WEIGHT LOSS SURGERY: A MAGIC BULLET?
A REALISTIC LOOK AT THE MEDICAL AND PSYCHOLOGICAL RISKS
Sharon K. Farber, PhD
reprinted by permission, co. 2003, all rights reserved. please
contact author for re-print information
As a psychotherapist
who specializes in treating people with eating problems, I have known for a long
time that binge eating and compulsive eating are the most common eating
disorders around and play a major part in the development of obesity. I do
individual and group therapy for people with these problems and find often that
what they really want is some kind of magic. Of course, no one will say so
openly, or if they do, it is in the form of a joke. But underlying the hope and
expectation they bring to meeting with me is the very human and understandable
wish for magic, even in the most intelligent and sophisticated people. Sometimes
I wish I had a magic wand that I could wave to alleviate their pain. But of
course, I don’t have that kind of power and neither does anyone else. And now
that I have am doing pre-surgical consultations for people considering bariatric
or weight loss surgery, I am still hearing the expectation of magic. There isn’t
any magic. What I have and what the bariatric surgeons have are tools for
helping people who eat far too much to modulate their eating. These tools are
not magic.
The weight loss industry has always profited from people’s desperation to lose
weight. When Weight Loss Surgery is presented as the only viable solution for
obesity, as is so often the case, this preys upon the sense of desperation that
so many obese people have. As bariatric surgery, the highest paying general
surgical procedure there is, has become part of that industry and surges in
popularity, with even obese teenagers having the surgery, the Journal of the
American Medical Association (JAMA April 2003) has raised very serious and
scientific questions about the effectiveness of weight loss surgery, about the
safety of the procedures, and has raised ethical questions about the way the
surgery is promoted in the media. With such aggressive promoting of these
surgeries, it is easy for someone who is feeling desperate to remain in the dark
regarding the serious medical and psychological risks to these surgeries.
What are the medical risks? Of those who have gastric bypass surgery, over
one-third develop gallstones and ten to twenty percent will require a second
surgery to repair a complication, most commonly a hernia. Other complications
are the staples pulling loose, so there is no longer a pouch or the opening from
the pouch to the stomach becoming stretched. It is also possible for a leak to
occur from the stomach into the abdominal cavity, which will result in
peritonitis, a serious infection. It is also possible for the plastic band to
begin to wear through the stomach wall. Some may have persistent problems with
vomiting, especially if trying to eat more than the pouch can hold. This can
also cause the pouch to stretch, thus eliminating any benefit from the surgery.
European research notes that complications of laparoscopic stomach stapling
include abscess, leaks, fistulas, and pulmonary complications. There is a small
risk of death from the surgery. The European research found that the
complications of laparoscopic gastric banding include an inability to eat (food
intolerance), wound infections, band slippage, and pouch enlargement. Second
operations may be necessary in 13 out of 100 operations. About 1 in 200 (0.5%)
people die from the surgery.
The AMA advised surgeons to tell patients that weight loss surgery is
'investigational' and that it is not known whether these procedures will help
the patient. The JAMA article acknowledged that the short term results of weight
loss surgery were impressive, showing large weight losses as well as improvement
of disorders like diabetes type II. But it also stated that the long term
consequences remain uncertain, such as whether weight loss is maintained and
what the long-term effects of altering nutrient absorption are. The available
data indicate that the outcome of bariatric surgery, although usually good in
the short term, is variable and weight regain sometimes occurs at 2 years after
surgery. A 1998 literature review found that on average, most patients lose 60%
of excess weight after gastric bypass and 40% after vertical banded gastroplasty,
but that weight regain occurs at 18 months to 2 years after surgery in about 30%
of patients.
What are the psychological risks? Binge eaters or compulsive overeaters eat in
an addictive-like way for emotional reasons, to distract themselves from
anxiety, to push angry feelings down, or to anesthetize themselves to
depression. Just as many compulsive eaters can defeat diets, the nature of their
eating disorder can defeat the purpose of the surgery. Binge eating serves a
powerful psychological function for those who do it, and the need for it will
not disappear once surgery is performed. How many people do you know who can
lose a good deal of weight, but cannot maintain their weight loss? That is
because they become quite anxious or depressed when they cannot use their
overeating or binge eating to keep those feelings at bay. It is much like the
way alcohol functions for the alcoholic, and drugs for the addict. Even if they
regain the weight they have lost, or “blow out” ” their staples or stretch out
their bands, this is the price they will pay in order not to experience those
disturbing feelings. Weight Loss Surgery makes it more difficult to eat large
quantities in this way, but it does not make it impossible and it does not make
the compulsion to eat disappear. This is why many will regain much of the weight
they may have lost initially. A study of psychosocial adjustment to the initial
weight loss found it to be generally encouraging over the short term, but there
are reports of poor adjustment after weight loss, including alcohol abuse and
even suicide.
For some compulsive eaters, bariatric surgery does feel like magic. It is a tool
that helps them to eat less, feel satisfied with less, and lose weight and
maintain the loss. When put to the test, they discover that they have more
ability to withstand the impulse to binge than they ever thought, and this
itself boosts their self-esteem, improves their health, and empowers them. They
are the fortunate ones.
The key question here is how can you know in advance how you will respond
psychologically to bariatric surgery? Unfortunately, with presurgical
psychological screening, we can have a general sense of who is more likely to do
better and who might do poorly, but we cannot predict this with any certainty.
Certainly someone with a history of severe depression, anxiety, or psychosis, or
addiction to alcohol or drugs is an especially poor candidate. The best you can
do is to make yourself as knowledgeable as possible and not allow yourself to
rely on magical thinking. This website and www.Obesityhelp.com are good sources
of information to start with. Ask the surgeon to connect you with patients who
are willing to share their experience, both positive and negative, and look for
such accounts on the Internet. I think that all patients considering
bariatric surgery should seek an independent (not affiliated with the surgeon or
hospital) pre-surgical consultation with an experienced psychiatrist, clinical
psychologist, or clinical social worker who is a good diagnostician and has had
extensive clinical experience in evaluating and treating patients with binge
eating or compulsive eating disorder. Patients
should be apprised of the psychological risks involved.
Traditional psychotherapy has not had a good track
record with compulsive eaters, but I have found that an approach that combines
helping them to develop a tolerance for feeling difficult emotions with the use
of certain behavioral tools can be enormously effective, and a safer alternative
to bariatric surgery. Some patients who choose the surgery may do well with the
weekly or monthly post-operative support groups offered at some medical centers,
but many will need psychotherapy to help them deal with the psychological
consequences of their surgery.
Sharon Klayman Farber, Ph.D., B.C.D. maintains a
private psychotherapy practice in Hastings-on-Hudson, NY and is the founder of
Westchester Eating Disorders Consultation Services. She treats people with
compulsive eating problems individually and in a group therapy, and provides
pre-surgical consultation to people considering bariatric surgery as well as
pre-and post-surgical psychotherapy. She has taught at medical schools, schools
of social work, and training institutes. Her work has been featured in The New
York Times and Parents' Magazine. She is on faculty at the Cape Cod Institute.
She is the author of When the Body Is the Target: Self-Harm, Pain, and Traumatic
Attachments (Aronson 2000) and other publications.
Visit her website at
www.Drsharonfarber.com
Healthread!