logo
16 celebrities who have spoken about having Lyme disease

16 celebrities who have spoken about having Lyme disease

Justin Timberlake shared his diagnosis shortly after wrapping up his world tour.
On Thursday, while wrapping up his world tour, the singer shared his diagnosis in an Instagram post.
"Among other things, I've been battling some health issues, and was diagnosed with Lyme disease -— which I don't say so you feel bad for me —— but to shed some light on what I've been up against behind the scenes," he wrote. "If you've experienced this disease or know someone who has — then you're aware: living with this can be relentlessly debilitating, both mentally and physically."
Timberlake was "shocked" at first, but this diagnosis helped explain some of the "crazy fatigue" and "nerve pain" he'd been feeling.
Though he debated ending his tour early, he wrote, he's glad he chose to keep going.
" … I was reluctant to talk about this because I was always raised to keep something like this to yourself," he continued. "But I am trying to be more transparent about my struggles so that they aren't misinterpreted.'"
In 2020, Amy Schumer shared that she'd been diagnosed with Lyme disease.
In September 2020, Schumer shared on Instagram that she has Lyme disease and "maybe had it for years."
Seeing as this disease is the "great imitator" with a range of symptoms, it's possible she could've experienced Lyme symptoms for quite some time without realizing it.
In an Instagram post that same year, the comedian said she was taking doxycycline, an oral antibiotic, to treat the condition, and she also asked others for advice.
Justin Bieber has been open about his experiences with Lyme disease.
In January 2020, the singer wrote on Instagram that it's been a "rough couple of years" battling the disease.
Bieber explained that, for a long time, people speculated that he was "on meth," but failed to realize that he'd actually recently been diagnosed with Lyme disease.
He wrote that he'd also been struggling with "a serious case of chronic mono which affected my skin, brain function, energy, and overall health."
Avril Lavigne is now an advocate for those with the illness.
Lavigne spoke about her struggle with Lyme disease in a June 2015 interview with "Good Morning America," revealing that she'd been bedridden in October 2014.
She called that the "worst time" in her life after seeing specialists and doctors who misdiagnosed her with chronic fatigue syndrome and depression.
In October 2018, the "Complicated" singer told Billboard she felt unwell during her 2014 tour and couldn't get out of bed as her symptoms progressively got worse.
During one of her darkest days battling with side effects of the disease, Lavigne said she wrote her 2018 song "Head Above Water," telling Billboard, "I had accepted that I was dying ... And literally under my breath, I was like, 'God, help me keep my head above the water.'"
She has also started the Avril Lavigne Foundation, which aims to bring awareness to those dealing with Lyme and other serious illnesses and disabilities.
Ben Stiller said he had trouble getting an accurate diagnosis.
In 2011, Stiller told The Hollywood Reporter about his Lyme disease, saying, "I got it in Nantucket, Massachusetts, a couple of years ago. My knee became inflamed and they couldn't figure out what it was, then they found out it was Lyme."
"I'm symptom-free now, but Lyme doesn't ever leave your system. It's a really tough thing," he said.
Shania Twain has said Lyme affected her career.
Twain dominated the pop and country charts in the 1990s and early 2000s, but by 2004, she had issues with her vocal cords, which she attributed to contracting Lyme disease.
In 2017, she told Canadian news outlet CBC that she was bitten by a tick when on tour in Norfolk, Virginia. She said she saw it fall off her, and she immediately began to see troubling Lyme disease symptoms pop up.
"I was on tour, so I almost fell off the stage every night. I was very, very dizzy and didn't know what was going on. It's just one of those things you don't suspect," she added.
It took Twain years to figure out that she had dysphonia, a neurological disorder of the vocal cords in which muscles can spasm and impact speech, which she attributes to the Lyme bacteria.
She now warns others about the disease.
Lyme "is very dangerous because you have a very short window to catch it and then treat it and then even when you treat it, you could still very well be left with effects, which is what happened to me," Twain told CBC. "It's a debilitating disease and extremely dangerous. You can't play around with it, so you've got to check yourself for ticks."
Kelly Osbourne went undiagnosed for nearly a decade.
In her 2017 book "There Is No F*cking Secret: Letters From a Badass Bitch," the former reality star shared she'd unknowingly been battling Lyme disease for years.
She explained that her mom, Sharon, purchased her dad, Ozzy, a reindeer sanctuary for their home in England for his 56th birthday in 2004. She said shortly after she was bitten by a tick, which Ozzy burned off her.
For years after, she experienced "traveling pain," ranging from stomach aches to a sore throat. She said it took quite some time to finally get a Lyme diagnosis.
Osbourne wrote that she was initially afraid to speak publicly about Lyme disease because "it seems like the trendy disease to have right now, and I'm tired of seeing sad celebrities play the victim on the cover of weekly mags," but that she now acts as her own health advocate.
Ally Hilfiger wrote about her experience with the disease in a memoir.
In her book "Bite Me: How Lyme Disease Stole My Childhood, Made Me Crazy, and Almost Killed Me," Hilfiger chronicled her experience with the invisible illness and the all-too-visible symptoms that followed.
In 2016, the designer told Health magazine, "I remember getting bit by a tick and my parents sent it off to the labs. And we got inconclusive tests back."
For 10 years, she said, multiple doctors gave her a variety of diagnoses from fibromyalgia to rheumatoid arthritis. She told the magazine that finally receiving the correct diagnosis felt like she "won the lottery."
The emotional struggles is just as hard as the physical ones, according to the fashion designer.
"One of the biggest issues I think a lot of Lyme sufferers have is that some days you can have good days. And other days you can feel really feel horribly and not be able to get out of bed," she told Health. "And sometimes you start to doubt whether or not you're really feeling what your feeling, if that makes any sense. And you feel disbelieved."
In 2014, Debbie Gibson shared she'd been privately dealing with the illness.
After fans expressed their concern about her appearance in social-media photos, Gibson took to her blog in April 2014 to give an update on her health, sharing she'd begun experiencing Lyme symptoms in early 2013.
She wrote that she first felt anxiety and sensitivity to certain foods, then began feeling unique pain and muscle fatigue she'd never had before.
She added, "I got tested for everything under the sun, though it did not occur to me, or my West Coast doctors, to test for Lyme. It is typically an East Coast thing."
Gibson began losing weight and experiencing symptoms of depression, adding, "I could barely walk. I started feeling numbness and tingling in my hands and feet, which is very disconcerting for a pianist and dancer, to say the least. Night sweats, chills, fever, nerve tremors, nightmares, and migraine headaches were at a fever pitch without a minute of relief."
After a long journey to find the correct diagnosis, the "I Love You" singer was able to begin treatment.
In recent years, she's spoken about learning to manage her symptoms.
"I've learned how to overcome. I've never said I'm struggling with Lyme [disease], I say I'm overcoming Lyme," she told People in 2023. "So, I've really overcome a lot and I just remain diligent and consumed with my body and my mind and it's working."
Alec Baldwin has spoken about experiencing Lyme symptoms.
During a 2011 interview with The New York Times, the "Saturday Night Live" actor mentioned that he had chronic Lyme disease.
Baldwin didn't mention his diagnosis again until 2017 when he spoke onstage at an event benefiting the Bay Area Lyme Foundation.
According to People magazine, he told the crowd he'd been bitten by a tick 17 years prior and was bitten again a few years later.
"I got the classic Lyme disease (symptoms) for each successive summer, for five years, every August, like [these] black lung, flu-like symptoms, sweating to death in my bed," he said.
"The first time was the worst of all," he recalled. "And I really thought, 'This is it, I'm not going to live.' ... I was lying in bed saying, 'I'm going to die of Lyme disease,' in my bed.'"
He said he and his wife, Hilaria, remain vigilant about checking their dogs and children for ticks.
Jamie-Lynn Sigler said she was diagnosed with Lyme disease and multiple sclerosis within a short period.
When Sigler was 19 years old and starring on HBO's hit "The Sopranos," she learned she had Lyme disease.
Shortly after, in 2016, she told People magazine, "I was diagnosed with MS (multiple sclerosis) when I was 20 years old. It was a shock, it was surprising."
"I had been diagnosed with Lyme disease the year before, so to get the diagnosis was confusing, and also strange because I didn't feel sick. I didn't feel that anything was wrong."
She'd taken antibiotics, a standard course of treatment for early-stage Lyme, "and things had started to go away," she said.
Daryl Hall has spoken about Lyme disease and tick bites.
In 2005, the duo Hall and Oates canceled a tour, sharing that Hall had been diagnosed with Lyme disease.
In 2011, Hall spoke about his experiences, explaining how he contracted the disease and his journey to health.
"I got it the way everybody gets it," he said. "I've lived in the country for many, many years ... it's a hotbed of deer and other wildlife animals. I'd been bitten over the years so many times and I think it finally reached a critical mass and I crashed and burned about five years ago."
He said he experienced a wide range of ailments, from allergies and fever-like symptoms to aches, pains, and tremors. After being tested, he learned he had "six or seven tick-borne diseases."
Hall said he saw a Lyme literate doctor who helped treat him and advised individuals with constantly changing symptoms "to get tested for Lyme disease because the symptoms mimic so many other things."
Thalía Mottola began feeling ill during pregnancy in 2007.
Mottola spent most of the 1990s and early 2000s dominating the Latin music charts, but in 2007, at the end of her first pregnancy, the "No Me Acuerdo" singer began feeling unwell.
By the time she gave birth, she was unknowingly dealing with a full-blown case of Lyme disease.
In her 2011 memoir "Growing Stronger," she explained that doctors tried to convince her she was suffering from postpartum depression, writing, "I continued to feel like I had been run over by a truck that had dragged me for a thousand miles, along with a steamroller that had crushed every last bone in my body. I literally thought I was dying."
When she found the energy to research online, she started seeing Lyme specialists, eventually undergoing two years of "heavy treatments."
Kathleen Hanna dealt with Lyme disease symptoms for over a decade before being properly diagnosed.
Hanna stepped away from her band, Le Tigre, in 2005, citing personal health issues as the reason for her hiatus.
Years later, she attributed those issues to an undiagnosed case of Lyme disease.
After multiple misdiagnoses — from multiple sclerosis to lupus and panic attacks — she saw a 2008 documentary called "Under Our Skin" about the Lyme epidemic and realized that a tick bite she got in 2005 could still be causing her health problems, even though she'd been treated with a standard course of antibiotics for Lyme disease at the time.
She experienced debilitating symptoms over the course of several years that made her unable to move or speak at times, and she began to heal after two years of "intensive therapy," according to The New York Times.
Yolanda Hadid is one of the most outspoken celebrity voices spreading awareness of the disease.
Hadid was a cast member on "The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills" in 2012, but viewers didn't know that behind the scenes, she was dealing with symptoms of chronic Lyme disease.
In the past decade, she's become known as a public advocate for those with Lyme while documenting her own debilitating neurological and physical symptoms and how she's coped with them.
In 2017, she published the memoir "Believe Me: My Battle with the Invisible Disability of Lyme Disease."
"Most people still don't seem to believe that chronic Lyme disease even exists," she told Vogue in 2023. "As the saying goes: You don't truly get it until you get it."
Bella Hadid has also spoken about having Lyme disease.
In late 2015, after going public with her diagnosis, Yolanda said that her daughter, Bella Hadid, has Lyme disease, too.
On August 6, 2023, the model posted a series of photos on Instagram of her receiving shots and undergoing medical procedures alongside a long caption.
" … I am okay and you do not have to worry, and 2:I wouldn't change anything for the world. If I had to go through all of this again, to get here, to this exact moment I'm in right now, with all of you, finally healthy, I would do it all again. It made me who I am today," she wrote.
She continued, " … I have so much gratitude for and perspective on life , this 100+ days of Lyme, chronic disease , co infection treatment, almost 15 years of invisible suffering, was all worth it if I'm able to, God willing, have a lifetime of spreading love from a full cup, and being able to truly be myself … "
This story was originally published in November 2018 and most recently updated on July 31, 2025.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The Dental Myths Your Dentist Wants You To Stop Believing
The Dental Myths Your Dentist Wants You To Stop Believing

Forbes

time2 hours ago

  • Forbes

The Dental Myths Your Dentist Wants You To Stop Believing

In the age of TikTok tutorials and Instagram hacks, dental 'advice' spreads fast—but not all of it is worth following. 'Social media is full of trends that might look helpful but can actually harm your teeth and gums,' says Dr. Briar Voy, a dentist and prosthodontist at Amsterdam Dental Group in New Jersey and a spokesperson for Supersmile. Knowing which tips are myths and which habits actually work can help protect your smile for years to come. Here are some of the most common misconceptions Voy says dentists wish you'd stop believing. The buzz around purple toothpaste comes down to color theory: purple sits opposite yellow on the color wheel, so it can temporarily neutralize yellow tones and make teeth look brighter. 'But the effect is purely optical,' says Voy. 'Purple toothpaste doesn't change the underlying shade of your enamel.' She also cautions that some formulas use strong synthetic dyes—such as CI 60730 or Acid Violet 43—found in products like hair dye and nail polish. Others rely on abrasive agents like silica to mask surface stains. While this can make teeth look cleaner in the short term, it can also gradually wear down enamel, increase sensitivity, and expose naturally yellow dentin. For real whitening without damage, Voy recommends seeing a dentist for professional treatment or using gentle, non-abrasive whitening products designed to lift stains while still protecting enamel. While crowns and veneers don't respond to traditional peroxide-based whitening, they do still pick up surface stains—just like natural teeth. Professional dental cleanings can remove these stains and restore the restorations' original brightness. Some non-abrasive whitening products can also help by dissolving the protein pellicle—a sticky layer that traps stains and bacteria—without harming the surface. 'This means they can safely remove stains from natural teeth, crowns, veneers, and even dentures,' Voy says. It might feel like the perfect finishing touch, but rinsing immediately after brushing can be detrimental because it washes away fluoride and other cavity-fighting minerals from your toothpaste that need time to strengthen enamel. High-alcohol mouthwashes can also dry out your mouth, Voy adds, which is a problem because saliva is essential for oral health since it washes away food particles, neutralizes acids, and provides salivary enzymes that improve oral hygiene. Plus, high alcohol content can disrupt beneficial bacteria, ironically increasing your risk of cavities. 'So instead of rinsing right after brushing, spit out excess toothpaste and wait at least 30 minutes,' advises Voy. And when you do use mouthwash, choose one with low or no alcohol. 'This common misconception about the order of oral hygiene steps greatly impacts how effective your cleaning routine actually is,' says Voy. Flossing before brushing removes plaque and debris between teeth, allowing for a deeper clean. Brushing afterward also ensures the cavity-fighting active ingredients in toothpaste can directly contact and strengthen enamel in those hard-to-reach spots. In short, 'flossing before brushing provides superior cavity protection and overall oral health benefits,' Voy notes. 'The idea that 'harder is cleaner' is a dangerous fallacy when it comes to tooth brushing,' Voy warns. Too much pressure—especially with a hard-bristled brush or an electric toothbrush used incorrectly—can lead to gum recession, root exposure, and enamel damage. What's more, tooth roots are covered in cementum, a material much softer than enamel and far more vulnerable to decay and wear. For a deep clean that avoids damage, 'lift your index finger off the toothbrush handle to lighten your pressure,' Voy suggests. She also recommends using a soft-bristled brush, angling it at 45 degrees to the gumline, and cleaning with gentle, circular motions. In the end, social media can be fun for discovering trends, but your oral health isn't the place to experiment. 'Trusting evidence-based care and products that protect enamel and gums,' Voy says, 'will keep your smile healthier, longer.'

Those Red Light Sunbeds You're Seeing Everywhere? Yeah, They're A Scam
Those Red Light Sunbeds You're Seeing Everywhere? Yeah, They're A Scam

Refinery29

time4 hours ago

  • Refinery29

Those Red Light Sunbeds You're Seeing Everywhere? Yeah, They're A Scam

Welcome to Sun Blocked, Refinery29's global call to action to wake up to the serious dangers of tanning. No lectures or shaming, we promise. Instead, our goal is to arm you with the facts you need to protect your skin to the best of your ability, because there's no such thing as safe sun. 'They are much safer as the red light has the opposite effect of [UV], it protects your skin.' I wince as I read this. I'm exchanging emails with 19-year-old Crisiant, who uses a red light tanning bed roughly every six weeks. Last year, she discovered that a tanning salon in her area had two of these beds, and she assumed they would be better for her skin. These machines‚ also known as collagen-boosting sunbeds, combine ultraviolet (UV) light — which tans the skin — with tubes that emit red light. Even if you've never stepped inside one, you've probably seen red light before. From LED face masks to full-body treatments that immerse the skin in red light, these devices have become skincare staples, promising to boost collagen, reduce acne and heal skin. ' Collagen sunbeds make no logical sense at all. Sunbeds that deliver UV radiation are harmful and cause skin cancers, full stop. Cloaking them as something good for your skin health is totally disingenuous. Dr Clare Kiely, consultant dermatologist ' Later, on the phone, it sounds like Crisiant is well aware of the dangers of regular sunbeds. She first tried one aged 18, but learning more about the risks put her off: 'If you [use] one now and then, I didn't think it'd be too bad, but I didn't want to do it consistently because I knew how dangerous they were,' she tells me. To Crisiant, red light tanning beds felt different — a little safer: 'It still gives you a tan while doing your skin good,' she says. 'I went on it once and noticed [a difference] within the same day. I had a really bad breakout on my face and it sort of soothed and cleared my skin. It was really strange as sunbeds have never done that for me before.' It also made her feel more confident. It's not hard to see why Crisiant thinks these machines are a safer, even beneficial alternative to regular tanning beds — and she's not the only one. But it highlights worrying misconceptions around red light sunbeds and their damage. Head to TikTok or Instagram, and you'll find countless videos posted by people who are convinced these beds can be used safely and that the risk of burning is lower. But that's not true. Combining red light with UV in a sunbed counteracts any of the potential benefits. Consultant dermatologist Dr Clare Kiely, cofounder of The Skin Diary, puts it plainly: 'Collagen sunbeds make no logical sense at all.' It is important to point out the differences between a red light-only bed and a sunbed that emits both UV and red light. 'Red light therapy without UV is a very different proposition,' confirms consultant dermatologist Dr Derrick Phillips. 'It is generally considered safe and may help with things like inflammation, wound healing and improving overall skin tone. However, the results do tend to be subtle and I always remind patients that it's not a quick fix.' Dr Beibei Du-Harpur, scientific engagement lead at The Skin Diary, agrees: 'More clinical evidence is needed to confirm the effectiveness [of red light] as a treatment for the skin, but there have been promising small studies from a skin ageing perspective.' The bottom line? On its own, red light is low-risk. But its popularity in skincare has made some see red light sunbeds as a good thing. ' Not only does UV increase your risk of skin cancer, it breaks down collagen — the very thing red light is supposed to help boost — and speeds up the skin's ageing process. In other words, any benefits of red light are immediately cancelled out by the UV. ' Are red light sunbeds 'safer' to use than regular sunbeds? The World Health Organisation has classed UV-emitting tanning devices as carcinogenic to humans since 2009. It doesn't matter if UV comes from a sunbed that also emits red light; it still causes damage to our DNA. Not only does UV increase your risk of skin cancer, it breaks down collagen — the very thing red light is supposed to help boost — and speeds up the skin's ageing process. In other words, any benefits of red light are immediately cancelled out by the UV. Dr Kiely says that those who market machines combining UV with collagen-boosting red lights can't have a good understanding of how light affects our skin. Why? It just doesn't make sense: 'Sunbeds that deliver UV radiation are harmful and cause skin cancers, full stop,' she says. 'Cloaking them as something good for your skin health is totally disingenuous.' Dr Phillips agrees and sees no evidence that combining red light with UV neutralises the harm. 'If anything, it gives a misleading impression of safety,' he says. 'These are still sunbeds emitting UV radiation, and they carry all the same risks as traditional tanning beds. From a dermatological perspective, they're just as concerning.' Why do people still use sunbeds despite the dangers? It's difficult to say how many of these red light and UV machines exist, but IBISWorld, a global industry research platform, reports that there were more than 28,000 tanning salons in the United States in 2024. In the UK, it's estimated that there are over 2,000. A quick Google reveals that plenty offer combined UV-red light beds. The reasons why people use beds like these are complex. Bronzed skin remains a beauty ideal, and among younger people, sunbeds are still seen as trendy. Crisiant hints that this is partly why she first tried one: 'You see all the girls getting these sunbeds and a nice tan from it,' she says. 'I feel like sunbeds are that phase that doesn't end for a lot of people.' Some credit sunbeds for boosting their mood. Others believe they help them get enough vitamin D — a proven myth. Another misconception is that they can help improve skin conditions like acne or eczema, but prolonged use of sunbeds can actually worsen these conditions and weaken the skin over time, making it more susceptible to infection. Then there's the theory that using sunbeds occasionally or for short bursts makes it 'safer' — something I thought was true as a teenager. Because sun damage isn't always visible right away, it's easy to underestimate the harm. Even those who understand their risks struggle to stop using them, with some describing themselves as feeling 'addicted'. The idea of sunbeds being most popular with young people is worrying, too. Melanoma Focus estimates that a third of UK 16 and 17-year-olds are using sunbeds illegally. 'I think people really should raise a bit more awareness about [the dangers],' Crisiant says. If sunbeds are so dangerous, why aren't they banned? While sunbeds remain so widely available, often without clearly displayed warnings, there is always a risk that members of the public may assume that they are somewhat safe, else they'd be banned. Refinery29's stance is clear: sunbeds should be banned, as they are in Iran, Brazil and Australia. Just one session before age 35 more than doubles your lifetime risk of melanoma, a skin cancer that can spread to other parts of the body. Red light doesn't change that. That's why many experts support a sunbed ban and agree that the growing trend for red light sunbeds is another reason it's needed: 'The messaging of these collagen-boosting sunbeds confuses those who may not understand the detrimental effects that sunbeds have on our skin,' says Dr Du-Harpur. She adds this is particularly dangerous given beauty standards around having a 'healthy' tan — a phrase that doesn't make any sense when a tan is our skin's damage response to UV. Marketing red light sunbeds as collagen-boosting, she adds, 'will encourage people to risk their health in the name of beauty and present an illusion that it may be safer or different to a conventional UV-focused sunbed.' She stresses, 'Sunbeds aren't safe — with or without red light therapy.' When I ask Crisiant if anything might put her off using a red light tanning bed, she says it's like she has 'a devil and an angel on each shoulder.' She might change her mind one day, but she can't say she'll stop for now. Crisiant isn't against a sunbed ban, though: 'Even though I use them, if they were [banned] I don't think I'd be massively annoyed because I know that the government would be doing it for our benefit,' she says. In June, the UK's All-Party Parliamentary Group for Beauty & Wellbeing launched its UV Safety Inquiry, but little has changed since Refinery29 reported on what it would take for sunbeds to be banned entirely last May. Here, it's illegal for under-18s to use sunbeds, while only a handful of US states have a blanket ban. But if we're serious about tackling rising skin cancer rates, intervention is needed. At the very least, more regulation around any kind of sunbed use, or better yet, a total ban.

Why Lyme disease cases are rising in Ohio
Why Lyme disease cases are rising in Ohio

Axios

time6 hours ago

  • Axios

Why Lyme disease cases are rising in Ohio

Justin Timberlake's recent diagnosis is putting a spotlight on Lyme disease, a tick-borne illness with staggering growth in Ohio over the past 15 years. Why it matters: Awareness of early symptoms, such as a rash and fatigue, can help patients catch cases early and treat them with antibiotics. If left untreated, the bacterial infection can lead to long-term neurological problems and symptoms like heart palpitations, arthritis, facial palsy and body aches. By the numbers: There were nearly 1,800 cases reported in Ohio last year, and around 1,200 so far this year. That's up from 40 in 2010. A post-2022 spike is largely due to a change in U.S. reporting requirements — but cases here were climbing before the change, with 615 in 2021, Ohio Department of Health data shows. The disease remains hard to diagnose and likely significantly underreported. Between the lines: Climate change is helping ticks survive longer, find new hosts and spread into new habitats. Ohio's cases started climbing around the time the blacklegged tick that transmits Lyme disease started appearing here, state and OSU researchers found. One silver lining: Only 3% of Ohio's cases in recent years have been recorded in Franklin County, making the local risk lower than in other areas. To help curb severe cases, the OSU Extension opened a tick-testing laboratory this year that detects diseases for $50, with results in 72 hours. Stay safe: Perform a "tick check" and shower after being outdoors, especially in the wooded or brushy areas, per the lab.

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