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The purpose is to determine the economic, clinical and quality of life outcomes of bariatric surgery and describe the consequences of protracted wait-times (~ 2 years) for this procedure.
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Severe obesity affects approximately 3% of Canadians (nearly 1 million people) and is becoming increasingly common and costly. Surgery for severe obesity, known as bariatric surgery, substantially reduces weight and the risk of death, decreases obesity-related health problems and increases quality of life. However, surgery carries a 0.5-2% up-front risk of death, has potentially serious short and long-term complications, and an uncertain cost-to-benefit ratio. Surgery is becoming increasingly popular, programs are being initiated or expanded across the country, and waiting lists are several years long. Provincial governments, unable to keep pace with surgical demand, are sending patients to the US for surgery and patients are petitioning governments for increased access to care.
By collecting data from a clinical obesity program that services an entire Canadian health region of over 1 million people and linking these data to provincial and regional data sources, this study aims to:
This study will provide essential data to accurately determine the benefits, risks, and costs of bariatric surgery in the Canadian context for patients, care providers, and decision makers. Equally important, it will determine whether the health and quality of life of Canadians waiting for surgery is adversely affected because of extended wait-times. Results will directly influence and streamline patient care, will be applicable to similar programs across the country, and serve as an important foundation for future research and data collection.
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500 participants in 3 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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