Daily Mail

I nearly died of sepsis after surgery says Fern Britton

- By Susie Coen Showbusine­ss Reporter

FERN Britton has revealed how she ‘was resigned to dying’ when she developed sepsis.

The TV host and author went into hospital last year for a hysterecto­my.

The procedure was successful, but three days later she was in such agonising pain she was unable to walk.

After being told to ‘wait and see’ by doctors, she was finally re-admitted to hospital where tests showed she was suffering from a bacterial infection and several abscesses.

The 59-year-old then contracted sepsis – a potentiall­y deadly reaction when the body responds to an infection by attacking its own organs.

Difficult to diagnose, it can lead to multiple organ failure and death without quick treatment.

The Mail has been campaignin­g to raise awareness of the symptoms among patients and medical staff.

Speaking about her ordeal for the first time, former This Morning host Miss Britton said she went into a private hospital on July 13 last year for a hysterecto­my to deal with fibroids on the uterus. But after coming home, the pain soared. Doctors ‘suggested paracetamo­l and a wait-and-see approach’ but by the next day her condition had deteriorat­ed so much she could barely walk. Shivering and with severe muscle and joint aches, she summoned help but a GP on duty at her local surgery was too busy to come out and an emergency-call handler felt her symptoms didn’t warrant an ambulance.

Eventually her husband of 17 years, TV chef Phil Vickery, rang the doctor’s receptioni­st – who pulled out all the stops to send an ambulance.

When the mother- of- four finally reached Stoke Mandeville Hospital in Buckingham­shire, tests revealed she had E.coli bacteria in her blood and several abscesses that required emergency surgery.

Miss Britton told Prima magazine: ‘I was resigned to dying... The theatre nurse offered to put a plaster over my wedding ring. Instead, I took off my ring and gave it to my daughter, who was with me. I hated the thought of them taking it from my dead body to give to her.’ Her health battles weren’t over, and the TV star developed pneu- monia and her lung collapsed.

She added: ‘Make no mistake, sepsis is deadly but can be beatenn if treated quickly. The pain and sense of losing the fight was very strong. Sepsis feels like being run over by a bus and, even a year later, I’m still recovering.’

More than 44,000 die of sepsis in the UK every year.

Symptoms include nausea and vomiting, high temperatur­e and confusion. The full interview is in the July issue of Prima, on sale June 2.

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 ??  ?? Battle: Fern Britton said sepsis felt like she had been hit by a bus
Battle: Fern Britton said sepsis felt like she had been hit by a bus

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