David Haslam (GP)

This article is about the obesity specialist. For other people with the same name, see David Haslam (disambiguation).

Dr David William Haslam is a General Practitioner and a Physician specialising in Obesity Medicine at the Centre for Obesity research at Luton & Dunstable Hospital. He graduated from St. Thomas' Hospital Medical School in 1985.

Haslam is the Chair of the National Obesity Forum. He is also a member of the group Experts in Severe and Complex Obesity. In 2010 he warned that the wrong people were getting bariatric surgery and said some of those who are biggest should just be offered "palliative care" for their obesity.[1]

In December 2013 he was one of a number of doctors who signed a letter to Jeremy Hunt urging that the battle against dementia should focus on the benefits of a Mediterranean diet rather than drugs of dubious efficacy.[2]

References

  1. "'Palliative care not surgery' for the most obese". BBC News. 13 August 2010. Retrieved 14 December 2013.
  2. "Mediterranean diet, NOT drugs is key to dementia fight, say doctors". Daily Mail. 8 December 2013. Retrieved 14 December 2013.

External links

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