To all those that say the info in my post..."About the Duodenal Switch or BPD-DS" is wrong.

Donna C.
on 7/12/08 7:02 am - Durham Region, Canada

This organization is a Bariatric Surgery Centre of Excellent with ASBS:

Press Release

For Immediate Release:
July 26, 2006

Contact: Mount Sinai Press Office
Tel: 212-241-9200
[email protected]

The Mount Sinai Medical Center Recognized for Excellence in Bariatric Surgery

NEW YORK, NY---The Mount Sinai Medical Center has been named a Bariatric Surgery Center of Excellence by the American Society for Bariatric Surgery (ASBS). This new designation recognizes the safety, efficiency and overall positive surgical results of the bariatric surgical team at Mount Sinai. The hospital has satisfactorily met the high standards set forth by the ASBS to be acknowledged for its excellence in bariatric surgery.

Obesity is a serious epidemic in America. Over two thirds of Americans are overweight, a frightening number that continues to rise each year. Faced with this issue, the leadership of the American Society for Bariatric Surgery identified the need to recognize surgical programs, like Mount Sinai’s Program for Surgical Weight Loss, that demonstrate a track record of favorable outcomes in bariatric surgery.

The Chief of Bariatric Surgery at The Mount Sinai Medical Center, Dr. Daniel M. Herron, MD, FACS couldn’t be prouder of the new designation for the hospital and the hard work of his entire surgical team. “The Mount Sinai Medical Center staff has been providing an extraordinary level of care to weight loss surgery patients since 1999. It’s very satisfying to see this officially recognized at the national level by the ASBS,” said Herron.

Dr. Herron has been performing laparoscopic bariatric surgery since joining the Mount Sinai faculty in 1999. Since that time he has performed over 700 laparoscopic bariatric procedures. Dr. Herron also serves as Director of the Laparoscopic Surgery Fellowship training program at Mount Sinai School of Medicine, where he is an Associate Professor of Surgery.

The ASBS Centers of Excellence Program was created to recognize bariatric surgery centers that perform well. To earn a Center of Excellence designation, Mount Sinai underwent a series of site inspections during which all aspects of the program’s surgical processes were closely examined and data on health outcomes was collected. Surgical Review Corporation (SRC), an organization dedicated to pursuing surgical excellence, formulates and establishes the rigorous standards with which Dr. Herron’s team at Mount Sinai and other Centers of Excellence must comply, thoroughly inspects and evaluates each candidate for designation, and upon review recommends approval for designation for those physicians and facilities whose practices and outcomes meet the stringent demands set forth by SRC and ASBS.
           
About Bariatric Surgery at Mount Sinai
The Mount Sinai Medical Center’s Program for Surgical Weight Loss and newly recognized Bariatric Surgery Center of Excellence continues to provide top quality care and options to its patients in need of bariatric surgery. Mount Sinai takes a team approach to weight loss surgery. In addition to working closely with a surgeon, patients work together with a whole team of dedicated weight-loss surgery professionals. Before surgery, patients meet with the surgeon, nurses or physician assistant, a psychologist or psychiatrist, a gastroenterologist, a nutritionist, and possibly others. Each procedure has its unique advantages and disadvantages. No single operation is right for everyone. When meeting with Mount Sinai’s surgical weight loss team, they help you determine which operation is best for you. They also help to determine whether you are a good candidate for laparoscopic surgery or if you would be better suited to a traditional open approach. The most common operations performed at Mount Sinai include Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass, Biliopancreatic Diversion with Duodenal Switch (BPD-DS), Laparoscopic Adjustable Gastric Band (Lap Band), Sleeve Gastrectomy (2-Stage procedure), and Revisional Bariatric Surgery (conversions or repairs of failed bariatric operations). Mount Sinai also performs other operations that are currently investigational in nature. For more information, please visit www.surgicallyslim.com

About The Mount Sinai Medical Center
The Mount Sinai Medical Center, located in New York City, consists of The Mount Sinai Hospital, a tertiary care facility known for excellence in patient care and Mount Sinai School of Medicine, a leader in medical research and in the education of tomorrow’s physicians by internationally known faculty. Founded in 1852, The Mount Sinai Hospital is one of the oldest voluntary teaching hospitals in the country and in 1963, the Hospital created Mount Sinai School of Medicine, beginning a close collaboration that has made Mount Sinai one of the leading academic medical center in the country. Today, the patients of Mount Sinai benefit as teams of physicians and scientists work together to rapidly translate laboratory research to new patient treatments. Many of the groundbreaking approaches that result from these collaborations are initially available at only a handful of facilities in the country—some, only at Mount Sinai. These advances make Mount Sinai the first choice for patients with complex medical and surgical needs. For more information, please visit www.mountsinai.org

About American Society for Bariatric Surgery
The American Society for Bariatric Surgery (ASBS) is the largest society for this specialty in the world. Founded in 1983, foremost American surgeons have formed the society’s leadership and have established an excellent organization with educational and support programs for surgeons and allied health professionals. The purpose of the society is to advance the art and science of bariatric surgery by continued encouragement of its members to: pursue investigations in both clinic and the laboratory; interchange ideas, information and experience pertaining to bariatric surgery; promote guidelines for ethical patient selection and care; develop educational programs for physicians, paramedical persons, and lay people; and promote outcomes studies and quality assurance. For more information about ASBS, please visit www.asbs.org

About Surgical Review Corporation
Surgical Review Corporation (SRC) is an independent not-for-profit organization dedicated to surgical excellence. SRC’s mission is to promote the delivery of surgical care with the highest level of efficacy, efficiency and safety possible. For more information about SRC or to download a Center of Excellence application, p
lease visit www.surgicalreview.org

 

If you think that their information is in accurate or misleading- maybe report them - as being in violation of the Advertising Guidelines under ASBS - see pdf below:

http://www.asbs.org/Newsite07/resources/advertising_guidelin es.pdf

 

 

   HW/SW/CW/Orig GW/New GW   328/311/161/153/142   LOVE my RNY!!!!      

        
Edmund S.
on 7/12/08 7:12 am - Cornwall, Canada
On July 12, 2008 at 2:02 PM Pacific Time, Donna C. wrote:

This organization is a Bariatric Surgery Centre of Excellent with ASBS:

Press Release

For Immediate Release:
July 26, 2006

Contact: Mount Sinai Press Office
Tel: 212-241-9200
[email protected]

The Mount Sinai Medical Center Recognized for Excellence in Bariatric Surgery

NEW YORK, NY---The Mount Sinai Medical Center has been named a Bariatric Surgery Center of Excellence by the American Society for Bariatric Surgery (ASBS). This new designation recognizes the safety, efficiency and overall positive surgical results of the bariatric surgical team at Mount Sinai. The hospital has satisfactorily met the high standards set forth by the ASBS to be acknowledged for its excellence in bariatric surgery.

Obesity is a serious epidemic in America. Over two thirds of Americans are overweight, a frightening number that continues to rise each year. Faced with this issue, the leadership of the American Society for Bariatric Surgery identified the need to recognize surgical programs, like Mount Sinai’s Program for Surgical Weight Loss, that demonstrate a track record of favorable outcomes in bariatric surgery.

The Chief of Bariatric Surgery at The Mount Sinai Medical Center, Dr. Daniel M. Herron, MD, FACS couldn’t be prouder of the new designation for the hospital and the hard work of his entire surgical team. “The Mount Sinai Medical Center staff has been providing an extraordinary level of care to weight loss surgery patients since 1999. It’s very satisfying to see this officially recognized at the national level by the ASBS,” said Herron.

Dr. Herron has been performing laparoscopic bariatric surgery since joining the Mount Sinai faculty in 1999. Since that time he has performed over 700 laparoscopic bariatric procedures. Dr. Herron also serves as Director of the Laparoscopic Surgery Fellowship training program at Mount Sinai School of Medicine, where he is an Associate Professor of Surgery.

The ASBS Centers of Excellence Program was created to recognize bariatric surgery centers that perform well. To earn a Center of Excellence designation, Mount Sinai underwent a series of site inspections during which all aspects of the program’s surgical processes were closely examined and data on health outcomes was collected. Surgical Review Corporation (SRC), an organization dedicated to pursuing surgical excellence, formulates and establishes the rigorous standards with which Dr. Herron’s team at Mount Sinai and other Centers of Excellence must comply, thoroughly inspects and evaluates each candidate for designation, and upon review recommends approval for designation for those physicians and facilities whose practices and outcomes meet the stringent demands set forth by SRC and ASBS.
           
About Bariatric Surgery at Mount Sinai
The Mount Sinai Medical Center’s Program for Surgical Weight Loss and newly recognized Bariatric Surgery Center of Excellence continues to provide top quality care and options to its patients in need of bariatric surgery. Mount Sinai takes a team approach to weight loss surgery. In addition to working closely with a surgeon, patients work together with a whole team of dedicated weight-loss surgery professionals. Before surgery, patients meet with the surgeon, nurses or physician assistant, a psychologist or psychiatrist, a gastroenterologist, a nutritionist, and possibly others. Each procedure has its unique advantages and disadvantages. No single operation is right for everyone. When meeting with Mount Sinai’s surgical weight loss team, they help you determine which operation is best for you. They also help to determine whether you are a good candidate for laparoscopic surgery or if you would be better suited to a traditional open approach. The most common operations performed at Mount Sinai include Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass, Biliopancreatic Diversion with Duodenal Switch (BPD-DS), Laparoscopic Adjustable Gastric Band (Lap Band), Sleeve Gastrectomy (2-Stage procedure), and Revisional Bariatric Surgery (conversions or repairs of failed bariatric operations). Mount Sinai also performs other operations that are currently investigational in nature. For more information, please visit www.surgicallyslim.com

About The Mount Sinai Medical Center
The Mount Sinai Medical Center, located in New York City, consists of The Mount Sinai Hospital, a tertiary care facility known for excellence in patient care and Mount Sinai School of Medicine, a leader in medical research and in the education of tomorrow’s physicians by internationally known faculty. Founded in 1852, The Mount Sinai Hospital is one of the oldest voluntary teaching hospitals in the country and in 1963, the Hospital created Mount Sinai School of Medicine, beginning a close collaboration that has made Mount Sinai one of the leading academic medical center in the country. Today, the patients of Mount Sinai benefit as teams of physicians and scientists work together to rapidly translate laboratory research to new patient treatments. Many of the groundbreaking approaches that result from these collaborations are initially available at only a handful of facilities in the country—some, only at Mount Sinai. These advances make Mount Sinai the first choice for patients with complex medical and surgical needs. For more information, please visit www.mountsinai.org

About American Society for Bariatric Surgery
The American Society for Bariatric Surgery (ASBS) is the largest society for this specialty in the world. Founded in 1983, foremost American surgeons have formed the society’s leadership and have established an excellent organization with educational and support programs for surgeons and allied health professionals. The purpose of the society is to advance the art and science of bariatric surgery by continued encouragement of its members to: pursue investigations in both clinic and the laboratory; interchange ideas, information and experience pertaining to bariatric surgery; promote guidelines for ethical patient selection and care; develop educational programs for physicians, paramedical persons, and lay people; and promote outcomes studies and quality assurance. For more information about ASBS, please visit www.asbs.org

About Surgical Review Corporation
Surgical Review Corporation (SRC) is an independent not-for-profit organization dedicated to surgical excellence. SRC’s mission is to promote the delivery of surgical care with the highest level of efficacy, efficiency and safety possible. For more information about SRC or to download a Center of Excellence application, p
lease visit www.surgicalreview.org

 

If you think that their information is in accurate or misleading- maybe report them - as being in violation of the Advertising Guidelines under ASBS - see pdf below:

http://www.asbs.org/Newsite07/resources/advertising_guidelin es.pdf

 

 

Hi Donna,

"If you think that their information is in accurate or misleading- maybe report them - as being in violation of the Advertising Guidelines under ASBS - see pdf below:"

http://www.asbs.org/Newsite07/resources/advertising_guidelines.pdf

 

 

I could not agree more.       

 

As i said earlier, if they change there information I would be glad to post it.

Take Care.  Ed. S
In Memory Of Lucie
My Highest Wieght 652Lbs,-- Dr Dent Consult 572Lbs,-- Dr Graber Consult 527Lbs,--Surgery Day 512Lbs,-- Current Weight 259Lbs,-- Total Loss to Date lt ...397lbs....Goal Weight 220Lbs.....Weight left to loose...39lbs

Frozen_Peach
on 7/13/08 2:50 am, edited 7/13/08 2:54 am

just to be clear as Zap stated earlier

 

DSers have TRIED to get them to change it but they won't listen!!!!  One visit to the DS board would put all the LIES about the DS to rest!!

 

ETA: and of course, if it's on OH it MUST be true

   MY DS  
 labrats.jpg picture by Frozen_Peach


Get the facts about Duodenal Switch at DS Facts
<~~link
DS Recipes can be shared HERE <~~link

 

 

                                                                                                                                                            

Frozen_Peach
on 7/13/08 2:54 am

I go "poo" once maybe twice every other day or every 2 days - not every day and certainly not 4-6 times per day!!!

I don't pass gas frequently...if I have a carb-heavy day - you bet I do but guess what?  I did that pre-op and RNYers do that too!!!

I don't smell...if I did my family would most certainly tell me....trust me on that one!

who doesn't have gas pains or bloating on occasion?  I did pre-op ...doesn't everyone?  They are controllable....just like they were pre-op

I'm early yet but have experience no hair loss - however, RNYers experience this too - from my understanding it's a side-effect of the anesthesia...not the DS

I've heard of food intolerances in not just DSers....but RNYers, Banders etc....and PRE-ops too!!!  I personally have no intolerances....I drink milk ....honestly I can't think of a thing that I've tried that I'm no longer able to eat....

 

So you see, these are blatant misrepresentations of life after DS! 

   MY DS  
 labrats.jpg picture by Frozen_Peach


Get the facts about Duodenal Switch at DS Facts
<~~link
DS Recipes can be shared HERE <~~link

 

 

                                                                                                                                                            

RosieHawk
on 7/12/08 7:09 am - Ottawa, Canada

God are we back to this AGAIN?!?!?  **** I mean honest to God enough is enough!  Great find on the links Bev!

HW 290/ SW 250/ GW 140-145/ LW 120/ CW 168

REACHED GOAL IN 8 MONTHS WITH MY DS!!!
FEB.22/ 08>> DS & JAN.23/ 09>> Breast Lift, Fleur de lis abdominoplasty, hernia repair
NOTE: My weight crept back up over the last 2.5 years, but I'm gonna stop that shit NOW!

Donna C.
on 7/12/08 7:20 am - Durham Region, Canada

I personally don't care what type of WLS any individual chooses to have.  All are dangerous and life changing in both the short and long term.  In fact I would not try to influence someone one way or the other - because I would not want to be responsible for influencing their decision making process. 

However, I think what bothers me about this post - is that someone is being chastized for posting information on this forum.  Whatever Ed's intentions are - I feel this is an open forum where individuals should be permitted to post what they want as long as they are not in violation of OH's forum rules.  Again, I am not trying to be argumentative - just putting forward my opinion.

I apologize if this offends anyone - that's not my intention.

   HW/SW/CW/Orig GW/New GW   328/311/161/153/142   LOVE my RNY!!!!      

        
DS Facts
on 7/12/08 7:26 am

This is not about wls choice Donna. If Ed'd intention was to help pre-ops I would applaude him, but we have been down this road before, and his intention is clear, to cause annimosity on the forums. Presenting pre-ops with accurate information is more important then starting surgery battles and starting theads just to make others anrgy. That is the bottom line here, not free speach. He can post anything he wants, that is not in question. But he has very quickly lost creditability on trying to help people.

Bev

S. B.
on 7/12/08 7:44 am - Canada

This is not about which WLS to have. For me, there are 2 issues at stake. One is about the accuracy of information presented. It has been brought to Ed's attention that the information contained in this post is not true. He ignores that feedback, claiming that his source is reputable. The fact that there is controversy about the accuracy of the information should be enough of a reason to refrain from posting it. I was very saddened to read earlier in this post that a person's decision to not have the DS was based on the information that Ed shared.

The second issue speaks to the reason behind the post. Ed knows that this is a sensitive issue, and choses to post it. He knows it will cause a controversial response, and in my opinion does it deliberately. It appears that he is attempting to create dissention.

If this was the first time that this occurred, I would be more tolerant. However, it is a repeat performance from last February.

SherryB

    
Cubankitten9
on 7/13/08 3:10 am

Actually, Donna, even though I'm not fond of what I think his intentions are, I agree with you about everyone being free to post on a public forum... so let him post however he sees fit... the proof is in the pudding and when people actually go the definitive source for information on the DS which is www.duodenalswitch.com, then go to read from those doctors who are EXPERTS, then read from those who've had it, people will have the opportunity to decide for themselves what's fact and what's theory.  I think he has the absolute right to post information he's read from a reputable source, but my opinion is that his intention still comes through loud and clear.

Kyle

SandrainOnt
on 7/12/08 8:28 am - Canada

I think it's in his nature to want to see people get worked up.  He gets his jollies from it.  If someone asks for info on your surgery type then by all means share it.  Why do you insist on  ******g people off.  First its the "sugar coating" and now this.  For crying out loud!  I personally almost didnt' get the DS because of this exact info on OH.  I left my decision up to the people who had actually experienced having the DS.   You scared the **** outta one person inparticular to the point where she was crying and extremely upset.  As Sherry said "SHAME ON YOU".  I don't think there is any sugar coating that goes on just pure fact...Maybe it's that you are jealous that we as DS'rs don't have all of what that is stated in the info provided.  Maybe you want us to fail....is that it?  I really feel badly for the new ppl that come on here ..This was such a great place when I first started coming here!  Whatever happened...???????????????????????????

">
    Bless my DS!  Ask me why I love it so much!
    Huggs to all of my Angelettes.

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