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Phone: (443) 602-6515
info@thebodyimagecenter.com

Bariatric Surgery Patients

The Body Image Center welcome

Struggling to manage your mood without food?

Are you slipping into other self-destructive behaviors?

Need a tune-up on motivation?

If you answered yes to any of these questions, psychotherapy can be the difference between reaching your ultimate health goals and regaining the weight you worked so hard to lose.

Research has shown over 60% of patients are not compliant with their nutritional regimens, often due to a strong history of destructive eating habits, poor body image and mood disorders. 

While the mental health of most patients does improve after surgery, it is usual transient and is often cited as the reason why so many bariatric patients are non-compliant with their diet and exercise and return to old destructive patterns. The role of therapy in the recovery process has never been more validated. 

We also offer pre-operative psychological evaluations required by every hospital prior to surgery.

Call (443) 602-6515 or email us at info@thebodyimagecenter.com for more information.

Why else are therapy and therapy so important before and after bariatric surgery?

For nearly 1 in 5 bariatric patients, the addiction to food does not go away
and can lead to poor outcomes after surgery. Some may do well for a while
and then relapse with their food addiction and regain some or all the
weight.

Often food is used to fill some void felt as a result of poor relationships
or unfulfilled goals. It can be the result of anxiety or depression. It can also be chemical in nature, no different than alcohol or drug addiction. Some transfer their addictive behavior from food to alcohol, drugs, sexual promiscuity, gambling and compulsive shopping. What once may have been a reward for losing weight can become another destructive habit.

In addition, eating disorder behavior has been documented after bariatric surgery, especially for those whose weight plateaus at some stage. Fear of weight gain can lead to anorexia, bulimia and compulsive exercising.

When physical and emotional trauma is part of a patient's past, their excessive weight may act as a barrier from their tormentors. As the weight comes off, so does that emotional and physical protection. For this person, dealing with the psychological trauma is vital to be sure the feelings of insecurity and victimization don't resurface and lead to new addictive, risky or self-destructive behavior.

Also, the change in one's body can disrupt relationships built around old food, exercise and self-esteem patterns. A husband may see his wife becoming more attractive and become possessive and jealous as a result. A child who is overweight may become sullen or depressed when they compare themselves to their newly svelte parent. And friendships that were built on an obese person's low self-esteem may no longer be compatible with their improved confidence level and healthy lifestyle, leading to increased isolation and loneliness. 

And what about all this new attention? It can lead to changed expectations romantically and sexually, which is frightening enough on its own! Also, people report higher expectations in productivity at work, which can be anxiety provoking to someone unaccustomed to the pace or benchmarks now requested. 

For these and many other reasons, therapy and can help a patient achieve their goals in weight loss, development of healthy behaviors, and life plans. Increase your self-esteem, develop the relationships you want, excel professionally, and learn to be happy and healthy at any size. 

Call (443) 602-6515 or email info@thebodyimagecenter.com now for your FREE 15 minute initial consultation.


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I'm Speaking at BEDA2012
9192 Red Branch Rd., Suite 270
Columbia, MD 21045

Email: info@thebodyimagecenter.com
Phone: (443) 602-6515
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