UK Health Radio – Medical News
Update on the Hour
Overweight
Patients and Smokers denied surgery.
A timely report from the BBC as the Christmas season
is upon us telling of how smokers and the morbidly obese in Devon will be
denied routine surgery unless they quit smoking or lose weight.
Patients
with a BMI of 35 or above will have to shed 5% of their weight while smokers
will have to quit eight weeks before surgery.
The
NHS in Devon has a £14.5m deficit and says the cuts are needed to help it meet
waiting list targets.
The
measures were announced on the same day government announced an extra £2bn of
annual NHS funding.
It
announced a range of cost-cutting measures on Wednesday including only
providing one hearing aid, instead of the normal two, to people with hearing
loss.
Shoulder
surgery will also be restricted.
A
statement said all the decisions were "interim commissioning
positions" and would require further consultation.
Patients
with a date for surgery will not be affected but will be offered weight management
or quit smoking support.
Dr
Tim Burke, Chair of NEW Devon CCG, said: "All of these temporary measures
relate to planned operations and treatments, not those which must be done as an
emergency or to save lives.
"We
recognise that each patient is an individual and where their GP or consultant
feels that there are exceptional circumstances we will convene a panel of
clinicians to consider the case."
NEW
Devon CCG said it would announce another round of cost-cutting measures
"in due course".
"We
don't under estimate how difficult it will be for some people to lose weight or
stop smoking and we will continue to support them," said Dr Burke.
In a
statement the Royal College of Surgeons said it was "concerned" by
the move and warned the region was merely storing up "greater
pressures" for the future.
It
said: "The need for an operation should always be judged by a surgeon
based on their clinical assessment of the patient and the risks and benefits of
the surgery - not determined by arbitrary criteria.
"Losing
weight, or giving up smoking is an important consideration for patients
undergoing surgery in order to improve their outcomes, but for some patients
these steps may not be possible.
"A
blanket ban on scheduled operations for those who cannot follow these measures
is unacceptable and too rigid a measure for ensuring patients receive the best
care possible."
Have
you ever been asked to lose weight or stop smoking before you had
treatment? We would love to hear your
story.
Amanda
Thomas
UK
Health Radio – Medical News Update on the Hour
Kindly
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