GW EMBERS Research Lab

Endocrine, MIS, Breast, and Education Research in Surgery

Older Age Confers a Higher Risk of 30-Day Morbidity and Mortality Following Laparoscopic Bariatric Surgery: an Analysis of the Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery Quality Improvement Program


Journal article


I. Haskins, Tammy Ju, A. Whitlock, Lisbi Rivas, R. Amdur, P. Lin, K. Vaziri
Obesity Surgery, 2018

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMed
Cite

Cite

APA   Click to copy
Haskins, I., Ju, T., Whitlock, A., Rivas, L., Amdur, R., Lin, P., & Vaziri, K. (2018). Older Age Confers a Higher Risk of 30-Day Morbidity and Mortality Following Laparoscopic Bariatric Surgery: an Analysis of the Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery Quality Improvement Program. Obesity Surgery.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Haskins, I., Tammy Ju, A. Whitlock, Lisbi Rivas, R. Amdur, P. Lin, and K. Vaziri. “Older Age Confers a Higher Risk of 30-Day Morbidity and Mortality Following Laparoscopic Bariatric Surgery: an Analysis of the Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery Quality Improvement Program.” Obesity Surgery (2018).


MLA   Click to copy
Haskins, I., et al. “Older Age Confers a Higher Risk of 30-Day Morbidity and Mortality Following Laparoscopic Bariatric Surgery: an Analysis of the Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery Quality Improvement Program.” Obesity Surgery, 2018.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{i2018a,
  title = {Older Age Confers a Higher Risk of 30-Day Morbidity and Mortality Following Laparoscopic Bariatric Surgery: an Analysis of the Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery Quality Improvement Program},
  year = {2018},
  journal = {Obesity Surgery},
  author = {Haskins, I. and Ju, Tammy and Whitlock, A. and Rivas, Lisbi and Amdur, R. and Lin, P. and Vaziri, K.}
}