fuzzynecromancer:

chubbynatsume:

930am:

science-fiction-is-real:

fatherangel:

ittybittykittykisses:

coverartistlol626:

It’s 2015. If doctors don’t know how to operate on fat bodies. Then they shouldn’t be doctors. We have enough resources an equipment to deal with “obese” patients. There is no need for the medical community to continue fat shaming. 

Let’s talk a little bit more in depth about how obesity affects surgical procedures.

In most serious, intensive surgeries, you’re probably going to be under anesthesia, right? And you’re probably going to have medications to take afterwards. Stuff like this filtered through the kidneys and liver.

Obese patients have much higher rates of renal hypertension, which affects the kidneys, and morbidly obese patients have a 90% likelihood of having abnormalities in their liver.

That all adds up to a really bad time, and drugs being filtered out of the system quicker and therefore not working as intended. And you really want your anesthesia to work right when people are cutting into you.

In addition to this, some weight-based drugs are affected by fatty tissue, and some are not, so this can cause problems in determining the proper dosage.

Obese patients are at a higher risk for deep-vein thrombosis – this is when a blood clot forms in a deep vein, like in the leg. Surgery is recognized as a risk factor for DVT, and so obese patients undergoing surgery are doubly at risk.

Finding veins in the patient is also made difficult – it’s the difference between finding the edge piece in a 1000 piece puzzle, vs finding it in a 100 piece puzzle.

It’s harder to monitor blood pressure in obese patients as well, as standard cuffs may not work due to there being too much fatty tissue between the blood vessel and the cuff.

When you’re performing surgery, you have to pull back the flesh and muscle to get to where you’re trying to operate on – the more you have to pull back, the more difficult this becomes.

This image shows how much more you’re having to work through when doing an operation on an obese person:

So no, it’s not a matter of doctors being bad at their job. Surgery by itself is a difficult and risk-laden process – adding obesity on top of that adds an uneccessary layer of additional risk and complexity.

Sources:

Palmer M, Schaffner F. Effect of weight reduction on hepatic abnormalities in overweight patients. Gastroenterology 1990; 99: 1408–13.

Albert S, Borovicka J, Thurnheer M, et al. Pre- and post-operative transaminase changes within the scope of gastric banding in morbid obesity. Schweiz Rundsch Med Prax 2001; 90: 1459–64.

Gholam PM, Kotler DP, Flancbaum LJ. Liver pathology in morbidly obese patients undergoing Roux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery. Obes Surg 2002; 12: 49–51.

Ramsey-Stewart G. Hepatic steatosis and morbid obesity. Obes Surg 1993; 3: 157–9.

Clain DJ, Lefkowitch JH. Fatty liver disease in morbid obesity. Gastroenterol Clin North Am 1987; 16: 239–52.

Marik P, Varon J. The obese patient in the ICU. Chest 1998; 113: 492–8.

Ribstein J, duCailar G, Mimran A. Combined renal effects of overweight and hypertension. Hypertension 1995; 26: 610–5.

Braekkan SK, Siegerink B, Lijfering WM, Hansen JB, Cannegieter SC, Rosendaal FR. Role of obesity in the etiology of deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism: current epidemiological insights. Semin Thromb Hemost 2013

Allman-Farinelli MA. Obesity and venous thrombosis: a review. Semin Thromb Hemost 2011; 37:903-7.

This is very true. When I had open heart surgery, there were various complications as well as problems with the anesthesia because of how fat I was. Thanks be to God my surgeon was top notch. But the fact of the matter is that if I was a thinner patient, the surgery would have been far less traumatic. In fact, if I had not put on so much weight, my aortic valve would have lasted me longer. So, yeah, biological and scientific realities are at stake when you carry too much weight.

I have seen some communities on tumblr try to push a “body positive” self esteem agenda by dismissing health risks of obesity as fat bias.

Yes.  You can be beautiful no matter what your body looks like.

No.  You cannot always be healthy regardless of what your body looks like, and while self confidence is important, taking care of yourself and addressing health problems-including being overweight- is important.

Thanks for someone being honest and real about the risks of obesity and the medical field

Im glad this didnt explode and now ive learned a little more about health risks and obesity. Thank you tumblr

No.

This is still wrong. If fat bodies are harder to operate on, metabolize anesthesia at different rates, if fat bodies are less healthy, that is irrelevant.

Doctors should LEARN how to treat fat people, because they should learn how to treat all their patients. If they can’t deal with somebody who diverges from the figure in the high school anatomy textbook, then they are BAD doctors.

Obese people are less healthy, you say? ..if so, what DIFFERENCE does that make? People generally come to a doctor when they have a HEALTH issue.

If somebody has an appendix threatening to burst, you, as a person with many years of medical schooling, should have a more immediate, practical answer than “lose some weight.”

If doctors are so bad at operating on fat bodies, because they have different anesthesia needs or more folds to cut through, well then maybe medical schools should train them to provide life-saving treatments to people who aren’t calvin klein models.

izzydoodledump:

I was recently criticized for not showing enough diversity in my artwork when it comes to the female figure :/ First and foremost let me just say that I think that woman are the most powerful and amazing creatures in the world, truly! And while I will admit, I do LOVE drawing the “pear shaped” figure the most, I honestly love all shapes and sizes of the female figure. From average, to pear, to boyish, to curvy, to plus sized, to petite, to banana (whatever the hell that is :P) I honestly love them all, and i’d hate to think that anyone out there feels any different.

So thus-ly, I promise to start showing more diversity in my works 

TOOLS USED
Mechanical Pencils
Standard Sketch paper
Photoshop

This is a pencil drawing cleaned up in photoshop

Beautiful Body Types by ~IsaiahStephens

thelaughingman1:

intothedarkstars:

wvstcoast:

callmeisabel:

stop-hodoring:

masslyeffective:

spangledmystars:

I can’t click my reblog button hard enough

It’s not just the ladies who get insecure, it’s all of us.  It’s a human trait, yo.

Fricken’ beautiful. Everything that I want to say about this has been said in the post above me.

you can’t stop me from reblogging this over and over again

Always reblog

I want to cry… I want this.

I definitely identify with this….