
This Morning's Rochelle Humes fights back tears as she comforts tearful guest
This Morning presenter Rochelle Humes couldn't bear to watch one of her guests break down in tears live on air without stepping in to offer some form of comfort.
The ITV personality, 36, is currently presenting alongside Dermot O'Leary this week, filling in for regular hosts Ben Shephard and Cat Deeley during their summer break.
During Monday's programme (July 28), they welcomed the family of Yvonne Ford, the British woman from Barnsley, South Yorkshire, who was scratched by a puppy whilst on holiday in Morocco and tragically died months later from rabies.
Initially showing no signs of illness, she was taken to Barnsley Hospital after experiencing a "horrendous" headache, with her condition deteriorating rapidly within days.
She started hallucinating, lost the ability to walk, speak or swallow, and developed hydrophobia. Once alarm bells sounded, doctors moved the grandmother-of-four to Royal Hallamshire Hospital in Sheffield, where relatives were informed she had contracted the deadly disease, reports Wales Online.
Her family are now determined to ensure Yvonne's death wasn't meaningless, campaigning to spread awareness wherever possible, beginning with a This Morning appearance despite their overwhelming sorrow following her passing on June 11, last month.
Still grappling with their loss, husband Ron alongside daughter and neonatal nurse Robyn Thompson and her son Adam appeared on the ITV show to highlight the risks of rabies.
Ron and Robyn portrayed Yvonne as a "massive animal enthusiast" with the "biggest heart", recalling that she hadn't been troubled or sought medical attention after a puppy had scratched her whilst on holiday in Morocco.
Yvonne's husband had been detailing the circumstances and how her wound hadn't even bled, telling the presenters she'd appeared well and even danced through the night just weeks before her passing. As he spoke about his spirited wife who showed no symptoms, it all became overwhelming for Ron as he burst into tears.
Rochelle, who was visibly moved as well, extended comfort to Ron by placing a hand on his shoulder as he buried his face in his hands.
Allowing Ron a moment, Rochelle's co-presenter Dermot continued by speaking with Robyn about their motives for appearing, with the nurse explaining they simply wished to generate as much awareness as they could, to ensure other families wouldn't endure the same anguish they had suffered whilst witnessing their mum's tragic decline.
Dermot said: "Thanks so much for coming in and you're in the fog of grief at the moment and you're trying to channel that grief through us," he thoughtfully asked: "What's the one message you'd like to get across today?"
Adam added: "Check the rabies recommendations. I mean Morocco was only recommended. We don't want anyone to go through what we've been through seeing our mum go through the seven days of deterioration that we had. Get those injections."
Ron went on to caution: "The World Cup is in Morocco in 2030, so anybody going just be aware."

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Scottish Sun
5 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
Brit grandad in Greek ICU with £14k bill after failing to declare health issue GP told him ‘not to worry about'
'He's really breathless, on the phone he can't say more than a few sentences,' his stepdaughter Liza says. 'We're just desperate to get him home.' STRANDED Brit grandad in Greek ICU with £14k bill after failing to declare health issue GP told him 'not to worry about' Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A BRITISH grandad is on life support in Greece with a £14,000 medical bill after an insurance mix-up over a lung mass his GP told him 'not to worry about'. Alan Kirby, 67, from Somerset, is now on a ventilator and stuck abroad with no cover for a £45,000 flight home because he didn't declare a condition previously dismissed as harmless. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 5 Alan Kirby, with stepdaughter Liza Whitemore Credit: SWNS 5 The grandad is now on a ventilator Credit: SWNS 5 Alan (back left), with his partner Helen Whitemore (middle), and Adam (back right) with his and Liza's children (front) Credit: SWNS His stepdaughter Liza Whitemore, 40, said: 'There's a talk about him going into a coma, but we don't know if it's cancer or pneumonia doing the damage. "He's fine, then he's not, he's fine then he's not. He's really breathless, on the phone he can't say more than a few sentences. We're just desperate to get him home." Alan, a car valeter from Marston Magna, had been three days into a family holiday in Zante with his partner Helen Whitemore, 62, Liza and her three daughters when he fell ill on July 5. He had an aching pain all down his side during dinner, which he thought was from throwing his stepdaughter's children around in the sea. The next morning he woke up breathless and went to a local medical clinic. After tests, doctors advised he return to the UK for a biopsy on a mass spotted in his right lung. But before they could leave, Alan deteriorated. His oxygen levels dropped to 36 per cent and he began fitting in his hospital bed. Doctors placed him on a non-invasive ventilato and have warned he may need to be put in a coma, but feared he wouldn't wake up due to his fragile lungs. Liza said: 'He looked dreadful, grey and pale. Everyone was petrified. Nobody knew what was going on.' The signs and symptoms of cancer Alan was airlifted by helicopter to a private hospital in Athens because he was too sick to fly commercially. But days later, the insurance company told the family they had checked Alan's UK medical records and discovered the lung mass had been noted by doctors back in December 2024, though they believed it was benign fatty tissue. That made it a 'pre-existing condition', something the family hadn't declared, because they thought it was harmless. Liza said: 'We know we've made the mistake, that's the problem. 'My mum had gone into the bank that she had insurance with and they said, 'just go on holiday, you don't have to do anything'. 'They didn't know about the mass. And he was well before, he was working as a car valeter the day before the holiday.' The insurance company agreed to cover the first five days of care in the Athens private hospital, racking up a £14,000 bill, before refusing further support. Alan has since been moved to a general hospital where treatment covered by his Global Health Insurance Card. This is a free UK card that lets travellers access state healthcare in EU countries on the same terms as locals. 5 The family are 'desperate to get him home' Credit: SWNS 5 They need £22k to get him back to the UK Credit: SWNS But it doesn't cover private hospitals or the cost of getting home, such as an air ambulance. He remains on a ventilator battling pneumonia, and doctors still don't know if the lung mass is cancerous. His family have returned to Somerset and are now desperately raising £22,000 on GoFundMe to help cover a medical flight to bring him home.


Daily Mirror
5 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
'Sir Chris Hoy's BBC interview helped me realise I had prostate cancer'
A man from Herefordshire has claimed that watching an interview with Sir Chris Hoy, in which he opened up about his terminal prostate cancer, potentially saved his life A man believes that watching into an interview with Sir Chris Hoy helped him come to the realisation that he might be battling prostate cancer, potentially saving his life. Britain's second-most decorated Olympian received his prostate cancer diagnosis in September 2023 after complaining of shoulder pain, before going public with the news during a BBC interview the following February. , having spread to his bones and reached stage 4. Following the heartbreaking revelation that his illness was incurable, he shared with the Times that doctors had informed him he had between two to four years to live. Whilst his situation prompted an overwhelming wave of solidarity from fellow Olympians, famous faces and the British public, the announcement had an even more profound effect on Patrick Hughes from Ross-on-Wye, Herefordshire. Speaking to the Daily Telegraph, the 57-year-old remembered catching an interview with Sir Chris on BBC News: "When I heard Sir Chris Hoy say that his only initial symptoms of prostate cancer were pain in his shoulder and ribs, I realised I needed to check my risk of the disease. He was speaking on television last November, shortly after announcing that his prostate cancer diagnosis was terminal." He continued: "Until that point, I'd never seriously considered being at risk of prostate cancer, despite my dad tragically dying of the disease in 2021. "But when Sir Chris told BBC News that his shoulder pain was actually a tumour, that's when my mindset completely changed - and just months later, I was diagnosed with the disease myself." Following encouragement to seek medical examination for the condition, numerous tests subsequently revealed that he was also battling prostate cancer. Fortunately, the disease had been detected sufficiently early for treatment to start, leaving him with the difficult choice between hormone therapy and radiotherapy or complete prostate removal. Describing the decision as straightforward, he chose to undergo surgery to completely remove his prostate. Prostate cancer is thought to be the most prevalent cancer affecting British men, with roughly one in eight men receiving a diagnosis during their lifetime, according to Prostate Cancer UK charity. The NHS states that the illness typically presents no warning signs until the tumour becomes large enough to affect the tube carrying urine from the bladder through the penis. Health officials note that warning signs of the condition may include "needing to pee more frequently, often during the night, needing to rush to the toilet and difficulty in starting to pee (hesitancy)".


Scottish Sun
7 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
Brit teen told mum ‘I'm sorry, goodbye' before collapsing in her arms during fatal allergic reaction on dream hols
A BRITISH teenager told her mum "I'm sorry" after collapsing in her arms from a severe allergic reaction on holiday. Lily King, 18, from Buckinghamshire, tragically died after eating a carrot in a meal to celebrate top grades in her first year at Exeter University while on holiday in Morocco. Advertisement 7 Lily King died from fatal Anaphylaxsis shock on holiday Credit: JustGiving 7 Lily King with her mum Aicha, who were on holiday in Morocco when Lily died Credit: JustGiving 7 Lily was just 18 when she died Credit: gofundme The student was diagnosed with severe allergies to fish and seafood, nuts, sesame, milk and eggs when she was two-and-a-half – and her mum Aicha had packed a whole suitcase of safe supplies. While Lily's childhood had been dominated her allergies - along with eczema and asthma - she hadn't ever needed hospital treatment until five months prior to the holiday. She had bought a burger at a music festival in Exeter and suffered anaphylaxis – the most extreme allergic reaction, where rapid swelling in the throat and tongue cause breathing difficulties and sometimes cardiac arrest. Then, on the last night of their holiday last year, Lily discovered that she had received a first for her first-year exams and wanted to celebrate - so the pair decided to go out for a meal. Advertisement read more in world news FIND MICHELE Cops probe 'sighting' of Brit who vanished from sunbed as search area expands It was somewhere they had eaten before, including for Lily's 18th, and they were confident that it would pass without hitch. Upon arrival, Aicha, who is Moroccan and speaks Arabic, gave staff repeated clear instructions about her daughter's allergies. Lily herself even said in Arabic: "I don't want to be killed," Aicha told the Mail. But when the food arrived, it came with vegetables and a sauce they hadn't asked for. Advertisement Lily put a small piece of carrot into her mouth, saying: "Don't be silly mum, it's just a carrot," but her tongue instantly felt itchy. She took an antihistamine and went to the bathroom, then used her EpiPen and went outside for some air. Megan McKenna blasted the Prime Minister today for 'abandoning' a vow to create an 'allergies tsar' After just 15 minutes, Lily was struggling to breathe. She used her second EpiPen and Aicha called an ambulance. Now desperate, the mum ran back into the restaurant to grab her bag of money and passports but, agonisingly, the waiter wasted vital minutes by insisting she paid the bill. Advertisement When she got outside again, Lily was gasping for air and slipping out of consciousness. According to the Daily Mail, she collapsed into her mum's arms and said: "You know Mum, I love you. I'm sorry. Goodbye." With the ambulance nowhere to be seen, Lily's cousins bundled her into their car and rushed to the hospital – but she stopped breathing on the way. 7 Lily wanted to go out for the meal after finding out she had earned a first in the first-year uni exams Credit: Facebook Advertisement 7 Lily's family want to raise awareness about the dangers of travelling abroad with allergies Credit: gofundme 7 Lily was eating at Maya Restaurant and Lounge, Rabat, in Morocco when her throat began to itch Credit: instagram Medics performed CPR but refused to begin further treatment until Lily's mum had written a check - further stalling the process. The desperately ill teen was eventually put on life support - but with no brain activity doctors were forced to switch it off three days later. Advertisement It was found that she had already suffered a heart attack and a catatonic fit, which rendered her brain dead, before being hooked up to the machine. Reflecting on the terrible ordeal, Aicha said: "Neither the waiter nor any of the doctors spoke English. "Without Arabic, it would have been impossible to make myself understood. "It is my mother tongue and yet I still couldn't get the care Lily needed." Advertisement A JustGiving page set up to raise funds for Natasha Allergy Research Foundation has racked up nearly £9,000 in donations.