Is Bariatric Surgery Right for You?

If you’re overweight, and diets and exercise haven’t helped, you may be considering bariatric (weight-loss) surgery. While surgery may sound extreme, carrying excess weight can put you at a higher risk for diabetes, high blood pressure and many other health concerns. Valley Baptist Medical Center is here to help.

The Valley Baptist Difference

At Valley Baptist, we want to be your first choice for weight-loss surgery. When you choose Valley Baptist, you can expect:

  • Compassion. Experienced and compassionate care by board-certified doctors who specialize in obesity medicine and general vascular surgeons who specialize in bariatric surgery.
  • Follow-through. A continuum of care that starts with your very first informational seminar and continues after your surgery to help you create lasting lifestyle changes.
  • Excellence. The Valley Baptist Surgical and Medical Weight-Loss Program in Brownsville is a Comprehensive Center accredited by the Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery Accreditation and Quality Improvement Program. We’re the only bariatric program in Cameron County to have received this accreditation.
Obesity is a disease. Bariatric surgery can be the solution. We offer an unparalleled combination of compassionate services, surgical expertise and ongoing therapy and support, including an outpatient clinic with personalized care that doesn’t end when you leave our hospital.

Weight loss surgery is generally designed for those with a body mass index (BMI) equal to or greater than 40, or equal to or greater than 35 with serious co-morbidities. Laparoscopic adjustable gastric banding is also FDA-approved for weight loss surgery in people with a BMI of 30 to 35 who have at least one obesity-related condition. Weight loss surgery is considered safe, but like many types of surgery, it does have risks. Consult with your physician about the risks and benefits of weight loss surgery.

Bariatric Surgery Services

Surgical Options for Weight-Loss

Valley Baptist offers two different weight-loss surgical procedures. Each has specific risks and benefits, and our staff and doctors will review each with you.

Laparoscopic Sleeve Gastrectomy

This surgery involves removing between 60 and 80 percent of the stomach, so that what’s left looks like a tube, or a sleeve. A smaller stomach means that you eat less, and that, along with a slower digestive process, leads to weight loss. This surgery is performed in Harlingen and Brownsville. Learn more about sleeve gastrectomy

Laparoscopic Gastric Bypass

This surgery creates a small pouch at the top of your stomach, and in addition your small bowel is divided. The biliopancreatic limb is reattached to your small bowel on one end, and the other is connected to the pouch, creating what’s called a Roux limb. The pouch releases food slowly, so you feel full after eating very little food. Learn more about gastric bypass

Bariatrics Surgery Disclaimer: Weight loss surgery is generally designed for those with a body mass index (BMI) equal to or greater than 40, or equal to or greater than 35 with serious co-morbidities.  Weight loss surgery is considered safe, but like many types of surgery, it does have risks. Consult with your physician about the risks and benefits of weight loss surgery.

We also offer  revision bariatric surgery to address complications from a previous surgery or enhance weight-loss results.

Bariatric Support Groups & Informational Seminars

Weight-loss surgery isn’t just about losing weight. Not everyone in your life will understand that. Valley Baptist provides support groups so that you’ll immediately have a caring community of friends to lean on for support. If you have had weight-loss surgery, or are considering it, please join us. You’ll be able to share what life is like after surgery as well as learn more about what to expect from the procedure. Every month, we hold a meeting for the community so that anyone interested in bariatric surgery can find out what’s involved, from the costs to the surgery itself and what happens afterward.
See our Bariatric Classes & Events

Vitamins and Protein Supplements

Following surgery, your dietary needs will change. Your smaller stomach will hold only a certain amount of food, and not all of it will be digested and absorbed. To make up for the digestive changes, you’ll need to take vitamin and mineral supplements, as well as maintain a high protein intake, for the rest of your life.

Talk with a Patient Navigator

Our Patient Navigators are a Registered Nurses who can answer your hospital related questions, help you navigate your way through the registration process, and more.

More Information

Life After Weight Loss Surgery

Weight loss is one of the top New Year’s resolutions made in America each year, but if you are post op from weight loss surgery, you have already been working hard toward your goal. Here are three things to do to stay on track with your life after weight loss surgery. Remember to keep it simple!

  1. Choose one healthy habit to work on at a time, not five. Part of staying motivated for your life after weight loss surgery is to set goals for yourself that you can actually achieve. It’s overwhelming to take on too much at one time and too easy to get discouraged when you inevitably aren’t able to do everything perfectly. And remember, it takes an average of 66 days to form a new habit. Hold yourself accountable with some small changes or one specific goal. It may work better to focus on adding something healthy and “good” for you rather than banning something. Once you have mastered a new change and it becomes a habit, move on to something else you would like to work on. Always give yourself grace for slip ups.
  2. Keep a journal. One way to encourage yourself in your new life after weight loss surgery is to write or take video about your journey. The benefit of journaling – keeping track of your progress and how you feel -- cannot be overstated. It doesn’t necessarily have to be a food or exercise journal, but that is certainly a good idea. Make your journal fun and something that inspires and motivates you. Speak kindly to yourself in your words, and keep up with “aha” moments and encouraging things that people say to you as well as your goals. You may also want to include feelings about how your life is changing and something you feel positive about or are grateful for each day. Months from now, you’ll be able to look back at the journal and see how far you’ve come.
  3. Celebrate small and large victories. Rewarding yourself can be a fun way to keep up your motivation. You know those things you would love to have but never buy for yourself?  At the end of a good week, treat yourself with experiences and non-food treats. In little ways and big ways make sure you pat yourself on the back for all the good you are doing, and forget focusing on the “bad.”

After making this life-changing decision, you owe it to yourself to do everything you can to stay positive and motivated. All of the hard work you have been doing and good decisions you have been making will pay off. You’ll have the healthier lifestyle you have longed for that will improve the quality of your life for many New Year’s to come.