Belfast Telegraph

BBC presenter Rachael Bland loses cancer battle at age of 40

- BY ANDREW ARTHUR

BBC news presenter Rachael Bland has died after being diagnosed with incurable cancer, her family has announced.

It come days after the 40-yearold BBC Radio 5 Live newsreader revealed on social media that she had only days to live.

Her family confirmed that she had died this morning shortly after 3am, the BBC said.

A post on Bland’s official Twitter account said: “Our beautiful, courageous Rachael died peacefully this morning surrounded by her close family.

“We are crushed but she would want me to thank everyone who took an interest in her story or sent messages of support. You’ll never know how much they meant to her. Steve and Freddie xxx.”

Bland was diagnosed with primary triple-negative breast cancer in November 2016 and had been documentin­g her journey on her blog Big C Little Me, which has the tag line “Putting the can in cancer”.

Her podcast, You, Me and the Big C, reached number one in the UK podcast charts after Bland made her announceme­nt earlier this week.

The 40-year-old was married to husband Steve for four years. The couple had a two-year-old son Freddie and would have celebrated their fifth wedding anniversar­y on September 14.

In a tweet posted on Monday, the broadcaste­r wrote: “I’m told I’ve only got days. It’s very surreal.”

In an early episode of her podcast she told how she had discovered she had cancer after breastfeed­ing Freddie.

She said: “I had pain first. I had this weird soreness. It was kind of inside my armpit. It went away. It was just around the time I was breastfeed­ing. But because of that I was having a little bit of a feel. When I found it, I was like: ‘How did I miss this?’

“It was the size of a walnut.” Originally from the Cardiff area, she had joined the BBC in 2001, and her career started at Radio Wiltshire, where she worked as a journalist and newsreader. She later joined BBC Radio 5 Live where she became a feature on Richard Bacon’s latenight show and ended up staying on. She also began presenting on BBC News.

Her husband Steve told the BBC: “Rachael’s death has left a huge hole in our perfect little family that we’ll never be able to fill. She was an incredibly talented broadcaste­r as well as a wonderful and much-loved daughter, sister, aunt, niece, wife and, most importantl­y to her, a mother to her precious little Freddie.

“We all take such huge comfort and pride from the amazing and tireless work she has done since her diagnosis to reduce the stigma around cancer and prove that it is possible to live life to the fullest even when facing huge challenges on a daily basis.”

BBC Director-General Tony Hall said: “Rachael was a popular and inspiring journalist. She will be hugely missed by her many listeners and by staff across the BBC. Our sympathies go out to her family and many friends at this difficult time.”

Tragic: Rachael Bland

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