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Paul Jonathan Mason

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Paul Jonathan Mason (born 1960) is an English man who is known for being one of the world's former heaviest men, weighing in at 444.5 kg (980 lb; 70 st) at his peak. Mason was given a gastric bypass surgery in 2010, and lost an estimated 295 kg (650 lb; 46.5 st). He is the heaviest recorded person from the United Kingdom.

When he was in his 20s, he started to eat food as a way to avoid dealing with emotional issues that began in his childhood such as child abuse. Several years earlier he had applied to the National Health Service for gastric bypass surgery, to help him get his weight down. Mason applied several times and in the end waited 10 years before he was approved for surgery. In 2010, two years after beginning counseling, Mason finally had the surgery he desperately needed and wanted. Five years later, he had lost over 272 kg (600 lb; 42.8 st) and weighed around 159 kg (351 lb; 25.0 st). The surgical removal of 34–45 kg (75–99 lb; 5.4–7.1 st) of excess skin allowed for greater mobility, which made him able to exercise, and lose more weight. In 2014 he weighed 140 kg (310 lb; 22 st), a total weight loss of 304 kg (670 lb; 47.9 st). Mason had a further 22–27 kg (49–60 lb; 3.5–4.3 st) of loose skin removed at New York’s Lenox Hill Hospital in May 2015. As of March 2017, Mason weighed 127 kg (280 lb; 20 st) and was living in a boarding house in the United States.

In 2018 he split with his girlfriend, after this he got addicted to food again.

In May 2019 Mason revealed that he has almost doubled in size – from 275 lb (125 kg; 19.6 st) to 500 lb (230 kg; 36 st). He announced plans to return at the end of May to the UK where he will be eligible for the assistance he needs to get his life back on track. His US visa expired, implying that he has no choice but to leave.

See also

References

  1. "Paul Mason: World's Fattest Man Weighs 980 Pounds | HuffPost Life". Huffingtonpost.com. Retrieved 2020-04-10.
  2. "Prison delays 'fattest man' surgery". BBC News. 2014-04-02. Retrieved 2018-09-19.
  3. "'Fattest man' has more skin removed". BBC News. 2015-05-13. Retrieved 2018-09-19.
  4. Heckert, Justin (2017-03-07). "How the World's Heaviest Man Lost it All". GQ. Retrieved 2019-02-18.
  5. ^ "Exclusive: World's former fattest man to return to UK from US to claim benefits | Metro News". Metro.co.uk. 2019-05-20. Retrieved 2020-04-10.

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