NFS4
No Lifer
WHAT THE ****?
I guess I can kinda see their motive; working the system in order to get insurance coverage. Everyone likes to take the easy way out.
http://vitals.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2...r-weight-loss-surgery-some-pile-on-the-pounds
I guess I can kinda see their motive; working the system in order to get insurance coverage. Everyone likes to take the easy way out.
http://vitals.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2...r-weight-loss-surgery-some-pile-on-the-pounds
At 202 pounds, Steffany Sears knew she was fat, but not fat enough to qualify for traditional weight-loss surgery.
Desperate for help, the Gold Bar, Wash., woman did what seemed the only logical thing: She gorged herself on chips and cookies, pizza and fried chicken so shed gain at least eight pounds more.
I would have eaten myself stupid, recalled Sears, 34, who was turned down by her insurance company for the $20,000 procedure. I know friends who would have done that, too.
In the end, she actually qualified to participate in a clinical trial that led the federal Food and Drug Administration this spring to lower the bar for obesity in people eligible for one form of weight-loss surgery, Allergans Lap-Band stomach-shrinking device. Because she had a body mass index, or BMI, of between 30 and 35, the target range of the new rule, she even got the treatment for free, instead of having to take out a second mortgage on her house.
Today, at 5-foot-6, she weighs 143 pounds. "I felt like I'd won the lottery, really, with my life," said Sears, a native of England.
