LOA or PTO...?
Just wondering...
I work in a multi practice office (how i met my surgeon) but im a receptionist so although my job is mentally stressing its not overly physical. Im in school also and was hoping to have the surgery in August before school starts since im not sure I will be able to handle both intially... I wanted to know, how long after surgery did you feel up and ready to resume normal activity???
***also my surgeon wants me on a 12wk liquid/mushie diet post-op and i was wondering if that would drain my enegry... so basically i need help deciding between taking a leave of absence or just using a few days of paid time off.*** Thanks :)
I work in a multi practice office (how i met my surgeon) but im a receptionist so although my job is mentally stressing its not overly physical. Im in school also and was hoping to have the surgery in August before school starts since im not sure I will be able to handle both intially... I wanted to know, how long after surgery did you feel up and ready to resume normal activity???
***also my surgeon wants me on a 12wk liquid/mushie diet post-op and i was wondering if that would drain my enegry... so basically i need help deciding between taking a leave of absence or just using a few days of paid time off.*** Thanks :)
12 weeks is the longest post-op restricted diet I've ever heard of, but if your surgeon finds that it reduces complications and improves outcomes, I guess you gotta go with it....
I was on clear liquids for 3 days, full liquids for 11 days, purees for 14 days, then soft food carefully transitioning to solids. My problem (in theory, anyway) with staying on a restricted (liquid/puree) diet so long is that it's solid food that provides early and prolonged satiety.
I was on clear liquids for 3 days, full liquids for 11 days, purees for 14 days, then soft food carefully transitioning to solids. My problem (in theory, anyway) with staying on a restricted (liquid/puree) diet so long is that it's solid food that provides early and prolonged satiety.
Jean McMillan c.2009-2013 - Always a bandster at heart
author of Bandwagon (TM), Strategies for Success with the Adjustable Gastric Band & Bandwagon Cookery. Bandwagon for Kindle now available on Amazon. Read my blog at: jean-onthebandwagon.blogspot.com
Your surgeon sounds like he's making band patients follow rules more applicable to more involved surgeries.
I was back on soft solids in two weeks. Two years out and no complications whatsoever other than a slight overfill a year ago.
I think 12 weeks is a bit of overkill. I would be very weak and not able to do much on such a restricted program. I also think I would be looking for a second opinion.. but that's me. I'm kinda hard headed and rather opinionated when it comes to my body & health. I even fired an oncologist because I didn't like their treatment plans for me.. LOL.
Best of luck on whatever you decide to do. :)
P.S. Oh.. and I agree with Jean on the solid foods providing satiety. I didn't lose any significant amount of weight until I was back on solid foods.
I was back on soft solids in two weeks. Two years out and no complications whatsoever other than a slight overfill a year ago.
I think 12 weeks is a bit of overkill. I would be very weak and not able to do much on such a restricted program. I also think I would be looking for a second opinion.. but that's me. I'm kinda hard headed and rather opinionated when it comes to my body & health. I even fired an oncologist because I didn't like their treatment plans for me.. LOL.
Best of luck on whatever you decide to do. :)
P.S. Oh.. and I agree with Jean on the solid foods providing satiety. I didn't lose any significant amount of weight until I was back on solid foods.
I was self-employed at home doing a sedentary job when I had my surgery, so I could take breaks whenever I wanted. I had planned on a 2-week break to recover and was bored and ready to work again after 3-4 days. My energy level was fine once I got into the puree food phase.
It's so hard to predict how each individual will react to the anesthesia (that's what knocks me for a loop, whatever the surgical procedure), pain meds, the new band, the incisions, the gas pain, sleeping with healing incisioins...plus keeping yourself supplied with the right food substances.
I'd probably take off a week, but how many days of PTO are you allowed to take? Can you talk to the office manager or whoever's in charge of benefits about your concern and see what they recommend, since they know the pace of the office and the nature of your job?
Jean
It's so hard to predict how each individual will react to the anesthesia (that's what knocks me for a loop, whatever the surgical procedure), pain meds, the new band, the incisions, the gas pain, sleeping with healing incisioins...plus keeping yourself supplied with the right food substances.
I'd probably take off a week, but how many days of PTO are you allowed to take? Can you talk to the office manager or whoever's in charge of benefits about your concern and see what they recommend, since they know the pace of the office and the nature of your job?
Jean
Jean McMillan c.2009-2013 - Always a bandster at heart
author of Bandwagon (TM), Strategies for Success with the Adjustable Gastric Band & Bandwagon Cookery. Bandwagon for Kindle now available on Amazon. Read my blog at: jean-onthebandwagon.blogspot.com