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Target Article

Stuck in the Middle: The Many Moral Challenges With Bariatric Surgery

Pages 3-11 | Published online: 14 Dec 2010
 

Abstract

Bariatric surgery is effective on short- and medium-term weight loss, reduction of comorbidities, and overall mortality. A large and increasing portion of the population is eligible for bariatric surgery, which increases instant health care costs. A review of the literature identifies a series of ethical challenges: unjust distribution of bariatric surgery, autonomy and informed consent, classification of obesity and selecting assessment endpoints, prejudice among health professionals, intervention in people's life-world, and medicalization of appearance. Bariatric surgery is particularly interesting because it uses surgical methods to modify healthy organs, is not curative, but offers symptoms relief for a condition that it is considered to result from lack of self-control and is subject to significant prejudice. Taking the reviewed ethical issues into account is important when meeting persons eligible for bariatric surgery, as well as in the assessment of and decision making on surgery for obesity.

Acknowledgments

I am most grateful to the reviewers and to colleagues at the Section for medical ethics at the University of Oslo for wise comments and valuable suggestions.

Notes

Certainly, bariatric surgery may also be viewed as a form of human modification or enhancement, which, however, is beyond the scope of this article.

Words like extreme, morbid, and severe obesity are of course not value-neutral.

One of these is differences in preference structures between various population groups, but studies documenting this are not identified.

Although I am part-time engaged by the Norwegian Knowledge Centre for Health Services, a HTA agency in Norway, I have never been paid to assess bariatric surgery.

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