
Media Contact: Russell Rian
214-648-3404
Those interested can call UT Southwestern’s Clinical Center for the Management of Obesity at 214-645-2900 to sign up for the 90-minute evening sessions, which are scheduled the first and third Thursdays of each month at UT Southwestern University Hospital - Zale Lipshy.
UT Southwestern is one of the few institutions in the nation that offers all types of bariatric procedures. The
Bariatric surgeries, which are usually reserved for people more than 100 pounds overweight, have become more widely accepted over the past decade as a safe and effective method for long-term weight loss. The procedures also can help resolve related medical problems such as high blood pressure, high cholesterol and diabetes. Those successful outcomes, combined with a growing number of obese people, have spurred a sevenfold increase in obesity surgery.
“As one of the top bariatric surgery programs, we receive a lot of inquiries about the process and requirements involved in weight-loss surgery,” said bariatric surgeon Dr. David Provost, associate professor of GI/endocrine surgery and director of the
The sessions cover a host of topics, including:
Clinicians will be on site to collect information needed for those wishing to schedule their first doctor visit.
More than 140,000 gastric bypass procedures are now performed annually in the
Studies indicate that nonsurgical therapies for morbidly obese patients are uniformly unsuccessful for sustained weight loss, while weight loss through bariatric surgery can be achieved and sustained, said Dr. Edward Livingston, chief of GI/endocrine surgery at UT Southwestern and chairman of the Veteran’s Administration Central Office Bariatric Surgery Work Group.
Selecting an experienced bariatric surgeon and proper preparation for bariatric surgeries are crucial factors in better outcomes, he added.
UT Southwestern physicians, for instance, have crafted a special diet plan that includes a liquid protein formula to help meet insurance requirements and improve patients’ outcomes.
UT Southwestern bariatric specialists have performed approximately 4,000 procedures and have trained more than 100 surgeons from across the U.S. UT Southwestern surgeons were the first in North Texas to do laparoscopic gastric-bypass surgeries, as well as completing the first laparoscopic gastric bypass surgery in Texas in 1999. In 2001 they were the first in the
As an academic medical center, UT Southwestern’s recognized multidisciplinary approach reaches beyond the clinical setting. UT Southwestern recently received a five-year, $22 million grant from the National Institutes of Health aimed at investigating the causes, effects and treatments for obesity.
Visit http://www.utsouthwestern.edu/bariatrics to learn more about UT Southwestern’s clinical services in bariatrics.
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