Investigation Underway After Christian Singer, 'American Idol' Alum Mandisa Found Dead

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Knox

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A spokesman for the Franklin Police Department said officers were involved in an active death investigation Friday after Christian singer and "American Idol" alum Mandisa was found dead in her Nashville-area home one day earlier.

Mandisa, born in Citrus Heights, California, as Mandisa Lynn Hundley, was 47.

A rep for the singer, The Media Collective, issued a statement confirming her death Friday morning.

"At this time, we do not know the cause of death or any further details," the statement reads. "We ask for your prayers for her family and close-knit circle of friends during this incredibly difficult time."

 
Love her - her music, her spirit, her vulnerability. She was so open about her depression and mental health issues. One of the sweetest comments I've read was from singer Natalie Grant who ended her Instagram post with "I rejoice that you're it the arms of Jesus, whole in every way, and understanding just how completely loved you have always been."
 
The Grammy winner and American Idol alum died of complications of class III obesity at age 47, according to an autopsy reported obtained by PEOPLE.

The report said the star was found dead in her home by friends on April 18, and that she "was last known alive approximately three weeks" earlier.

Her manner of death is listed as natural.

Class III obesity is a disease in which a person "has a body mass index (BMI) of 40 or higher or a BMI of 35 or higher and is experiencing obesity-related health conditions," according to the Cleveland Clinic.
 
Rest in peace, Mandisa. I’m sorry that she seems to have struggled with physical and mental health recently (she’s definitely not alone in that).

This MSM article discusses a bit more in layman’s terms what a cause of death from complications with obesity means:


[Dr. Katherine] Saunders says that life-threatening complications from obesity can also include heart attack, heart failure, sudden cardiac death, stroke and pulmonary embolism.

“While there is increasing recognition of obesity as a complex, heterogeneous, chronic disease, many people don’t realize how serious obesity is,” says Saunders. “Obesity is treatable, but it is massively undertreated.”
 

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