Obesity is one of the main causes of poor health. Surgery is an effective treatment for those who are severely or morbidly obese and have been unable to lose weight and keep it off.
Bariatric surgery is also called obesity, metabolic or weight loss surgery and it refers to operations designed to help reduce a person’s weight and improve their health.
Bariatric surgery includes:
- gastric bypass
- gastric sleeve
- revisional surgery.
Procedures result in restricting the amount of food you can eat, absorb or both.
Regional bariatric surgery criteria
Due to limited resources, bariatric surgery is offered only to patients who meet the following bariatric regional acceptance criteria.
Agreed BMI criteria
- A BMI greater than 70 renders a patient ineligible for the surgical pathway.
- A BMI between 35 and 60 is acceptable.
- Patients with a BMI between 60 and 70 will require support to reduce their BMI to below 60 before being accepted onto the surgical pathway for long‐term benefit.
Agreed prioritisation categories
- Patients diagnosed with type 2 diabetes for less than 5 years who are not on insulin.
- Patients requiring weight management for life‐extending treatments, such as transplantation, cardiac surgery, cancer treatment, or sleep apnoea (with a proven CPAP benefit on sleep study), or those with poor diabetic control (with a referral from an endocrinologist).
- Primary obesity referrals will be declined.
- Patients aged over 60 years old will be declined.
In the meantime, if you do not meet criteria, we suggest seeing your main healthcare provider to be referred to a weight loss service.