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Father Ken Near of
Englewood, N.J. can
attest to that. He was
obese, and had developed
type 2 diabetes. "The
likelihood was that I
would have a 50 percent
chance of having a major
organ failure by the age
of 60. And I only had a
50 percent chance of
living to age 70," he
says. "The realization
was very, very clear to
me that I was not able
to control my
consumption of food. And
I was not likely ever
going to be able to
control it."
So he had bariatric surgery last June. It has helped him shed 100 pounds, and his diabetes is gone. "My doctor sat down and said, 'You are not diabetic,'" he says. "People who have type 2 diabetes who are seriously overweight. …are good candidates for a gastric bypass," Dr. Flancbaum observes. "Gastric bypass will have dramatic effects on their diabetes. And the sooner they have it, the better the results will be." Senay points out that people can only qualify for bariatric surgery if they meet certain criteria for obesity and related health conditions: "This is major surgery, no doubt, and that comes with a variety of risks including, in a small percentage of cases, even death. "We don't know how many exactly how many people have that complication from this surgery but that's something...to consider. Still, when the stakes are as high as they are in this situation, where you know you're going to experience some sort of complications, like a heart attack, people weigh those things and make these decisions." İMMIV, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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