Rant.

M M
on 9/23/11 6:24 am
Screen Shot 2011-09-23 at 8.08.23 AM

-Mirror UK

This kind of article may be why I throw things at my computer at 7am.

"The mum was unaware she was four weeks pregnant when she had gastric bypass surgery to reduce her 18-stone frame.

Her weight plummeted by half in four months and her malnourished daughter Juli was born 15 weeks premature, weighing only 1.9lbs.

The baby was too weak to survive and doctors turned off her life support two days later.

Yesterday distraught Holly, who is now under nine stone and a dress size 8, spoke about her heart-breaking ordeal and called on all women who have gastric surgery to get a pregnancy test beforehand.

Read more: http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/top-stories/2011/09/23/i-had-sl imming-surgery-and-it-killed-my-baby-115875-23439471/#ixzz1Y m11w3jH 

Yes.  I understand it's from the UK tabloid  "The Mirror."

Yet this is a published piece which hits the demographic for those seeking weight loss surgery and the Google Alerts for allthings Weight Loss Surgery.  

Which is why it still makes it to me -- at 7am.

The unborn baby astonishingly survived when surgeons at Charing Cross hospital, London, divided Holly’s stomach in two.

After six weeks, recruitment consultant Holly became concerned when she was still unable to eat anything properly and kept being sick.

She had already lost three stone by the time she went to hospital for tests and doctors discovered she was 10 weeks pregnant.

They warned that she was not taking in the vital nutrients for the growth of a healthy baby but she was too weak for the operation to be reversed. Holly spent the next few months in and out of hospital and her weight continued to plunge until she lost nine stone.

Following a difficult labour, Holly gave birth at 25 weeks in May but starved Juli was too fragile to survive.

Grieving Holly, of Uxbridge, Middlesex, has been unable to talk about her loss until now.

Obesity expert Dr Ian Campbell said: “It is imperative to ensure someone is not pregnant before this procedure. But I can see why people can slip through the net.

“The reason this child might have suffered from malnutrition is the diet after having a gastric band fitted is very low calorie."

Imperial College Healthcare NHS, which runs Charing Cross Hospital, said patients who have a gastric bypass should avoid pregnancy for two years. A spokesman added: “This is to minimize complications such as maternal malnutrition, miscarriage and premature, or underweight, birth."

Assuming it's actually true:  this woman was likely paid for her story of a premature birth following weight loss surgery -- but the article mentions a gastric bypass and a gastric band.  It is a devastating scenario -- woman undergoes weight loss surgery and is very newly pregnant?  

This is surely something to concerned about -- but -- really?   How was she not tested?  Any woman of childbearing age - it's the FIRST THING DONE IN THE HOSPITAL (at least in my limited experiences in the US) for ANY COMPLAINT.

I walk in to a ER - "Hello, my eyeball is hanging out!  I just had a seizure!  My gut is broken!"

"Could you be pregnant?"  

"No."

"Would you please give us a urine sample anyway?"

 

How does one have abdominal surgery without a pregnancy test?  Okay.  I'm over it.  I'm just angry at this article and it's silly because it's a tabloid and stupid and wrong and made to make you go "GIRL?!  WTF?!"  and it worked.  

Stupid tabloid.  

WLS does not cause preemies.  Not typically.  Get your self tested FIRST.  Do NOT have WLS if you are pregnant and do NOT get pregnant after your weight loss surgery procedure until you are cleared by your surgeon and the President of the United States.  KTHANXBAI.

 

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(deactivated member)
on 9/23/11 6:44 am - Toronto, Canada
oh, lord. Just a junky sensational news story...the print media has to compete with reality television somehow, lol!   Clearly it is a very unfortunate and sad situation that should never have happened, but could have easily been avoided by a pregnancy test and a deferral on bariatric surgery until after she had delivered the baby, if still needed and desired.

The interchangeable use of gatric bypass and gastric banding certainly does nothing to clarify which medical procedure she actually had done and will only confuse the general public even further into thinking that these are same procedure.

Oh well mm, spare your computer from any hurling objects, it is clearly an innocent bystander in this situation. 
MacMadame
on 9/23/11 7:49 am - Northern, CA
I am always suspicious about these kinds of stories.

For one thing, it is quite possible to have a healthy baby while losing weight while pregnant. (I know several people who did it.)

Secondly, they talk about how she was too weak to reverse the surgery but there are other treatments that could have happened in this case before a reversal was needed and I doubt that was even considered as a viable option given what a gnarly operation it is. They could have given her a TPN line and force-fed her calories, for one thing.

This makes me wonder if the pregnancy was doomed from the get-go or if the damange was done during surgery due to the anesthesia. Or maybe she just got sucky health care in general. Because, there really isn't any excuse for not getting adequate nutrition into her once they figured out she was pregnant.

Plus it really makes me mad when they refer to WLS as "slimming" surgery as if it's this cosmetic thing that women do on a whim just to look better.

HW - 225 SW - 191 GW - 132 CW - 122
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Kathleen W.
on 9/23/11 7:57 am - Lancaster, PA
Geez,  I was 54 when I had my surgery and they did a pregnancy test on me.

SW 327
GW 150
CW 126

                                      

Island Girl
on 9/23/11 8:36 am - VI
Socialized medicine?
I got my toes in the water, ass in the sand ,
        Not a worry in the world, a cold beer in my hand
               Life is good today. Life is good today.
MacMadame
on 9/23/11 10:04 am - Northern, CA
I don't know about that because there are other countries that have it and do a much better job.

I have a low opinion of UK medical care though. I don't know how fair it is but I see a lot of stories online from people who live there that make me wonder just how good the standard of care is.

HW - 225 SW - 191 GW - 132 CW - 122
Visit my blog at Fatty Fights Back      Become a Fan on Facebook!
Starting BMI 40-ish or less? Join the LightWeights

(deactivated member)
on 9/23/11 9:11 am - Santa Cruz, CA
I don't blame you for being angry, but please don't abuse your poor 'puter!

I just saw a post this week where a woman's surgery was halted AT THE DOOR to surgery when it was shown she was PG. WTF is up with UK medical???

Linda_S
on 9/23/11 12:10 pm - Eugene, OR
I don't blame you for being angry either!  I had to give a urine sample before surgery also, and I had a hysterectomy several years before that.  I'd say my likelihood of being pregnant was nil and none.

Success supposes endeavor. - Jane Austen

(deactivated member)
on 9/23/11 12:24 pm - Toronto, Canada
 I'm Canadian and I love my socialized medicine....I think everyone should try it!  And no, this is not a result of socialized medicine, its a result of bad medicine.
jspencer1014
on 9/23/11 7:51 pm - Riverdale, GA
An early pregnancy at 4 weeks would probably not show up in a urine pregnancy test yet. Especially if the test was not done on her first mornings urine. Her pre op work would not have shown it either. Not even a blood test would have popped positive before 4 weeks. This sucks, but early pregnancy could slip through. However, that is no excuse for not insuring that the baby got the nutrition it needed. TPN feedings are adjusted for each individual through blood testing. There is absolutely NO reason this woman couldn't have been given this and the poor baby spared. Of course all this is assuming that the story is even real.
"It's not what is taken from you that counts. It's what you do with what you have left."-Hubert Humphrey


           
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