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The world?s former fattest man celebrated yesterday ? after shedding nearly 650 pounds.

Paul Mason, 51, lost two-thirds of his nearly 1,000-pound weight following a gastric bypass operation funded by the U.K.?s National Health Service (NHS), which reduced his stomach to the size of an egg.

The ex-postman, of Ipswich, Suffolk, now weighs around 330 pounds ? but says his target is to get down to 200 pounds.

?I still have a way to go,? Mason said, as he vowed to go from the world?s fattest man to the world?s greatest slimmer.

Mason?s medical bills are so far thought to have cost taxpayers more than $1.6 million. And he is fighting the NHS to fund further surgery costing up to $50,000 to remove folds of loose skin left after his substantial weight loss.

?I was ashamed to be called the fattest man in the world because I knew I?d got myself in a hell of a state,? Mason said. ?I am proud that I have shown to other people with weight problems what can be achieved.?

At his heaviest weight, Mason once ate 20,000 calories a day :| ? about 10 times the recommended level ? on a diet of supersized takeout food, fried foods and up to forty bags of crisps.

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Mason?s medical bills are so far thought to have cost taxpayers more than $1.6 million. And he is fighting the NHS to fund further surgery costing up to $50,000 to remove folds of loose skin left after his substantial weight loss.

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No way the UK had the worlds fattest man

It wouldn't surprise me at all. The UK has an incredibly high level of obesity and very little is being done to tackle it - the NHS is still treating it reactively, rather than proactively. Obviously the US is leading the way with obesity - the US obesity rate is a third higher than the UK - but we're doing very poorly in comparison to other European countries; the UK's obesity is nearly three times greater than Italy and the difference is readily apparent. More importantly, more than half of the UK is overweight - that's shocking.

Bashing America for being fatter is counter-productive, as it in turn makes us think that our obesity rate is somehow more acceptable when that certainly isn't the case.

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It wouldn't surprise me at all. The UK has an incredibly high level of obesity and very little is being done to tackle it - the NHS is still treating it reactively, rather than proactively. Obviously the US is leading the way with obesity - the US obesity rate is a third higher than the UK - but we're doing very poorly in comparison to other European countries; the UK's obesity is nearly three times greater than Italy and the difference is readily apparent. More importantly, more than half of the UK is overweight - that's shocking.

Bashing America for being fatter is counter-productive, as it in turn makes us think that our obesity rate is somehow more acceptable when that certainly isn't the case.

I wasn't bashing the US for being fatter, I have seen heavier people than that guy, from the US.

I cba to search right now, but it wouldn't take long to find someone heavier

I don't mind if the UK has the fattest person in the world, just that I have seen otherwise (Unless they have died since)

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I wasn't bashing the US for being fatter, I have seen heavier people than that guy, from the US.

Sorry if I wasn't clear - that was a general statement and wasn't directed at you or anyone in particular. :)

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Sorry if I wasn't clear - that was a general statement and wasn't directed at you or anyone in particular. :)

:) No offence taken, just send a burger to POBOX 347

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I wasn't bashing the US for being fatter, I have seen heavier people than that guy, from the US.

I cba to search right now, but it wouldn't take long to find someone heavier

I don't mind if the UK has the fattest person in the world, just that I have seen otherwise (Unless they have died since)

From what I could find, the heaviest person in medical history was a US man that weighed an estimated 1,400 pounds, though they specify that a great deal of it was water accumulation due to heart failure. The heaviest he was recorded at before the heart failure (and water accumulation) was 975 pounds. But, he died in 1983 and there since hasn't been anyone heavier.

That being said, this UK man at "nearly 1000 pounds" is damn near close to the heaviest in medical history.....if he had heart failure before he got his surgery its very possible he would have been at a similar weight to the currently credited "heaviest person".

As far as the story goes.....so what? Okay, he lost a ton of his weight, good for him.....he didn't work for it, or even pay for it. I don't think he deserves a huge story or to be made out to be great because he lost 650 pounds due to surgery and other people paying for it.

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From what I could find, the heaviest person in medical history was a US man that weighed an estimated 1,400 pounds, though they specify that a great deal of it was water accumulation due to heart failure. The heaviest he was recorded at before the heart failure (and water accumulation) was 975 pounds. But, he died in 1983 and there since hasn't been anyone heavier.

That being said, this UK man at "nearly 1000 pounds" is damn near close to the heaviest in medical history.....if he had heart failure before he got his surgery its very possible he would have been at a similar weight to the currently credited "heaviest person".

As far as the story goes.....so what? Okay, he lost a ton of his weight, good for him.....he didn't work for it, or even pay for it. I don't think he deserves a huge story or to be made out to be great because he lost 650 pounds due to surgery and other people paying for it.

Appreciate your research :)

1400 pounds is very heavy, but saying that, nearly 1000 pounds is heavy too, either way, I feel very sorry for them both

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