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Waist Watch: New healthcare laws could expand coverage for weight loss

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. -- With the U.S. obesity rate nearing 35 percent of the adult population, a federal health advisory panel is trying to reign-in a growing health crisis in this country. New recommendations could significantly expand insurance coverage of weight loss treatments if President Obama's healthcare law is upheld.

Bobbie Kendall Cordova: The turning point was when a doctor told me at 47 if I continued at that weight, I may not see my 50th birthday.

Bobbie Kendall Cordova used to weigh 280 pounds.

 Bobbie Kendall Cordova: I've yo-yo'ed my whole life.

After losing 110 pounds five years ago, Cordova gained 90 of it back. This time around she's lost 90 pounds and has 20 more to go and she says she couldn't have done it without the help of a medical doctor.

Bobbie Kendall Cordova: This is a lot of weight and it changes body a lot. It's important you be constantly checked.

Cordova turned to Dr. Gloria Hakkarainen who is board certified in bariatrics and treats a lot of patients for weight loss.

Dr. Gloria Hakkarainen: We have a pandemic now with obesity crisis which has spread faster than any other known human disease.

Because her weight loss treatment isn't covered by her health insurance, Cordova has spent $8,000 to $9,000 out of pocket. But that could all change Thursday, if the US Supreme Court upholds President Obama's healthcare law which requires adoption of certain recommendations, including one that would require Medicare and most private insurers to cover the cost of weight loss for obese people.

Obesity and obesity related diseases already cost $147 billion annually in the U.S., if the panel's recommendations are adopted that spending would increase. But medical experts say only in the short term.

The recommendations would also require intensive counseling for obese patients.

Bobbie Kendall Cordova: I know I didn't want to hear it when I was morbidly obese. But I'm sure a doctor made me understand what was happening.

The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force urged doctors to identify patients with a body mass index of 30 or more - currently that's 1 in 3 Americans - and either provide counseling themselves or refer the patient to a weight loss program.Waist Watch: New healthcare laws could expand coverage for weight loss

Wednesday, June 27 2012, 07:49 PM EDT

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