The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Heartbroke­n dad’ s plea

- LINDSEY HAMILTON AND ALASDAIR CLARK

Amum of three from Brechin has died aged just 27 after a 10-day battle with Covid-19. Rashelle Baird succumbed to coronaviru­s early yesterday after being placed into a coma last week.

Her family were called to be at her bedside but got to Ninewells Hospital 10 minutes too late.

Heartbroke­n dad Steve, from Arbroath, said: “We got the call we had been dreading. We raced to the hospital but we didn’t make it in time.

“However, they say the hearing is the last thing to go so we spoke to Rashelle and told her our goodbyes. I think she probably heard us.”

Rashelle, who had asthma and was overweight at 22 stone when she died, leaves behind two daughters and a son – Madison, two, Layla, six, and Scott, eight.

She was not vaccinated against the virus. Steve said that Rashelle had nothing against vaccines and had always planned to have it done.

He said: “She was going to go but every time it came up she had something she needed to do with the children and for her that always came first. She just never got round to it.”

But with more than twothirds of deaths in Scotland since last December happening among people who have not had either jab, Steve believes getting her injections would have given his daughter the best chance of fighting the disease.

Speaking just hours after Rashelle’s passing, he said: “This is awful.

“Your children shouldn’t die before you.

“Rashelle hadn’t been vaccinated against Covid and now we have lost her – her children have lost their mum.

“I would plead with others to go and get their vaccinatio­n.

“This is a terrible illness. We have now lost two family members to it and I don’t want anyone else to die.

“Get out there, get that injection and give yourself some protection.”

Rashelle and her children had all fallen ill with what she thought was the flu earlier this month.

After a delayed recovery, Rashelle visited her GP, and she was given a nebuliser to treat her asthma, but did not improve.

Following a visit to hospital where she tested positive for Covid-19, her oxygen levels got better, and Steve said doctors believed she may have been experienci­ng problems recovering from the virus.

But she was readmitted

days later when her oxygen levels dropped and her dad was told she would have to be placed on a ventilator.

Rashelle was then placed in a coma but never recovered.

Steve, a delivery driver, said: “Rashelle fought this so hard, we could see she was fighting and the doctors said they could see from her brain activity that she was fighting but it just got too hard for her.

“It was just all too much for her body and she just couldn’t fight it any more.”

Paying tribute to his daughter, Steve said: “She was a bubbly, happy, loving mum.

“She doted on her children and they on her. Nothing was too much bother for her as far as her children were concerned.

“Now they are going to have to grow up without her – it just doesn’t bear thinking about.”

Others have also spoken about the loss of Rashelle – among them Jill Scott, chairwoman of Brechin Community Council.

She said: “Rashelle was

I don’t want anyone else to die

well-liked and a good friend to many.

“Her passing is a great loss to our community, the loss felt will be a fraction of what her family will feel at this difficult time.

“Our thoughts are with her family, including her three children and their dad Scott.”

Some have taken to social media to pay tribute to Rashelle.

Kim MacDonald of Mission Fitness Scotland wrote: “Absolutely gutted to hear the passing of ex-member Rashelle Baird.

“Gorgeous lady, heart of gold and amazing mummy to her three beautiful children.

“She was always a joy in classes, she shaved her hair for the Brain Tumour Charity back in 2017 and absolutely rocked it.

“You put up some fight girl.

“Rest easy now.” Rashelle’s death came as new data showed that the number of daily deaths linked to Covid-19 in Scotland peaked in late January, when more than 90 fatalities were recorded in a single day and the

seven-day average was 60 deaths per day.

This coincided with a peak in the number of positive cases being recorded in Scotland early in the month.

However, there have been two higher peaks of positive cases since January – one in early July, and one in mid September, both higher than the last.

The September peak was more than twice as big as the one experience­d in January.

Despite this, the highest number of

deaths recorded in a single day in September was nearly half that of January, while the seven-day average peaked at 23.6.

The number of people that have had both doses of the Covid-19 vaccine now stands at close to four million.

More than 4.3 million people in Scotland have had their first dose.

More coronaviru­s cases and deaths are registered among people who are unvaccinat­ed, compared to those who have been double-jabbed.

 ?? ?? DEVOTED MUM: Rashelle Baird, 27, has died after battling Covid-19 and now her dad Steve is pleading for people to have their vaccinatio­ns.
DEVOTED MUM: Rashelle Baird, 27, has died after battling Covid-19 and now her dad Steve is pleading for people to have their vaccinatio­ns.
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Dad Steve from Arbroath is heartbroke­n over the loss of his daughter.
Dad Steve from Arbroath is heartbroke­n over the loss of his daughter.

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