
Tarit Kanti Ghosh
The University of Melbourne Australia
Title: Surgery and chronic stress ultimately leading to major health risks
Biography
Biography: Tarit Kanti Ghosh
Abstract
In this article I shall be trying to show how surgery irrespective to age and/ or organ becomes a prospective major health problem. In general about 50-60% patients undergone anyhow surgery suffer mild/moderate/severe psychobiological illness in future for a long time due to feeling of fear that he/she (1:3)(1) has lost part of his body, inside unhealed or prolonged healing process . So anxiety, tension, emotion and depression gradually burden their daily life style eventually leading to chronic stress (about 10%) in 4 years after surgery along with some major health risk. Background: This is an observational, prospective and multi centred study under intention to treat principle. This study is a over-view about the patients from January’08 to July’14. Data was collected from the leading practitioners of a district named Khulna in Bangladesh. The practitioners are Medicinist, Gynaecologist, Orthopaedician, Eye Surgeon, General Surgeon, Psychiatrist and Neurologist. In this study the outcome shows that about 10% of post surgical (mainly those who were undergone major surgery) had been suffering from chronic stress and among them some patients experienced major health risks i.e. Hypertension, Diabetes, Stroke, Heart attack, Panic disorder, Generalised Anxiety Disorder etc.