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Three Suffolk Primary Care Trusts are refusing to perform hip and knee replacement surgery on patients with a Body Mass Index (BMI) of over 30. (The average is between 18.5 and 24.9).
Do you see this as discrimination against the obese, or a prudent use of limited financial resources in our health care system?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I am fairly certain that if any person refused an operation on grounds of obesity said to the health authority "I am unable to stand the pain any more here is K�x when can you operate?" the health authority would find a bed very quickly!
It is odd that only obesity seems to be a reason to stop these operations yet someone who smokes or an alcoholic will be operated on.
These operations for an obese person would be life changing, they could exercise, maybe return to work, lose weight just by removing a need for steroids, this would also save the health authority money. Whereas the alcoholic would be unlikely to find work and along with a smoker or drug user would continue to require treatment
Hey woofgang, I'm sorry I made you feel like stomping off, I didn't mean to offend you at all. :-(
I didn't answer the question about other treatments or 'self inflicted' conditions because the question only spoke about knee/hip replacements. I guess this is another one of those times when there are no easy answers. Maybe the Health Authroity are just trying to find a way to be able to prioritise patients so that they can treat the elderly and children and people who require joint replacements through no fault of their own (if obesity is a cause of the joint failure in the first place, I'm not an actual medical doctor, so I don't know all the medical facts here.) first.
But I do agree with Ward Minter (for once) that my BUPA covers me for nearly everything, and costs relatively little per month. I am also covered for well woman checks annually, I think, this includes not only mammograms, but also ovarian ultrascans. I'd rather have that for a couple of chineses a month, than the chineses. Especially if it helps my BMI.
But seriously, I do apologise for causing any offence, it wasn't my intention.
mimififi I wasn't offended, and definitely not by you.I was just cross that yet again, NHS bean counters are not being honest about the fact that there are too many people needing a procedure and not enough budget.
As I said, there is no problem spending money on repairing (and re repairing) sports injuries or providing (multiple) joint replacements for "sporting" people, no problem with people having children when they know that they will eb born with disabilities, no problem with multiple childbirths for women who have problems every time, and in many areas, no problem with funding fertility treatment for healthy women who are unable to conceive or who are married to healthy men with low sperm counts.
I too have bupa and both my husband and I have used it (thankfully only for diagnostics) when the NHS would have made us wait. We pay for that out of money that it taxed, we pay tax on the payment, AND we continue to pay into the NHS and then some jumped up little bean counter decides that because someone like me doesn't fit his profile, that person will be denied a treatment.
There are good clinical reasons for refusing provide joint replacements. These are the same for all treatments viz, either the patient is put at too much risk by it, or it is unlikely to improve matters. One of these factors in joint replacement is around the density of the bone ie is the patient osteoporotic, now people with osteoporosis tend to be those who are underweight...no mention of low BMI as being a reason for refusal though.
I am me. I would rather look like Elle Macpherson but I don't. I live an active healthy life, have normal blood pressure, acceptable cholesterol, a strong healthy heart, yet because my BMI is over 30. I would be automatically excluded from surgery.
Sorry, I know that I am taking this personally but it stinks
Oh stevie - you've upset me know!
But seriously, where does discrimination stop?
Should over 80s not get a hip/knee op - after all their chances of getting over major durgery is very small - as are the over 70s and over 60s.
Maybe we should only allow Blue eyed, blonde haired people in their mid 30s with an IQ of over 130 and the perfect weight, have no heridery compalints, who drink no more that 21 units a week, don't smoke and who are capable of having children to have free treatment.
After all, they would have the best chance of recovering - any other person would not have such a good chance and therefore treatment should be withheld.
Stevie21 for deputy PM (I will stand down after 2 terms - promise)
sorry folks, but an important point is being missed here.
As I said earlier, people are already screened to ensure that they can stand the op and that it actually will do them good ie that the hip will be patent and durable after the op. keep in mind that even the best hip replacement will only last 8 to 15 years and very active people wear them out faster. Screening is done on a patient by patient basis and considers all factors that have an effect including low bmi, poor muscle tone and osteoporosis status.
By what I have read, this is a blanket ban based on only 1 criterion, there is no clinical justification for doing this.
Actually it won't affect people who can afford the approx 5k that a joint replacement costs and I think that sandbach99's point on offering the PCT the cash is very telling.
believe me this is a thin end of a long and divisive wedge. Where will you draw the line in future and who will land on the wrong side of it. Will it be you who damaged yourself playing sport? you who damaged yourself bearing children? You who damaged yourself gardening?
If find it a bit sad that there appears to be some tacit agreement on here that it might be okay, not on good clinical grounds but just because the person is fat. Or maybe I am misunderstanding some of the posters?
It's not about saving money. These individual health outfits have a limited budget. When they use it all it is gone. You have enough money for say, 500 operations. That is it. Once you have done 500, you turn the next person away, fat or thin, man or woman.
3000 people come to you for this op. Some of them will be at risk of the operation as such (ie they could DIE) and even if they get the operation, the chances of the outcome still being negative is quite high.
The rest of the people (1000) are not obese, so do not present such a risk, and are far more likely to have a positive outcome (ie be up and walking in 4 years).
So is it better to turn down a slim, 26 year old man, and never let him walk again, so that you can fit a hip replacement to a very fat 80 year old who may die during the operation because of his weight and who is still 50/50 on being able to use the hip anyway?
So which would you do?
-No discrimination?
-Give it to the young one.
Remember........obesity is largely a choice. The weight don't get on there by itself. 'You are what you eat'......in this case a truckload of nachos.
So who should get treatment
1) An obese person who has been obese for the last 20 years.
2) Someone who has smoked for 20 years
3) Someone who has had more than 20 units a week for the last 20 years (which I believe a lot of ABers would fall into)
4) Someone who requires treatment from being in a car crash travelling at 45 mph in a 40mph limit
5) Someone who went played football on a saturday afternoon and got tackled badly.
In all the above cases, it is the individuals fault that they are in situation where they require hospital facilities.
Personally I think that if this is enforced, the hospital will be sued costing it several million more.
but stevie, these people are going to benefit. Assuming that they can stand the op and are not an osteoporisis risk, they will be more mobile and they will be pain free. Their replacements are likely to last as long or longer than someone who is originally much fitter and then goes off and skis or plays rugby on it.
Now if their weight means that they have circulatory or pulmonary complications then obviously these need addressing before any op. BUT if the heart and lungs are fine and they are moderately active then they stand an excellent chance of benefitting from the op AND as I have said will probably get more years out of it than someone who is going to indulge in sports such as rugby, football, sking (is that spelt right?) where the risk of hitting the ground at speed is quite high. They are certainly a better risk both for the op and the post op healing than a skinny chain smoker, even if this person runs marathons(yes they do exist, I know one, he gives up when he goes into training, then starts up again harder than ever).
My point is that it is not clinically good sense to take one criterion for treatment and apply it blanket fashion over everyone.What that is is a rather nasty form of rationing and as I have pointed out, the thin end of the wedge
Okay - hip replacements are often needed because a atient suffers from Osteoarthritis.
The causes of Osteoarthritis are as follows:
(source Bupa website: http://hcd2.bupa.co.uk/fact_sheets/html/osteoarthritis.html
So if you want to punish obese people, you should also punish people who play a lot of sports as this to is self inflicted. (As pointed out earlier, a sportsperson will actually get less benefit out of a hip replacement than an obese person.)
Also, what do you do if an obese person is old and has a family history - which is the defining reason for it?