After much consideration and research, I've decided to have a VSG. It seems like the best bet for me, after battling my weight for years. I'm 26, 6'2", and 370. Nobody else in my family is overweight, and I'm easily the fattest of all my friends. After I quit drinking a few years ago, I really began putting on weight (probably just switched one addiction for another) but even before that, I was heavy. It just wasn't until the last couple years that I really lost control with it. I have what amounts to a lifetime gym membership, and it feels like I'm dying after a couple minutes of cardio. Also, I have high blood pressure, but luckily no diabetes or elevated cholesterol (yet..). One new thing thats been scaring me is these weird, transient pains in my feet and legs; perhaps its just the hypochondriac part of me, but I keep getting the thought of blood clots and embolisms... I need to do something about this now.
Another impetus for getting this surgery is the fact that next month I start at a nearby university, which provides medical insurance. It'll be the first time in about 8 years that I've had it, so i figure I may as well take advantage of it while I'm there. Its some form of Anthem, though not sure if its different being through the school, I see that there is bariatric surgery coverage, and understand that Anthem now covers VSG. But I'm curious... can a regular doctor (GP, or whoever I first see at the university health center) refuse to refer me to a surgeon? What I mean is, even though I more than meet the criteria for surgery, can a doctor, by way of their own beliefs against these types of procedures (or that I need to keep trying the same stuff I have been in terms of dieting), deny my request for referral?
Also, anyone have good suggestions for surgeons in the bay area? I'm not sure which hospitals are "in network" for Anthem, until I actually get the insurance next month, but I think Alta Bates and UCSF are, and perhaps the California Pacific Hospital are.