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If you are unable to lose weight with exercise and diet control, you can seek medical help. Medical options include weight-loss drugs, liposuction and bariatric or metabolic surgery.

​Weight-loss drugs​

There are 2 types of weight-loss drugs, one to suppress the appetite and the other to reduce the absorption of fat from food in the intestines. Weight-loss drugs may be suitable for people who have health problems such as diabetes and hypertension related to their excess weight. Typically, these people have a BMI of over 27 and have not been able to lose weight with exercise and diet control.

Your doctor would have to consider your health history and other medications you are taking, before prescribing any weight-loss drugs.

Liposuction

Liposuction is a cosmetic procedure in which fat is removed from fleshy parts of the body such as the abdomen, thighs and buttocks. However, this is essentially an aesthetic procedure and doesn’t cause significant weight loss. It is more suitable for patients who want to improve the contours of their body.

Weight-loss surgery

Weight-loss surgery is recommended for severely-obese patients who have not benefitted from diet and exercise intervention, or weight-loss medication. This type of surgery is referred to as bariatric, adapted from the Greek word “baros” which means weight.

Weight-loss surgery involves three main techniques:

  • Gastric banding – a band is placed across the stomach shrinking its size so that one feels full with less food
  • Gastric bypass – a small pouch is created at the top of the stomach; this pouch is connected directly to the small intestine, reducing the calories absorbed from food
  • Gastric sleeve or sleeve gastrectomy – about 75 per cent of the stomach is removed, drastically reducing its size

In recent years, bariatric surgery has been found to be effective treatment for more than just obesity. It has namely proved to be beneficial in the treatment of obesity-related diseases such as diabetes. Hence, bariatric surgery is now sometimes called metabolic surgery, to refer to surgical intervention for the treatment of metabolic diseases.

“However, even with medical and/or surgical intervention, you will need dietary and exercise support to maintain your weight loss,” says Dr Tham Kwang Wei, Senior Consultant and Director of the Obesity Metabolic Unit, LIFE Centre,Singapore General Hospital (SGH), a member of the SingHealth group. "There is just no getting away from these two key elements of weight management."

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