Irish Independent

Patients dying because of seven-year waiting list for surgery – obesity specialist

- Eilish O’Regan

SOME patients who are obese are needlessly dying because they are forced to wait so long for surgery, a leading consultant has warned.

Dr Helen Heneghan, bariatric surgeon in St Vincent’s Hospital in Dublin, said nine patients died over five years while on the waiting list for a gastric bypass operation.

They developed life-threatenin­g complicati­ons such as heart disease due to their size, she said.

Patients are waiting up to seven years from the time they are referred to a weight management clinic before getting the surgery.

“It is tragic,” said Dr Heneghan, whose appointmen­t as a full-time bariatric surgeon has brought down the list from around 300. But some 200 are still facing long waits for surgery.

There are 250 waiting in University Hospital Galway in the weight management service run by Dr Francis Finucane, many of them waiting for a first appointmen­t to see a specialist. Dr Heneghan said patients who are first referred can wait three years to be seen. They are then put on a nine-month preparatio­n programme.

The next stage is the surgery list, with a further three-year delay.

“There are some patients we expedite sooner if they are really obese and very ill,” she said. But even there the wait can be a year to two-and-a-half years.

The HSE has not put any funding into the gastric bypass surgery programme in St Vincent’s.

The surgery leaves the top part of the stomach joined to the small intestine, so the patient feels fuller sooner.

Providing patients with the surgery sooner allows for preventabl­e deaths, Dr Heneghan added.

“The surgery has major benefits in health gain. Half of patients with diabetes go into remission and the rest have improvemen­ts,” she said.

“Risk of stroke and cancer are reduced. No other treatment achieves that.”

Most people remain obese despite the surgery but they are at a healthier weight and more functional.

A small number regain the weight.

Afterwards, patients eat smaller portions while eating more mindfully and savouring the food.

The clinic is seeing patients who weigh up to 300kg. The majority weigh 150-300kg.

In some cases, those who are less obese have more complicati­ons, said Dr Heneghan.

The HSE’s national service plan for 2019 says that it proposes to continue to support bariatric surgery “within existing resources”.

Dublin couple Deirdre and Alan Murphy, who had the surgery privately in the Blackrock clinic, said there was still plenty they can eat but the volume and type has changed.

 ?? PHOTO: CAROLINE QUINN ?? Good outcome: Alan and Deirdre Farrell with son Charlie (5) at their home in Castleknoc­k. Right, how they looked before the op.
PHOTO: CAROLINE QUINN Good outcome: Alan and Deirdre Farrell with son Charlie (5) at their home in Castleknoc­k. Right, how they looked before the op.
 ??  ?? Concerns: Dr Helen Heneghan of St Vincent’s Hospital in Dublin
Concerns: Dr Helen Heneghan of St Vincent’s Hospital in Dublin

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