiser, Daniel B. Jones, Stephanie B. Jones, Lee M. Kaplan, John J. Kelly, Rayford S. Kruger, David B. Lautz, Carine M. Lenders, Robert LoNigro, Helen Luce, Anne McNamara, Ann T. MulliganMichael K. Paasche-Orlow, Frank M. Perna, Janey S.A. Pratt, Stancel M. Riley, Malcolm K. Robinson, John R. Romanelli, Edward Saltzman, Roman Schumann, Scott A. Shikora, Roger L. Snow, Stephanie Sogg, Mary A. Sullivan, Michael Tarnoff, Christopher C. Thompson, Christina C. Wee, Nancy Ridley, John Auerbach, Frank B. Hu, Leslie Kirle, Rita B. Buckley, Catherine L. Annas

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

93 Scopus citations

Abstract

Rapid shifts in the demographics and techniques of weight loss surgery (WLS) have led to new issues, new data, new concerns, and new challenges. In 2004, this journal published comprehensive evidence-based guidelines on WLS. In this issue, we've updated those guidelines to assure patient safety in this fast-changing field. WLS involves a uniquely vulnerable population in need of specialized resources and ongoing multidisciplinary care. Timely best-practice updates are required to identify new risks, develop strategies to address them, and optimize treatment. Findings in these reports are based on a comprehensive review of the most current literature on WLS; they directly link patient safety to methods for setting evidence-based guidelines developed from peer-reviewed scientific publications. Among other outcomes, these reports show that WLS reduces chronic disease risk factors, improves health, and confers a survival benefit on those who undergo it. The literature also shows that laparoscopy has displaced open surgery as the predominant approach; that government agencies and insurers only reimburse procedures performed at accredited WLS centers; that best practice care requires close collaboration between members of a multidisciplinary team; and that new and existing facilities require wide-ranging changes to accommodate growing numbers of severely obese patients. More than 100 specialists from across the state of Massachusetts and across the many disciplines involved in WLS came together to develop these new standards. We expect them to have far-reaching effects of the development of health care policy and the practice of WLS.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)842-862
Number of pages21
JournalObesity
Volume17
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - May 2009
Externally publishedYes

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Medicine (miscellaneous)
  • Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism
  • Endocrinology
  • Nutrition and Dietetics

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