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  • Companion to Lauren's post about obese kids

    I read this in the New York Post today. It made me sad. I think medical advancements are amazing, but there is something disturbing about childrem undergoing these surgeries before they reach adulthood. Is there no other option? Has every other avenue been travelled? I would think that suppressing hunger alone can't be enough to bring about long term change. Some of the statements are very superficial also. It just irks me.

    "Gone in a Flesh"
    http://www.nypost.com/news/regionalnews/64749.htm

    by Carl Campanile
    June 5, 2006 -- Some severely obese teenagers are shrinking.


    Eighty-one supersize 14- to 17-year-olds who enrolled in an NYU Medical Center fat-busting program have collectively shed 7,300 pounds after undergoing gastric-band surgery that reduced the size of their stomachs and curbed their appetites. On average, they weighed 300 pounds before the surgery. One tipped the scales at 530, three others at 400. The average loss equaled 90 pounds of body fat. And the total loss - 3.65 tons - was equivalent to the weight of an SUV.
    The procedure "controls the patient's hunger," said Dr. George Fielding, NYU's chief pediatric gastric-band surgeon, who first performed the surgery in his native Australia. "Not being hungry is the key to the whole thing. The size of the stomach goes from a football to a golf ball." An adjustable white silicon ring, attached to a wiry, inflatable prosthetic belt, is fastened to the top of the stomach after small incisions are made and tubes inserted during a laparoscopy. The "LAP-Band" creates a smaller pouch, or stomach. A balloon inside the band helps control the size, which can be adjusted by injecting a saline solution in the stomach wall.


    Retiree Ira Harris, who was a patient of Fielding's, donated $2 million to pay for the surgery and follow-up treatment for the 81 kids, 35 of whom are part of an FDA-approved clinical trial and all of whom had been diagnosed as morbidly obese.

    A significant majority in an NYU survey said that they were no longer short of breath, fit in better at school and now play sports they never had. Plus, once-large girls can now shop in regular stores. "It's very hard being a fat teen-ager," Fielding said. "Being a morbidly obese teenage girl is as close to being in **** as you can imagine. This surgery gives them a shot at a normal life."

    Three-quarters of his patients are female; most are white. Many come in with ailments more often associated with the elderly: high blood pressure, high cholesterol, joint pains. Dieting has failed these kids. And the alternative, gastric bypass, or intestinal rerouting, is more invasive and more dangerous.

    "We want to show LAP-Band surgery is a valid treatment for kids. It is much safer," said Fielding, who himself went from 330 to 215 pounds after undergoing the surgery. There is a risk of infection from excess skin, and some doctors fear the bands may dissolve or break over time. But there's been no evidence of that, Fielding said. And, in any event, the bands are easy to retrieve and replace - unlike one's teenage years. carl.campanile@nypost.com

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  • #2
    Re: Companion to Lauren's post about obese kids

    Wow this is really shocking to read


    So sad that the kids have become like that in the first place!
    34 yr old Female

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    • #3
      Re: Companion to Lauren's post about obese kids

      This made me cry. What has happened to kids these days?
      No stats. Not weighing anymore ever. Will post "before and after" pictures when I want to. The end.

      Vigilance, not perfection.

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      • #4
        Re: Companion to Lauren's post about obese kids

        Hunger isn't the problem. The problem is what people are feeding (and not feeding) their kids. They then grow into adults that do not know how to eat properly.

        When every other commercial on TV is for fast food or bad food or soda, what can you expect?
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        • #5
          Re: Companion to Lauren's post about obese kids

          The school lunch ladie argues with me that the food is balanced and as per the government regulations. Breakfast yesterday was a donut and toast. What ever happened to cheree O's and fruit. We have snack at camp 3 or 4 kids bring candy ALL others bring chips. Would a bananna or apple kill you? These parents need to wake up.
          ~Lauren~



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          • #6
            Re: Companion to Lauren's post about obese kids

            We want to show LAP-Band surgery is a valid treatment for kids.
            What?!?!!?? I've never seen a fat crack addict, is that a valid option? How's about we cut out the donuts and pop tarts and sugary cereal and sports drinks for kids and, and, and.....my gosh. Where's the common sense???

            And sorry, but how do you let your kid get to be the size of an suv without noticing??
            Female, 46yrs, 5'3"

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            • #7
              Re: Companion to Lauren's post about obese kids

              I couldn't believe it when I was reading it. I was at the laundromat. Mind you, the Post can be a little sensational at times, but how can this be okay? Espaecially the last part of the article
              There is a risk of infection from excess skin, and some doctors fear the bands may dissolve or break over time. But there's been no evidence of that, Fielding said. And, in any event, the bands are easy to retrieve and replace - unlike one's teenage years.
              That is not okay.

              Check out our Low Carb Recipes website and add to it!!
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              New Year, new goal!!


              If you read and listen to the book and its advice, you will succeed. Nothing worth having ever came easy.
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              • #8
                Re: Companion to Lauren's post about obese kids

                this article does not shock or surprise me ..I am telling you .. kids are a mess .....and we have no clue what to do about it
                we know what would be right for them ..breastfeed them on to good healthy fresh foods and lots of running around ..but it is not happening ....

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                • #9
                  Re: Companion to Lauren's post about obese kids

                  Originally posted by bizzlekitty
                  Hunger isn't the problem. The problem is what people are feeding (and not feeding) their kids. They then grow into adults that do not know how to eat properly.

                  When every other commercial on TV is for fast food or bad food or soda, what can you expect?
                  I agree with that. And let's not forget the commercials for "healthy" foods like 100% fruit juice which is just fruit flavored sugar water. So the kids drink alot of sugar water, sit around and get fat.
                  ~Megs~
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                  • #10
                    Re: Companion to Lauren's post about obese kids

                    How could any parent or doctor let a child get to 530 lbs! I'm sorry, there's an upbringing question here too! OK, maybe you could not realise your child had gained or lost weight, but 530! I STRONGLY DISAGREE with this radical surgery being available for kids as young as 14. Lock 'em up and make them diet and exercise.
                    Odille

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                    • #11
                      Re: Companion to Lauren's post about obese kids

                      One thing to remember though is that this is the lap band surgery, that is reversable, and had better mortality rates.

                      It's not the gastric bypass surgery.

                      The banding is definately my preferred option.

                      That is some massive sizes for 14-17 year olds. They have some serious metabolic issues going on there!

                      I fully believe that those kids do not fully understand the consequences of the surgery. How Can they ? They are still babies at that age ?

                      Just think about when you were 21 and you thought you knew everything.

                      It's pretty sad to me.
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                      • #12
                        Re: Companion to Lauren's post about obese kids

                        I work in a doctor's office and before that I worked in a children's hospital and several clinics. Anyhow, some parents are in total denial about their child's weight. I remember at the hospital, there was a 4 year old boy who weighed about 90 pounds. He was in for a metabolic work-up and breathing problems (naturally). His mother allowed him to drink fruit juice from a baby bottle (and he's 4 years old!). If he didn't get his bottle, he would scream until he got his fruit juice. Anyhow, the doctor discussed the diet changes he was going to make while the child was in the hospital. The hospital nutritionist was called in to speak with mom, etc. Mom agreed to the diet they proposed. Then the night shift caught mom sneaking food to him.

                        I remember the mom was sobbing that we were starving him and that if he didn't drink his juice, he would starve and die.

                        Then there was the time I worked in a rural clinic.....There was a family with an obese teenager (about 14 years old and weighed about 245 pounds). The mom was normal weight. So the doc weighed and measured the kid, plotted the numbers on a growth chart and explained to the mom that he was very obese and he needed to be put on a weight reduction diet and exercise plan. Doc referred them to one of the local hospitals to see the nutritionists. The mom started crying and dragged her kid out of the office. About 2 hours later, we got a visit from the father. He was very angry and was yelling at Doc for upsetting his wife and calling his kid fat. Doc was a older man (early 60s) and calmly showed the father the growth chart and explained everything. The father was still angry, left the office. About a month later, we got a request to send their medical records to another doctor.
                        ~Megs~
                        242/141/160 (130)
                        dress size 26/10/8
                        5'4", Female, May 2, 2003
                        My blog:
                        http://mformiscellaneous.blogspot.com/

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