logo
British mother who died of rabies from puppy scratch on holiday had 'horrendous' death, daughter reveals

British mother who died of rabies from puppy scratch on holiday had 'horrendous' death, daughter reveals

Daily Mail​a day ago
The daughter of a British woman who died of rabies after she was scratched by a puppy on holiday has spoken of her mother's 'horrendous' death.
Yvonne Ford, 59, from Barnsley, South Yorkshire, was scratched on the leg by a small stray puppy lying under her sunbed while on holiday in Morocco with her husband in February - but thought nothing of it at the time.
Many months later, the grandmother-of-four started suffering from a 'horrendous' headache and was admitted to Barnsley Hospital.
Within days, she could not walk, talk, sleep or swallow. She started hallucinating, and developed a fear of water.
Yvonne was transferred to Royal Hallamshire Hospital in Sheffield where she was eventually diagnosed with the rare but devastating virus. She died on June 11.
Her daughter Robyn Thomson, 32, has spoken of how the deathly disease that stole her mother.
Neonatal nurse Robyn said: '[Mum] was the most loving person imaginable. She had the biggest heart.
'She was my best friend and the most fantastic grandparent to mine and my brother's children.
'She was a huge animal lover so for her to have died of rabies - it is just particularly horrendous.
'She will be missed so dearly.'
Robyn said her mother's death was a huge shock to the whole family - especially as it took so long for her to develop symptoms. She was scratched in February - and died four months later.
She said: 'She and dad were on a holiday in Morocco and they were on a private beach next to the hotel.
'There was a puppy underneath mum's sunbed and it scratched her leg.
'There was no blood and no evidence of the dog being unwell. It was such a mild scratch and it never got infected so we just thought nothing of it at the time.
'Mum came home and everything was normal. We went to Florida as a family and she went fishing with my dad.
'But in June she came down with this horrendous headache. She was in a lot of pain so went to hospital.
The family later found out that it normally takes a few months for rabies symptoms to show - but the deadly disease can incubate for up to two years
'Soon, she couldn't sleep, she couldn't walk, she couldn't talk. She was hallucinating and had a fear of water.
'She couldn't swallow. She was choking on her own saliva. So doctors put her in an induced coma.
'It wasn't until over a week later that she was diagnosed with rabies.
'There's only one outcome for rabies once symptoms develop and it's death every time. So we had to turn off her life support.'
The family later found out that it normally takes a few months for rabies symptoms to show - but the deadly disease can incubate for up to two years.
Now, Robyn wants to spread awareness for rabies - and help stop it at the source via a charity mission in Cambodia.
The mother-of-two has launched a GoFundMe and is appealing for help from the public.
She said: 'This is something I need to do. If I can save even one life through this work, or spare one family from going through the pain we have experienced, then it will be turning a terrible negative into something positive.
'I'm determined to transform my grief into action - helping vaccinate dogs, support surveillance efforts, and deliver life-saving lessons in schools.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Family issue warning after mother's rabies symptoms stayed hidden for months
Family issue warning after mother's rabies symptoms stayed hidden for months

The Independent

time10 hours ago

  • The Independent

Family issue warning after mother's rabies symptoms stayed hidden for months

A family whose mother died from rabies after a puppy scratched her has issued a warning after her symptoms did not show for four months. Yvonne Ford, 59, was scratched while on holiday in Morocco in February. Her daughter and son Robyn and Adam, together with her husband Ron, spoke to This Morning to raise awareness of the disease and urge the public to get vaccinated, as well as check government advice before visiting a country. "We don't want the people to go through what we've gone through. Seeing your mum deteriorate in seven days like that. We don't want anybody to see that ever again," Adam said.

Why rabies is making a comeback this summer — and what you should know
Why rabies is making a comeback this summer — and what you should know

The Independent

time11 hours ago

  • The Independent

Why rabies is making a comeback this summer — and what you should know

Cases of rabies, a viral and potentially fatal disease that primarily spreads through the bites or scratches of infected animals, have recently been reported around the Northeast. This week, officials in the town of Westfield, New Jersey, issued a public health alert after two reports of bites associated with a raccoon that may be infected with rabies, put the surrounding communities on high alert. Last week, New York's Nassau County Department of Health declared an imminent public health threat in response to the ongoing spread of rabies among wild and feral-domesticated animals in the county. 'The resurgence of rabies in Nassau County, with its high population density and after nearly a decade of absence, represents a serious and evolving public health concern,' Nassau County Health Commissioner Dr. Irina Gelman said in a release. 'This declaration allows us to respond to prevent further spread and protect the health and safety of Nassau County residents.' The resurgence comes after the county had successfully eradicated the virus since 2016. Over the last year, the department has confirmed 25 rabid animals, including raccoons and feral cats. The department noted that surveillance data shows that the virus is circulating in the area. "Let me be clear, there is no cause for alarm, as we have not yet received any reports of human transmission,' Gelman said, according People. 'However, the time for prevention is now." The declaration comes as health authorities in nearby Suffolk County reported two cases of rabies — the first since 2009. But, whether or not an uptick in new cases indicate that rabies is becoming more prevalent in the region is unclear right now. The summer season has something to do with it, Stony Brook Children's Hospital Chief of Pediatric Infectious Diseases Division Dr. Sharon Nachman told News 12 Long Island. "It is a question of where you are and what the season is, and certainly the summertime is always associated with more bites and more worries about rabies," she said. A large number of cases has also been reported in Queens. Around 4,000 animal rabies cases are reported each year. The animals most frequently found with rabies in the U.S. are bats, skunks, raccoons, and foxes, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says. Outside of the Northeast, there has been a rise in cases linked to bats, resulting in three rabies deaths in a period of just five weeks a couple of years ago, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In 2021, five Americans died of rabies, the largest number in a decade. Human-caused climate change has resulted in the expansion of vampire bats' habitat, and increased the risk of rabies in domestic animals, according to scientists. This week, Denver Animal Protection warned that the public should be cautious after two bats tested positive for the rabies virus, 9 News reported. Still, fewer than 10 people in the U.S. die from rabies each year. That's thanks to post-exposure care and the rabies vaccine. Nearly 100,000 people are vaccinated following a possible exposure each year. Treatment is nearly 100 percent effective if you get it after an exposure. Initial rabies symptoms are similar to the flu, including fever, headache, and muscle aches. They can progress to neurological and physical symptoms, such as delirium, a fear of water, and seizures. To prevent the risk of infection, there are several steps people can take. Make sure pets are up to date with their vaccines, stay away from wildlife, call animal control to remove stray animals from the neighborhoods, and wash any bites or scratches immediately with soap and water after possible exposures before seeking medical attention. 'Rabies is preventable through vaccination and pet owners should remember that the best protection is to vaccinate for rabies and license all pets with the town,' Westfield officials said.

Family of British woman who died from rabies speak out to warn others
Family of British woman who died from rabies speak out to warn others

ITV News

time17 hours ago

  • ITV News

Family of British woman who died from rabies speak out to warn others

Yvonne Ford's family speak out on ITV's This Morning The family of a woman who died from rabies have revealed how she was sunbathing when she caught the disease following an innocuous scratch. Yvonne Ford, from Barnsley, died in June after suddenly developing symptoms four months after a holiday to Morocco. Appearing on ITV's This Morning, the 59-year-old's husband, Ron, said: "Two days before we came home, we're on the beach outside the hotel, and there were lots of dogs running about everywhere, and there was a puppy actually underneath the sunbed of Yvonne's. "She put her leg down, it startled the dog, and it just scratched her. It didn't bleed, it it didn't really mark her." He said there were no signs of illness for weeks. The couple went to Florida in May and it was only after they returned that the symptoms started. Their daughter, Robyn, said: "My dad and my mum went to York on a little fishing trip in the camper van and on the Saturday, my mum started with a horrendous headache, unbearable headache, to the point where she couldn't sleep at all. "The Monday after that, my dad had taken her to A and E because the headache was so severe. On the Monday she went into hospital walking, talking, doing everything, and come the Friday she couldn't walk, talk, swallow. She had a fear of water, she was horrendously hallucinating beyond what we could even imagine. "She just deteriorated within five days." What is rabies? Rabies is a rare but serious infection that is usually caught from the bite or scratch of an infected animal, such as dogs, bats, raccoons and foxes. In the UK, it is only found in some bats. Although the risk of getting it while travelling is small, rabies is more common in parts of Asia, Africa and Central and South America. Symptoms of rabies usually take three to 12 weeks to appear, but they can appear after a few days or not for several months or years. They include numbness or tingling, hallucinations, acute anxiety, difficulty swallowing or breathing and paralysis. It is almost always fatal once symptoms appear, but vaccination and early treatment can prevent it. Mrs Ford's family are speaking out to warn others about the dangers. Her son Adam said: "We don't want people to go through what we've gone through. Seeing your mum deteriorating like that. We don't want anybody to see that ever again. "So if we can just get the awareness out - just check, check, check, contact your doctor, get the injections. That's all we want, awareness, awareness, awareness." Robyn is volunteering with the charity Mission Rabies, which works to vaccinate dogs in regions across Asia and Africa to help reduce the spread of rabies—a disease that tragically still claims many lives each year. She said: "Since we've put it out on Facebook, to raise awareness, we have had people messages saying that they've been abroad, they've had scratches from cats and dogs and they've then gone to get the vaccine, so I feel like we are doing something, we're making a little bit of a change, and then if we can do that for one family then we've made a difference."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store