Home Treatments Destinations Resources FREE Quotes Packages Roadmap Contact Us
         Search:  
Find Medical Procedures
Treatment
Region/Country
Find Wellness Programs
Treatment
Region/Country
Find Packages
Treatment
Region/Country
Free Quotes
Free Health e-NEWS
Enter E mail Address
Enter First & Last Name
Popular Health & Wellness Requests
Affordable Cosmetic Surgery Packages Latin America
Affordable Stem Cell in Mexico
Affordable Stem Cell Therapy Abroad
Amazing Dental Holidays in Cancun, Mexico
Anti-Aging in Bad Ragaz, Switzerland
Eye Surgery Package for Corneal Transplant, Panama
Gastric Bypass Surgery Package in Mexico for $10,000
Spine Surgery in Korea
Sports Medicine in Switzerland
World Class Cosmetic Surgery in Latin America
 
  Article/Press Releases;
Search:  
  Obese dying while waiting for weight-loss surgery
by Sharon Kirkey ,  Ottawa Citizen | 2009-06-02

Patients in Canada are dying while waiting their turn for obesity surgery, according to new research that says wait times for bariatric surgery are the longest of any surgically treated condition in the country.

In 2007, 6,783 patients were waiting for bariatric surgery in Canada. The wait time was just over five years, according to a report in the most recent issue of the Canadian Journal of Surgery.

At one Canadian centre — the McGill University Health Centre in Montreal — 12 patients died while on the waiting list. Researchers say the number of deaths underestimates the magnitude of the problem, because they were not actively looking to find them, and there was no formal callback of all 2,178 patients in the centre's queue as of the end of 2008.

The average age of those who died was 46.

"It is not surprising that prolonged waits of more than five years for bariatric surgery lead to deaths among patients on the waiting list, given the devastating obesity-associated diseases that afflict these patients," the McGill University researchers write. Those who died had underlying conditions such as diabetes, sleep apnea, heart disease, high blood pressure and deep vein thrombosis, or blood clots in the veins.

"Bariatric surgery cures or improves all these," says lead author Dr. Nicolas Christou, a professor of surgery at McGill University and director of the bariatric surgery program at the McGill University Health Centre.


 
Search Keywords 
 
  Resources
 
Articles
Destinations
Events
Industry News
Medical Tourism Blog
Partners
Travel Planning
Treatments
Videos
 
 
placidway.com 2008. All Rights Reserved