Access to NHS weight loss surgery is "inconsistent and unethical" with some obese patients effectively being made to eat more to get an operation, doctors' leaders have said.
The Royal College of Surgeons (RSC) said NHS funding constraints meant some patients who already qualify for operations are being forced to wait until they are more obese or develop life-threatening illnesses such as diabetes.
It has calculated that out of around 240,000 people requiring weight-loss surgery, only 4,300 - or 2% - had operations carried out last year. The college also said that approximately two thirds of surgeons saw patients eligible under national medical guidelines being refused surgery in their centres.
Under NHS rules, morbidly obese patients - those with a Body Mass Index (BMI) of 40 or more - have a right to be assessed for weight loss surgery.
The RCS said while some health trusts observe the guidelines, others stipulate that only the most extremely ill patients - those with a BMI of 50 or 60 with obesity-related illness - are referred for surgery.
RCS education director Professor Mike Larvin said: "National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) guidelines are meant to signal the end of postcode lotteries, yet local commissioning groups are choosing not to deliver on obesity surgery.:source:thislondon:
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