Guest guest Posted May 1, 2006 Report Share Posted May 1, 2006 Seven Rational Reasons To Require Universal Insurance Coverage of Weight Loss Surgery (WLS) so that morbid obesity need not be a death sentence for millions without resources by Glenn Goldberg, J.D., R.C., VBG WLS 10.24.02 360/195 1. Americans are suffering from an epidemic of obesity that devastates countless lives and families with incalculable suffering and expense, and then kills people prematurely. Obesity is also a causative factor in many other costly and debilitating medical conditions. According to the 12.08.03 issue of Newsweek, more than 65% of Americans are overweight or obese, a rate that has doubled in the last 20 years. Obesity rates vary from about 14% in Colorado to almost 26% in Mississippi. Morbid (i.e. life-threatening) obesity is often defined as weighing 100 pounds or more over a person's ideal weight. Newsweek also reported that the incidence of diabetes increased 27% in the last five years. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimate that 17 million American adults have already been diagnosed with diabetes, and 12 million adults are developing the disease. Morbidly obese individuals are at particularly high risk for diabetes. In the July, 2003 issue of ObesityHelp magazine, www.obesityhelp.com founder Klein estimated that the average costs associated with morbid obesity (e.g. medications, hospitalizations, etc.) are about $6,000 a year. At this rate, a Weight Loss Surgery can pay for itself in about four years, and start generating significant savings in five years! More than 10 million Americans, 4.7 percent of the population, are medically eligible for Weight Loss Surgery, according to the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases of the National Institutes of Health. More than 100,000 very overweight people are expected to undergo Weight Loss Surgery this year, double the number that had WLS in 2001, but largely because of insurance exclusions for the procedure, that represents only 1% of the number of people who are medically eligible. Morbid obesity is an independent risk factor for premature death, with the risk rising as a person's BMI (body mass index) increases. A BMI greater than 40 -- or greater than 35 with associated medical problems -- means that a person has clinically severe or morbid obesity, which is associated with diabetes, heart disease, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, heartburn, gallstones, arthritis, urinary stress incontinence, infertility, and some types of cancer. People with a BMI of 30 have a relative risk of dying early that is 1.3 times greater than normal weight individuals. By the time the BMI reaches 40, the risk is almost 3 times as great. At 50, the risk of dying prematurely multiplies exponentially. 2. Mandating insurance coverage for WLS is the fair, equitable and right thing to do, because obesity is a disease. The disease of morbid obesity need not and should not be a death sentence for so many individuals without insurance coverage or resources. Weight Loss Surgery is a medical (not a moral) condition requiring a medical intervention (not moral judgments.) Smokers aren't denied insurance coverage for appropriate surgical treatment when they develop lung cancer, and patients with heart disease are covered for indicated surgery regardless of their lifestyles. This raises fundamental issues of fairness and discrimination in health care policy on the basis of weight and appearance. Classifying obesity as a disease would not only lessen the severe social stigmas associated with the condition; it would also immediately remove presently insurmountable economic and regulatory hurdles to prevention and treatment. Declaring obesity as a " disease'' could open up insurance coverage to the estimated 10 million Americans who need treatment for their morbid obesity. " For ages, obesity has been regarded as a personal moral failing, a behavioral issue that's easily fixed by people who have sufficient willpower to do so,'' says Downey, executive director of the American Obesity Association. " The modern scientific understanding of obesity is that it is a complex disease in its own right.'' That understanding has led many major medical authorities, including the National Institutes of Health and the World Health Organization, to conclude that obesity should be classified as a disease. 3. Mandatory WLS coverage at equitable compensation rates would encourage and help the American Society of Bariatric Surgeons (ASBS) to elevate their training, research and quality assurance programs. Hundreds of doctors have jumped into the bariatric field recently and started to advertise their availability as WLS surgeons, even though they may not have the expertise and experience required to perform the procedures safely and effectively. Universal WLS coverage, and the increased resources that would generate, will encourage the most highly qualified bariatric surgeons to impose stringent ASBS certification requirements that will protect patient safety and promote quality medical treatment and care. 4. WLS is proven effective and reasonably safe (especially compared to alternatives). Numerous studies suggest that Weight Loss Surgery is the ONLY treatment that reliably produces significant and sustained weight loss. According to Dr. Bruce Wolfe, a bariatric surgeon and Professor of Surgery at the University of CA at , " Morbid obesity is life-threatening, and surgery is the only treatment that works. " Surgical treatment for clinically severe obesity has been endorsed by the National Institutes of Health, the World Health Organization, Shape-Up America, the American Heart Association, the American Dietetic Association, and the American Obesity Association. WISH Bariatric Centers have reported that their patients lose as much as 70 percent of their excess weight within one to two years after surgery. Other studies show that more than 92% of American WLS patients achieve and maintain long-term weight loss. While there are risks inherent in any surgery, the rates of death (0.5 - 1%) or complications (5-8%) from Weight Loss Surgery are comparable to those for most other major surgeries. The risks to the health and life of a morbidly obese individual from NOT losing their excess weight seem to be far greater than the risks of death or complications from having WLS. Bariatric surgery techniques and technologies have been refined and improved, and they can save lives – if patients can afford to have the surgery. The barriers created by insurance policy exclusions prevent most patients who need surgery from having it. Consequently, they effectively impose a death sentence upon millions of morbidly obese Americans. 5. Weight Loss Surgery is extremely cost-effective. Denial of WLS coverage today will exponentially multiply our nation's future health care costs. Dr. Kerr, director of health care management at HYPERLINK " http://www.nytimes.com/redirect/marketwatch/redirect.ctx? MW=http://custom.marketwatch.com/custom/nyt-com/html- companyprofile.asp & symb=F " the Ford Motor Company, estimates that obese workers cost employers $12 billion annually in medical bills, reduced productivity, increased absenteeism and higher insurance premiums. The National Institutes of Health reports that the annual costs of treating obesity-related conditions -- including diabetes, heart disease, osteoarthritis and breast and colon cancers -- are at least $120 billion. (According to Frost & Sullivan, a consulting firm, spending on bariatrics is now approaching $3 billion a year, at an average cost of $25,000 for each procedure.) According to an 8.29.03 article by Milt Freudenheim in the New York Times, bariatric specialists say that the surgery reduces overall health care costs in the long run. Patients with Type 2 diabetes, which the National Institutes of Health said accounted for $98 billion of obesity-related costs, have normal sugar counts within a few days after the stomach bypass procedure, without medication. A recent study by the Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association confirmed that " surgery is far more effective than diet and exercise in treating morbidly obese patients, " according to Naomi Aronson, executive director of the association's technology evaluation center. If Klein is right in his calculations, the financial " break even " point for bariatric surgery may be as short as four years post- op. 6. Insurance exclusions for WLS disproportionately hurts our poorest and most vulnerable Americans. Obesity is an especially acute concern for poor people (due in part to government food subsidy policies that support and promote the least nutritious, highest calorie foods.) Millions of low- and middle-income people don't have and can't afford private insurance, and Medicare and Medicaid -- the government's health care plans for older/disabled and impoverished patients -- have been reluctant to pay for bariatric procedures. At the University of California at , for example, Medi-Cal patients face a 12-year wait for bariatric surgery, according to Dr. Bruce M. Wolfe, a bariatric surgeon there. Aggravating the dismal situation, Medi-Cal reimburses for the procedure at less than a third of the hospital's cost. " Basically [poor people] are not getting access to the care, " he said. " They will suffer the consequences of untreated obesity. " 7. For many morbidly obese people, Weight Loss Surgery may be their ONLY realistic hope for a long and healthy life. Research has identified several genes (and their corresponding hormones such as leptin) that seem to be at least partially responsible for obesity. These genes help regulate appetite and metabolism. We now have credible evidence that obesity is at least partially biological in its origins, offsetting the prevalent misconception that it is primarily a behavioral or psychological disorder. Obesity is a disease which needs a cure, rather than a character defect within the individual that warrants condemnation and requires correction. Perhaps because of their genetic endowment, people prone to obesity seem to gain excessive weight easily, while finding it difficult or impossible to lose it. That's why diets almost always fail and why WLS is currently the only viable weight loss option for many morbidly obese people, according to endocrinologist Cummings of the Veterans Affairs Puget Sound Health Care System. Most people can lose no more than 5-10% off their " natural " body weight by exercising and eating wisely. Decades of diet studies show that more than 90% of people who lose weight by dieting gain it all back within 5 years. " There are exceptions, but when you are speaking of general rules, the only people who are able to lose more than 10 percent of their body weight and keep it off are people who have had gastric-bypass or other bariatric surgery, " according to Cummings. Our community of Weight Loss Surgery patients and their families and friends faces a difficult, but surmountable, challenge to create a society where each person is judged by the quality of their character, not their weight on the scale, and receives quality and appropriate medical treatment for their medical needs. WE already know that covering the costs of surgery is smart, saves money in the long run, and contributes to our creating a nation that is compassionate, caring and supportive to people struggling with obesity. Our job now is to convince the rest of America that Universal WLS Insurance Coverage – in both private and governmental health insurance programs – is an idea whose time has finally come. Each of us has a vital role to play in helping to encourage, solidify and nail down what is presently merely an emerging trend. If we educate and inform our circles and communities, and demand action from our elected representatives, denial of insurance coverage may soon become as outdated as our wardrobes after we've used WLS to take off our excess weight. I encourage you to become a WLS advocate on this issue in solidarity with all those who are still suffering, and are without hope, because they are blamed and judged for their excess weight, rather than supported and assisted in their quest to regain their health. In my next newsletter, the first of the new year, I will describe a scenario whereby we can mobilize our community and realize this dream. Copyright, © 2003, Glenn Goldberg. All rights Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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