Britain's fattest woman who weighed 40st died of the cardiac arrest aged 44 after not being able to walk out of her house for six years.
Doctors warned Brenda Flanagan-Davies to 'lose weight or die' when she became bed-bound at her home in Gateshead, Tyne and Wear, after eating and Pure Fat Three Days enjoying more than 6,000 calories each day.
But simply 4 hours following a check-up in July 2013, where she returned home with an ambulance, her husband Ronald Davies found her foaming in the mouth as well as in pain.
He called an ambulance, and four paramedics used a blanket to carry Mrs Flanagan-Davies to the vehicle, but she died on her behalf method to hospital after suffering a heart attack.
Mr Davies, 68, who had been with his wife for 5 years, now really wants to warn people about the risks of obesity after he was left 'devastated' following her death.
The retired labourer and water inspector, said: 'She was alive about a minute and dead the following. 'I think the heart attack was right down to her weight and her health. It could have happened at any time.
'I have no idea how to proceed. When I used to sit within the living room I would talk to her.
'I still find myself talking with her in the other room since she died but obviously there is no answer as she's not there.
'I wish to warn others to maintain after themselves and not to decline help if anyone really wants to provide you with a hand.
'I wouldn't want what went down to Brenda to happen to other people.'
Mrs Flanagan-Davies was so addicted to food that they had a fridge alongside her bed, crammed full of chocolate and fizzy drinks, and would get regular deliveries from the butchers, fish and chip shop and local Tesco supermarket. She was unable to walk just a few steps towards the shower or even the living room without getting out of breath.
Mr Davies, who said he'd worried about his wife's health, added: 'She spent most of her time in bed, she had a telly beside her but she didn't see it. Sometimes she would have music on without the picture. 'She couldn't walk far. She'd to get assisted to get to the shower. It took a couple of us, myself and her carer.
'I felt sad for her. I didn't feel sorry on her, I felt sad for her.
'I did be worried about her health but I didn't prefer to tell her just in case it made her upset. I wanted her to get rid of the load so she was healthy.' She was offered a gastric band by doctors if she lost enough weight to prove she wanted the ?¨º12,000 operation so when she didn't the operation was provided to someone else.
Mr Davies said: 'The doctors were telling her to lose weight. But she wasn't showing them that they was losing the weight - I think she was a bit fearful of getting the operation.
'She did lose a substantial amount of weight so she must have been considering it but she didn't go through by using it.
'It would have been a relief to not possess the operation and she Best Share Green Coffee or he returned to her old self. 'Maybe if she'd taken the help her situation would have been different.'
The pair met five years ago in a community centre in Gateshead - in that time Mrs Flanagan-Davies put on 11 stone.
:: بازدید از این مطلب : 35
|
امتیاز مطلب : 0
|
تعداد امتیازدهندگان : 0
|
مجموع امتیاز : 0