Focus on the mental health of young obesity surgery patients

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Research from Lund University in Sweden shows that one in five adolescents who have undergone obesity surgery experience poor mental health. Some have even had suicidal thoughts. The study is based on follow-up studies of 88 adolescents who have undergone obesity surgery. “It is extremely important that the focus of healthcare providers is not limited to their patients’ physical well-being”, says psychologist Kajsa Järvholm.

Psychologically speaking, adolescents who are considered for obesity surgery are a very vulnerable group. Most of them are cared for both physically and mentally, but there are those who suffer after the surgery: they are depressed and some of them experience thoughts of suicide.

The studies are among the most extensive follow-ups ever made concerning the mental health in adolescents who have undergone obesity surgery: 88 Swedish participants with a former average BMI of 45.

Kajsa Järvholm has mapped the patients’ psychological well-being before surgery, four months after, and again another two years after surgery.

“At the first follow-up, most of them were feeling better”, says Kajsa Järvholm. “Right after the surgery, they experience a type of euphoria when the pounds start dropping after years of mental and physical problems due to them being overweight”.

Kajsa Järvholm argues that it’s not until the two-year follow-up that you get a real indication of what the future will be like. And at this time, 14 per cent experience suicidal thoughts and 13 per cent report symptoms of major depression.

Is there a way to find out which persons will not be helped by the surgery?

“It is important to emphasise that they all feel better physically after the surgery. As for their mental well-being, we have seen that those who are in the worst state of mental health before the surgery are also those who continue to suffer”, says Kajsa Järvholm.

The surgical treatment performed on obese adolescents is currently in a trial phase, on the initiative of the Swedish county councils. The results of Kajsa Järvholm’s study are therefore important in terms of how to proceed in the future.

Her main conclusion is that if obesity surgery is to be part of what is considered basic healthcare, follow-ups must also be performed to evaluate the patients’ psychological well-being two years after the surgery.

“Obesity is often more difficult for young people than for adults. Therefore, there’s a difference in developing obesity as an adult, and doing so while growing up”, says Kajsa Järvholm, who believes that all adolescents who undergo obesity surgery must be screened in terms of their state of mental health.

Järvholm K (2016). Mental Health in Adolescents Undergoing Bariatric Surgery: Psychological Outcomes Four Months and Two Years after Gastric Bypass https://lucris.lub.lu.se/ws/files/11036565/avhandlingen_pdf.pdf

Contact Kajsa Järvholm
Email: kajsa.jarvholm@psy.lu.se, or
Tel: +46 (0)705 72 79 87

Cecilia Schubert
International press officer
Email: cecilia.schubert@kommunikation.lu.se

Lund University was founded in 1666 and is regularly ranked as one of the world’s top 100 higher education institutions. The University has 41 000 students and 7 500 staff based in Lund, Helsingborg and Malmö. We are united in our efforts to understand, explain and improve our world and the human condition.

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