Medical Weight Loss

Medically guided weight loss, tailored to you

Achieving and maintaining a healthy weight can be challenging, but you don’t have to do it alone. UTMB Health offers personalized, physician-guided medical weight loss care designed to help you lose weight safely and sustainably. Using evidence-based strategies, our team works with you to create a plan that fits your health needs, lifestyle, and long-term weight loss goals so you can feel your best.

  Services We Offer

Over-the-shoulder view of a female dietician analyzing a male patient’s nutrition data on digital tablet in consulting room for weight loss treatment

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  Your Care Team Each provider may treat different conditions. Click on a profile to see their areas of specialty.

UTMB Health takes a comprehensive, multidisciplinary approach to medical weight loss, bringing together doctors from various specialties to deliver coordinated, patient‑centered care. Our team works collaboratively to address all the factors that contribute to obesity and help you achieve safe, sustainable weight loss.

Endocrinology

Nephrology

For transplant candidates only.

Family Medicine

Internal Medicine

Additional specialties who may assist with your weight loss journey:

  Additional Resources

 Frequently Asked Questions.

  • What exactly is medical weight loss?

    Medical weight loss is a physician-supervised program that combines clinical evaluation, personalized nutrition, behavioral support, and, when appropriate, medications to help patients lose weight safely and effectively. It addresses underlying health conditions that may impact weight and focuses on sustainable results.
  • Who is a candidate for medical weight loss?

    Patients of any age with a BMI over 25, weight-related health conditions, or difficulty losing weight through diet and exercise alone may benefit. A medical evaluation determines the safest and most effective plan for each individual.
  • Are medications part of the medical weight loss program at UTMB?

    Yes. When clinically appropriate, FDA-approved prescription medications may be used to support appetite control, metabolism, and overall weight management. Medications are always supervised by a licensed physician.
  • Is medical weight loss safe for people with chronic conditions?

    Yes. Medical weight loss is supervised by physicians who coordinate care with other specialties as needed, ensuring that weight management strategies are safe for patients with chronic conditions such as diabetes, high blood pressure, or heart disease. These physicians often treat these conditions as well.

 BMI Calculator

Myth Busters

Myth #1:

All bariatric patients eventually regain all the weight they lost.

Based on long-term studies, over 80% of patients maintained their weight loss 20 years after surgery.

Myth #2:

Bariatric surgery is dangerous.

Bariatric surgery is actually safer than a laparoscopic cholecystectomy, which is the removal of the gallbladder. This is one of the most common general gastrointestinal surgeries performed at UTMB Health. Because bariatric surgery is minimally invasive, it’s generally considered a safe procedure. Patients typically stay only one night in the hospital and can go home the next day. While there’s a possibility for both short-term and long-term risks after surgery, such as infection or ulcers, the likelihood of most risks is very low.

Myth #3:

Bariatric surgery treatment only involves surgeons.

UTMB Health’s bariatric weight loss services incorporate a multidisciplinary team approach. This means that our surgeons, nurse practitioners, dieticians, psychologists, and coordinator work closely together to set patients up for success in their long-term obesity care.

Myth #4:

After bariatric surgery, you’ll be expected to keep the weight off on your own.

Unlike at other hospitals, UTMB Health believes in lifelong follow-up. We don’t want to just operate on patients and leave them to take care of themselves, by themselves. We want to be part of their journey. This includes a post-surgical follow-up after two weeks, six weeks, six months, and a year. We also follow up annually for life and give patients the option to schedule additional follow-up visits.

Myth #5:

Women can’t get pregnant after a weight loss procedure.

Women can still get pregnant and give birth after bariatric surgery or an incisionless weight loss procedure. However, we strongly recommend waiting a specific amount of time before conceiving. We suggest waiting at least two years after bariatric surgery and at least 12-24 months after an incisionless procedure. Your surgeon will provide you with an exact period, depending on which procedure you have.

Bariatric Surgery Educational Booklet

  Our Locations

A woman wearing a green sweater and stethoscope stands in a bright hospital atrium.

UTMB Health elevates weight loss management with Dr. Andrea Stark

The University of Texas Medical Branch (UTMB Health) is taking a bold step forward in addressing obesity, a complex disease, with the addition of Dr. Andrea M. Stark, DO, FACP, to its Department of Internal Medicine.

An accomplished researcher, author, educator, lecturer, and mentor, Stark brings a comprehensive, evidence-based approach to care that reflects the latest advances in the field.

“There are fewer than 8,000 physicians in the U.S. board-certified in obesity medicine, despite the fact that over 40% of adults live with obesity,” said Stark, who sees patients at two UTMB Health clinics in League City. “I pursued this field so that I could offer evidence-based, compassionate care.”

Since arriving at UTMB Health this summer, Stark has been committed to establishing a practice that specializes in treating patients with obesity, emphasizing personalized care that acknowledges each individual's unique experience and needs.

“My training entailed rigorous clinical exposure to obesity medicine treatments—both FDA-approved treatments and clinical research trials—in addition to multispecialty clinical rotations,” she said. “These rotations included diverse specialties such as bariatric surgery, nutrition, exercise physiology, sleep medicine, endocrinology, and eating disorder psychology, providing a comprehensive foundation in obesity care.”

Stark earned her doctor of osteopathic medicine from West Virginia School of Osteopathic Medicine and completed her internal medicine residency, including a year as chief resident, at West Virginia University-Charleston/Charleston Area Medical Center. She relocated to the Houston area to begin her obesity medicine fellowship at The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston.

After completing her fellowship, Stark was inspired to join UTMB Health by the institution’s proactive approach to health, including its 2024 designation as a Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery Accreditation and Quality Improvement Program (MBSAQIP) Center of Excellence, under the leadership of Dr. Sarah Samreen.

“Reading about this work and knowing that there is a multidisciplinary team working together to help patients battling the disease of obesity, it made me excited to advance these efforts,” Stark says. “The first thing we consider for every patient is always lifestyle modification … But then we may look at other interventions, including medical and surgical options. There are a number of factors that determine the right path, and no two patients are exactly alike.”

These factors include their body mass index (BMI) and comorbidities like diabetes, hypertension, sleep apnea, GERD, fatty liver disease, and osteoarthritis, as well as the patient’s lifestyle and history of previous weight loss attempts.

The clinic has a licensed professional counselor on staff to support patients’ mental health through their weight loss journeys. Studies have shown that mental health care is foundational to safe, effective, and sustainable weight loss treatment – ensuring patients are emotionally prepared, less likely to experience complications, and supported in long-term behavior change.

Stark emphasizes that patients choose to address obesity for a wide range of deeply personal and medical reasons. For many, the decision is not solely about weight, but about reclaiming their health, improving their quality of life, and preparing for other medical procedures that may be safer or more effective once obesity is managed.

“Obesity is a complex, chronic disease,” she says. “Not a personal failure.”

For an appointment, call 800-917-8906 or schedule online.