ObesityHelp.com: Making the Journey Together
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boomerkaren has 48 Friends

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Surgeon Testimonial

Garth Davis M.D.
First he quite good looking and young, learned he is age 37. He sounded knowledgeable about obesity and gastric bypass and also sounded genuinely concerned and compassionate about the plight of the obest. He truly believes the emotional health of the surgical candidate is extremely important and specifically understands emotional eating and food as a best friend. He seems to have a busy practice, lots of activity both times I went to his office. His staff strikes me as disorganized and the faces have changed from my visit in May versus my visit per op in November. The office manager trys to keep everything moving I can tell and she is very knowledgeable about insurance issuesl
My impression of Dr. Garth has only gotten better now that I am post op. He obviously is good at what he does, even used a pain free material for the drain and I did not feel a thing when he pulled it. He emphasizes aftercare from the beginning information seminar. He even attends the support groups at Methodist on the last Wednesday of each month. I will learn more about aftercare when I seem him this coming Thursday but sometime soon I meet with he, the nutritionist, the psych, for an hour. These folks always go to support meetings. Their statistics show those who participate in support groups and take their vitamins and follow pouch rules lose and maintain the best.
He discussed the risks at our first meeting and at his seminar and they are covered in detail in the preop consent form. His and his father's stats show low complication rates, and no deaths.
I think he is excellent overall, both in surgical competence and bedside manner. I tend to be critical of surgeons in particular from my nursing background but he is truly unique.
Member Interests
  • Books & Literature - Fiction is my favorite, mysterys mostly.
  • Animal Rescue - The Best Friends organization in Utah does great work, hope to go post op
  • Cats - My Smokey boy is an only "child", adoped from SPCA.
  • Meeting People - I like people and need to find ways to meet new ones.
  • Dancing - I love to dance and plan to do post op. Sweat too much and can't move well now
  • Scuba & Snorkeling - Snorkeling in the Caribbean much more fun since lasik surgery.
  • Swimming - Swimming is fun for me when I can psych myself to get my big body to the pool.
  • Cruises - Cruising is the way I get to snorkeling sites, lots of fun to and from too!
  • Computer and Internet Surfing - Don't know many types of software but really like the Internet.

Latest Surgery Support Comments

  • Comment by JudyC on 12/1/06 9:20 am
    Congratulations Karen! It sounds like you're doing great! I had my surgery on Monday and came home yesterday. The docs say I'm doing great but I have a lot of burning and stinging in the left incision. I also got diarrhea after the leak test and it hasn't stopped yet. Keep in touch,,,we'll compare notes. Judy C.
  • Comment by carlak on 11/30/06 10:17 pm
    Karen, Welcome to the other side. I am so glad you are going so well. When you get home pamper yourself. You deserve it. Carla Klein
  • Comment by mrsa24 on 11/30/06 6:19 pm
    Karen, I am so happy to hear that you are now post-op and doing so well. Linda told me at the support group meeting last evening that she visited you yesterday. Now you're on the loser's bench with us and time will fly! Best of luck to you during your continued recovery. Maybe the three of us can attend meetings together. God Bless you, Anita R (mrsa24)
Click here for the surgery support page

boomerkaren's Blog



First day home from hospital post op.
on December 1, 2006 4:45 pm

Photo of Karen Martin Hi friends,
I got home this afternoon. Wow, how fast these last few days went. My brother and sister in law arrived Monday afternoon, we visited a bit, then they picked me up at 5:30 am and arrived at the hospital at 6:00 am. Picture being in a hospital that looks more like a resort, waiting to be taken upstairs and the grand piano starts playing in the lobby. It was quite surreal. It was automatic, the playing I mean, but I thought I would turn around and find a grand gentleman sitting in tux and tails at this piano. That is how the morning began. Then one minute I am saying goodbye to family in pre op holding going to OR, and that is all I recall till about two to three hours later when I woke up in recovery. The cotton ball mouth was the worst. Got ice chips in recovery but not on floor, said no order, so I talked them into swabs with a cup of ice and a little water, and soaked the swabs in this, worked great. Morphine pump took care of pain where I was stabbed five times, but morphine and I don't get along so well I found out, made me itchy and hot. I had them discontinue Morphine before the swallow test next day. Nasty tasting barium, but neat machine and got to see my new pouch and connection and that all was flowing properly. Then got back to my room and loudly announced I could have liquids. Well they got there in two minutes. Talk about overkill. Pitcher of fresh chicken broth, huge bowl of jello, plus something else. Found out the broth was fabulous, couldn't handle jello too sweet, even sf. This hospital has three chefs and all food items even liquids are made from scratch, not the jello. Oh, to get a tray or any food at any time you just dial the extension and order what ever you like within your food restrictions. Just like a cruise ship, minus restrictions of course. Really meals are not delivered at certain times, no menus, no carts, each tray is delivered by a waiter. Cool, and I even ordered broth today in go cup which I have been sipping on all day. I get it now how hard it is to keep sipping and get enough fluids in. I remember Linda Woods said once about tightness in her chest indicating fullness. I think I have had this happen once, not sure. I have so much gas still who knows. Boy, getting rid of that barium is a process, just keeps coming. I walked three times this morning around the nursing floor, actually two circles each of the three times, and several yesterday and once Tuesday night with my brother. Getting the drain out today was a relief and a breeze, did not feel it at all. Will be so glad to sleep in my own bed tonight with no one to wake me up to do stuff to me.
It is just hard to believe I actually had surgery, except for the five stab wounds in my belly. I mean the pain has been minimal, movement has been easy so getting prepared for the worst and hoping for the best worked great for me. Preparing for all this for the past seven months was the most helpful, especially this OFF forum. I was really ready aand knew what to expect. So I start full liquids tomorrow, adding my protein powder, then on to pureed in two days. I know this is a faster progression than some have had but my surgeon said it is what he has found works best.

Thanks for all your supportive comments over these past few days both here and on my support page. Meeting Linda Jones was neat having talked and emailed only. Her experiences over the past two weeks helped me prepare as her surgeon was my surgeons father and they are in practice together. 

My kitty did miss me just like Jan said, but he is playing it cool, especially since I have to keep a pillow on my stomach so he can't jump on me. He took to my brother very well, gracing Chuck's lap with his furry body. They took good care of him.

I highly recommend asking family to come rather than trying to be independent and not ask for help. It was hard for me to ask but they were glad to come and glad to be here and I was so happy to see when I got back from the recovery room. Though they needed to do very little other than care for my kitty, take out the trash, get me a few items at drugstore and grocery, I felt so comforted by their presence.

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