Chinese Streamer Gets Brain Haemorrhage During The Stream And Passes Away

Wang Yefei, a 39-year-old Chinese content creator known online as ‘Sister Wang Zha,’ passed away on March 9 after a brainstem hemorrhage struck her while she was live on camera. According to sources, what had begun as a routine session promoting women’s clothing became a medical crisis that played out in just over 10 minutes before her audience.

Around 30 minutes into the broadcast, Wang started showing signs of severe distress. She was seen clutching her head and neck as the pain rapidly worsened before urgently asking those around her to call an ambulance.

In her final moments on camera, she cried out: “Oh, what’s happening, my head suddenly,” then warned those watching, “I feel so unwell, quickly,” before pleading for someone to “call 120.” Seconds later, she told viewers she was about to fall, and collapsed on camera.

She was rushed to a hospital but did not survive. Medical professionals confirmed the cause as a brainstem hemorrhage, a particularly severe form of stroke associated with a high fatality rate.

Friends painted a picture of someone who never let on how much she was going through. “She was never one to complain,” one recalled. “Even if she had back pain or a headache, she never showed it during the live broadcast and always said that she was fine.”

In the weeks before her collapse, Wang had reportedly been managing persistent headaches with painkillers, a sign, in hindsight, that her condition had been deteriorating for some time.

Wang typically broadcast for around 11 hours a day, often on an irregular sleep schedule. Through that relentless routine, she had built a following of around 130,000 people who tuned in regularly to watch her sell women’s clothing and engage with her audience. Those close to her say she poured those long hours into her work to provide for her family.