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Gastric band weight loss ops on the rise for under-25s

An article by BBC Radio 1’s reporter Jean Mackenzie states that the number of under-25s being given weight-loss surgery on the NHS in England has quadrupled over the last three years, according to figures seen by Newsbeat.

That includes people being fitted with a gastric band, having their stomach stapled, or having a gastric bypass.

Between 2006 and 2007, 55 people under the age of 25 had one of these operations, but between 2009 and 2010 the number had risen to 210.

That included 34 teenagers, some as young as 15.

Doctors and eating-disorder groups say they are worried about the rise, claiming the NHS in many cases is not giving young people the support they need before and after the surgery.

Gastric bands are given to overweight people to help them lose weight quickly. They work by reducing the size of a patient’s stomach, therefore limiting the amount of food they can eat.

The eating disorder charity Beat says too often this is not being treated as a life-changing procedure.

Beat’s chief executive Susan Ringwood says: “Having a gastric band fitted is a very serious operation that has long-term, permanent consequences, yet we know young people are not always being given this information and that is very concerning”.

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