WORLD’S fattest man Paul Mason rollercoaster journey with his weight is being documented in ITV show The World’s Fattest Man: 10 Years On.
Paul took an overdose in lockdown after gaining an extra 20 pounds and has a history of depression caused from childhood abuse. Who is he and what’s his story?
Who is the ‘world’s fattest man’ Paul Mason?
Paul Jonathan Mason was born in 1960 in Ipswich, England.
He is the world’s former heaviest men, weighing in at 70 stone – 444.5kg – at his peak.
He is the heaviest recorded person from the United Kingdom.
Paul began binge eating in his twenties as a form of emotional detachment from issues that started in his childhood, including child abuse.
After numerous attempts to get his weight back on track, he revealed that he gained an extra 20 pounds during the coronavirus lockdown.
When did he have gastric band surgery?
Mason applied several times to the National Health Service for gastric bypass surgery but was turned down.
He had to wait 10 years before it was approved.
In 2010 he was given gastric bypass surgery, and it was estimated that he lost 295kg – 46 stone.
In 2014, Mason weighed 140kg or 22 stone, a total weight loss of 304kg, almost 48 stone.
Mason had a further 22–27kg of loose skin – around three and half stone – removed at New York’s Lenox Hill Hospital in May 2015.
From March 2017, Mason weighed 127kg/20 stone and was living in a boarding house in the United States.
However in 2019, he broke up with his girlfriend and started to become addicted to food again.
In 2019, he revealed he had almost doubled his weight to 230kg/36 stone, and returned to the UK to seek NHS care.
What therapy has he had?
Mason has been receiving therapy for his depression which is the main cause of his weight gain.
From a young age he was subjected to child abuse which resulted in eating to such extremes as a form of coping.
In May 2021, he took an overdose as a result of the depression and was saved by paramedics who had to carry him out of his accommodation in a sling.
Paul told The Mirror : “Nobody was listening, nothing was happening, I could see myself slipping back into the bad old days so it was a cry for help.”
Paul believes therapy will be the key to his success from now on.
He said: “They can fix your body really quickly with all the surgeons but your mind, that needs more, and it’s vital too because it’s the mind that obviously controls everything.
“I started having therapy in 2008 and carried on with therapy right up until I went to America but I let it go and realise now that was a mistake.
“I personally think the NHS could save a lot of money by spending the money on therapy instead of just popping you pills. Because the therapy helps you in the long term.
“The pills just help you in the short term, it doesn’t fit just sticking a plaster on a big issue that you have to deal with.