This is going to cause a stir but is an account of what was an interesting hour or so in the parish hall. Because it was a Parish Hall no alcohol played a part in the temperament of any of the participants. Many of the group are 'churchified', I personally am not. No offence is therefore meant or implied and as we are all entitled to free speech here we go......
During one of the meetings of the discussion group I regularly attend the question posed was "Should those who are morbidly obese receive free NHS or Private (nhs funded) bariatric surgery when the reason for their obesity was their own choice"?
The discussion was lively and some really interesting comments were made. The vast majority of the concensus of opinion was that anyone who is so morbidly obese should have to pay the total costs of their surgery and after care surgery themselves. There should not be any grant or state assistance. One question was "Why should each operation to fit gastric bands etc cost in excess of £10k, followed by aftercare and further shin tightening surgery at even greater expense be paid by the taxpayer when it was the recipient of the surgery who had by their own choice overeaten to the point where they had become so overweight? There were many replies but interestingly not one of them was upheld by the majority of our group.
One suggestion to save the NHS a vast amount of money and have the same end result was that instead of an expensive gastric band operation, with all of its possible risks to the life of the recipient during surgery, costing many thousands of pounds when the far simpler act of having their teeth wired together to stop them eating solids would be as effective. They would feel no more hungry than with the gastric band and they would still have to learn to adapt their diet, exercise and meal sizes to suit and so retain a healthier weight.
The end result was that the gastric band surgery should not be offered on the NHS and if done privately should be at the total expense of the applicant. It was acknowledged that there would be a very tiny number whose health problems had caused the onset of their obesity but that the majority had caused their own dilemma by their personal choice of their lifestyle.
The NHS would then be able to put those valuable resources to a far better use such as cancer research and care which would benefit the whole of the public and not just the morbidly obese minority who chose to be as they are. After all the NHS has had to spend another massive fortune on buying new heavy duty equipment and vehicles to deal with that selfish section of their patients.
Please reply, not in anger, but with a reason that can be accepted why they should have free treatment. Please, please, not the one where the NHS is free care for everyone, think about how a minority is severely depleting the scarce funds of the NHS by their own selfish choice of lifestyle acts.
The next discussion is one of 'benefit abuse' and its impact on neighbourhoods.