Guest guest Posted November 9, 2002 Report Share Posted November 9, 2002 Ceep and all, Just a response to Ceeps post about the high risk part of WLS. I have been fortunate enough to meet several post folks in the past few years. Some at ASBS, and some when they come to Vegas. One of the benefits of living in a tourist mecca I suppose. Anyhow.....on one visit with a postie, he was telling me about his surgeon and how he only operates on exceptionally high risk folks. I repeated this conversation with Dr Fisher and he said to me, " what do you think you were? " to which I replied, " Oh! " Duh, talk about your blonde moments. People email me through my website and of course are very concerned about surviving surgery. I try to explain to them that as MO people we are a high risk to have a tooth pulled! Think of all the things that can go wrong with a " normie " Gall bladder attack, appendix, ovarian cysts, a simple fall, a fender bender, a twisted knee or ankle....... Then think of what happens to a MO person who has these things go wrong. As MO people we tend not to go to the doctors. We don't want to hear that everything would be fine if we would just lose 100, 200 or 300 pounds. So we don't go. And we put our health in jeopardy. So yes, weight loss surgery is surgery, and any surgery presents a risk. All the more reason to do lots of research and make sure you and your surgeon and all your doctors are on the same page. Huggzz to all, Sue in Las Vegas re the wording " wls " Hi everyone: just a note to head off a potentially divisive controversy in response to an e-mail I rec'd privately. (I don't want a calcium or " what to really name it " controversy either one---grin--it just makes it so that people don't want to read the list) Please call surgery whatever you wish. I don't think anyone here is going to say its has to be one way or another, or else. By my sights, wls is one of the side effects of the surgery, but it is not the name for the surgery. And wls most definitely has been appropriated by and for marketing purposes by many, MANY surgeons, aftercare groups, hospitals, nutritionists, lawyers---- but not all, especially those who began in the field long, long ago. I've been online about these matters going on half a dozen years, and I have watched the phrase wls evolve into its current mileau. Language evolves and words are often appropriated and used in ways that were not meant at the onset. That's all. hope this clarifies. ceep Homepage: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Graduate-OSSG Unsubscribe: mailto:Graduate-OSSG-unsubscribe Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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