Renee Williams
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Renee_Williams an entity of type: Thing
Renee Williams (June 4, 1977 – March 4, 2007) was an American woman believed to be the largest woman in the world at the time of her death in 2007 from complications following her surgery for morbid obesity. Williams was also one of the heaviest people to ever live and one of the heaviest ever to undergo gastric bypass.By the age of 12, Williams was already in the category of super-morbid obesity, which refers to a body mass index over 50. After a car crash in 2003 she became unable to walk, which further contributed to her weight gain.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Renee Williams
rdf:langString
Reneé Williams Altovise
rdf:langString
Reneé Williams Altovise
xsd:date
2007-03-04
rdf:langString
Austin, Texas, United States
xsd:date
1977-06-04
xsd:integer
15712194
xsd:integer
1115544471
xsd:date
1977-06-04
xsd:date
2007-03-04
rdf:langString
Renee Williams (June 4, 1977 – March 4, 2007) was an American woman believed to be the largest woman in the world at the time of her death in 2007 from complications following her surgery for morbid obesity. Williams was also one of the heaviest people to ever live and one of the heaviest ever to undergo gastric bypass.By the age of 12, Williams was already in the category of super-morbid obesity, which refers to a body mass index over 50. After a car crash in 2003 she became unable to walk, which further contributed to her weight gain. Williams was featured in the American television program Amazing Medical Storiesand she was also the subject of a British television program called Half Ton Mum broadcast on Channel 4 after her death as part of the BodyShock series. The program stated that she also held the world record for being the heaviest person ever to have gastric bypass surgery on her stomach at 63 stone, or around 880 lbs. When Williams went to the hospital for her gastric bypass, her Body Mass Index was calculated by the doctors to be over 9000, where a BMI of 50+ is considered "super-morbidly obese". She was treated by the same medical team as Kenneth Brumley, subject of the counterpart documentary Half Ton Dad, which included My 600-lb Life's Dr. Younan Nowzaradan. She suffered a heart attack post surgery and was buried at Santa Maria Cemetery in Travis County, Texas.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
3706
xsd:gYear
1977
xsd:gYear
2007