Daily Mail

Obese patients could be denied routine NHS ops

- By Sophie Borland Health Correspond­ent

PATIENTS who are too fat could be denied routine operations to save money, a survey of health bosses has revealed.

More than a third of NHS trusts are considerin­g rationing some types of surgery and other treatments.

Several have admitted they may impose ‘ eligibilit­y’ rules which could affect smokers as well as the overweight.

The criteria for accepting patients for operations would be based on their Body Mass Index, which measures obesity.

When senior managers at 67 Clinical Commission­ing Groups – local health trusts – were asked, 39 per cent said they were planning to ‘limit access’ to routine treatment for financial reasons.

Procedures affected include varicose vein treatment, hip and knee replacemen­t, and breast reduction surgery. Others said smokers might be denied some treatments, most commonly IVF.

Senior doctors criticised the plans and accused health managers of denying patients vital treatment simply because they were considered to be ‘undeservin­g’.

Dr David Paynton, of the Royal College of GPs, said: ‘ Decisions about whether our patients are eligible for surgery or treatment need to be made on a case-by-case basis and by whether surgery will benefit a patient’s long-term physical and mental health.

‘It should not be the role of CCGs to impose blanket bans on patients’ access to surgery, nor to decide who is and who is not deserving of potentiall­y life-saving treatments based on their lifestyle choices.

‘ Of course, some procedures cannot be performed on patients who are above a certain weight.

‘In these cases, a clinical decision needs to be made about whether surgery would be beneficial if the patient lost weight – but this is a separate issue.’

Katherine Murphy, chief executive of the Patients Associatio­n, said: ‘Each case must be individual­ly assessed and each decision must be ethical and in the best interests of the patient.

‘It is easy to target vulnerable patients and we must be very careful not to unfairly discrimina­te against people who aren’t always able to speak out.’

A Conservati­ve Party spokesman said: ‘If health bodies stop patients from having treatments on the basis of cost alone, then we will take action against them.’

There are 211 CCGs in England so the survey by the Health Service Journal covered just under a third.

Last year, a CCG in Devon threat- ened to ban all non-urgent treatments for anyone severely obese with a BMI above 35. This is equivalent to a 5ft 6in woman of 16st or a 6ft man being 18st 13lb. After an outcry, the policy was dropped.

A survey by GP magazine last month found that 80 per cent of CCGs ration at least one procedure to patients who are very obese.

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‘I’m afraid you’re too fat to operate on’
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