logo
‘I'm fighting': Dawn Fraser shares heart health update

‘I'm fighting': Dawn Fraser shares heart health update

Perth Now6 days ago

Australian swimming legend Dawn Fraser has opened up about her recent health battles, including the moment she 'could die'.
Fraser, an eight-time Olympic medallist, a world record holder for 15 years and a highly decorated Australian having received both a Companion of the Order of Australia and Member of the Order of the British Empire, has had a bad run with her health in recent months, including a fall that left her needing surgery and a heart issue.
'I've lost 22 kilos and a lot of strength,' Fraser told the Daily Telegraph.
Sharing new details on the fall she had in December 2024, Fraser revealed it was a simple everyday activity that brought her to the ground.
'I was opening a case of Coca-Cola. I slipped opening the plastic container. My foot got caught on the little ledge we'd just had made for the gate,' she said.
Fraser said after the fall, she 'couldn't get up' and was in a 'lot of pain', knowing she had suffered some serious injuries. Dawn Fraser and David Dickson in Australia's 1962 swimming team. Credit: unknown / supplied
'The pain was excruciating,' she said.
'I'd never felt pain like that before. I've never sort of fallen or broken anything in my life and it was a shock to me.'
Fraser, who was home alone at the time while her family went shopping, had her mobile on her when she fell and was able to call a neighbour for help.
The swimming legend, once cheered on my thousands around a pool, was taken to hospital to be surrounded by health care professionals who told her she 'could die'.
Fraser learnt that she had broken a hip, cracked ribs and was told she may have internal bleeding.
Doctors asked Fraser's daughter, Dawn-Lorraine, if Fraser wanted medical professionals to conduct resuscitation if an urgent operation went wrong.
'I said, 'This is Dawn Fraser. She's not just any 87-year-old. She is tough.' I know my mother, and I was quite upset about that,' Dawn Lorraine told the outlet. 'This is Dawn Fraser', doctors were told. Credit: UNKNOWN / SUPPLIED
Fraser said she fight the ordeal 'frightening', especially the idea that she may no-longer be around to spend years with her beloved family.
'When the anaesthetist came in and said I could die, that was the frightening part,' Fraser said.
'That I could die under anaesthetic. I didn't want to die that way, so that put my will up to come through and come out of it. I wasn't going to give in.'
Fraser, who said she understands her age, said 'When I die, I want to be with my family.'
The swimming legend won her race with surgery and began making a steady recovery until another alarming incident in the following weeks.
When Fraser was visiting a surf club in Queensland, her heart began to fail.
'I started to feel very faint and I fainted and was unconscious for 5-7 seconds,' Fraser said.
'I didn't understand what had gone wrong,' she says.
'They said my heart had stopped for five seconds and I had a very low heart rate, which I did have when I was swimming. But as I've gotten older, it's got lower.'
Following an emergency trip to Noosa Hospital, Fraser was given a pacemaker, something she hopes will give her more precious time with her daughter, grandson Jackson and others. Dawn Fraser on Dancing With the Stars. Credit: Unknown / TVW 7
'I'm slower, I've got to accept that,' Fraser said.
'I do a lot of running in the water for my knees and my back and my hip.'
However, it appears that Fraser's first love may have been the best medicine, saying she if better now she is 'back in the pool'.
'I'm good now that I'm back in the pool. I feel happy. I hope to get some of my strength back because I've lost a lot,' she said.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘Proper midwinter stuff': Coldest days of the year so far arriving in Adeliade and Canberra, while Brisbane and Sydney to see chilliest mornings yet
‘Proper midwinter stuff': Coldest days of the year so far arriving in Adeliade and Canberra, while Brisbane and Sydney to see chilliest mornings yet

Sky News AU

timean hour ago

  • Sky News AU

‘Proper midwinter stuff': Coldest days of the year so far arriving in Adeliade and Canberra, while Brisbane and Sydney to see chilliest mornings yet

Most Australian capitals will continue to feel the winter blast as temperatures plummet around the country in the days ahead, with Canberra and Adelaide set to experience their coldest conditions so far this year. Meanwhile, mornings in Brisbane and Sydney are forecast to be the chilliest they have been yet in 2025, with lows for Queensland expected to enter single digits. Winter has firmly set in on the east coast this week, with Sky News meteorologist Rob Sharpe explaining Wednesday was Sydney's coldest day of the year so far by a 'considerable margin' with the city seeing a maximum of just 14.1C. Sharpe said the chill in New South Wales' central east was due to southerly winds brining rain and cold air as it rolls through the area, and Sydneysiders are now facing their coldest mornings of 2025 so far as the week progresses. Sydney is set to see daily lows drop to single figures for most of the next seven days and the Bureau of Meteorology has forecast a chilly 6C for Friday morning. 'I'm not sure it's going to be quite that cold on Friday, but we will be feeling the chill and then we'll be having another cold belt, Monday, Tuesday, with daytime tops again back to just 16 degrees,' Sharpe said. Brisbane could drop to 9C on both Thursday and Friday mornings and Sharpe said the forecasted lows are 'easily the coldest we've seen so far this year' for Queensland's capital. Temperatures in Brisbane are looking more mild for Saturday through to Monday, but another cold dip could arrive as early as Wednesday next week. Canberra has been forecast to plummet to a freezing low of –4C on Thursday and Friday morning is also set to be below zero, reaching a low of –3C. Wet weather is looking set to roll into Adelaide from Thursday, with the city also likely to see its coldest 2025 day yet this weekend. 'With temperatures as low as 13C on Sunday, easily the coldest day of the year so far there as well. So, proper midwinter stuff coming through,' Sharpe said. Sharpe said Monday next week could be Canberra's coldest day of the year so far, with a high of just 9C and a low of 0C forecast. Windy and cold conditions are expected for Melbourne and Hobart over the next seven days and the Victorian capital could dip to just 4C on Thursday. It will be a different story in Perth and Darwin, however, with the West Australian capital largely avoiding the nail-biting temperatures sending a shiver down the east coast. 'The cold temperatures have really avoided the region and the showers that we've been seeing constantly, they're going to be gradually clearing. So, an improvement in the weather on the way there,' Sharpe said. Darwin appears set for balmy conditions over the next seven days, with Sharpe saying the northernmost capital 'seems immune' from the cold spell. Daily highs of 31 are expected in Darwin for the next week beginning Thursday, with the city projected to drop to a seven-day low of 20. Rain, strong winds, thunderstorms, and even hail and snow have been forecast in parts of the country's south-east by the BOM, as a strong cold front hits southern SA, NSW, Victoria, and Tasmania from Saturday afternoon into next week.

Cher McGillivray: How parents can respond when their child is the bully
Cher McGillivray: How parents can respond when their child is the bully

West Australian

time2 hours ago

  • West Australian

Cher McGillivray: How parents can respond when their child is the bully

Bullying is something every parent worries about — and it's no wonder, with one in four Australian students experiencing regular bullying. The rate in Australia is one of the highest among English-speaking countries. This data gives rise to a challenging question for some families — what if my child is the bully? The fear for most parents when it comes to bullying is that their child will be the victim, and experience all the negative impacts that can come with it. But the idea that it is your child who may be the one inflicting harm can be extremely difficult for parents to process. What's often at play in these situations is that the child is responding to a perceived threat — feeling like they aren't quite fitting in, and a sense of anxiety that can manifest as anger or aggression. As children and teens, young people's brains haven't yet fully developed and as a result they are essentially living out of their limbic brain — the 'threat brain'. Every situation is different, but often when a child is engaging in bullying behaviours, there's something deeper at play. For some reason they are trying to protect themselves – their brain is responding to a threat that is sending them into fight or flight. In many cases it is a cry for help from the child, and one of the best things a parent can do is seek to understand, without judgment, what their child is feeling that might be leading to these behaviours. It can be incredibly distressing for a parent to realise that their child has been bullying others and there's often a rush to self-blame. But acknowledging the issue and using it as an opportunity to find out what's really going on for their child is the mark of a good parent who deeply cares. In research with young people who had been engaging in bullying behaviours that led them to eventually commit crimes, many said that no one had even bothered to ask them why they were bullying other kids, no one had asked what was going on for them that made them behave this way. In those teen years, the prefrontal cortex is being remodelled and teenagers are going to act without thinking. They're going to be more impulsive. They're going to be more self-conscious. They've got an undeveloped sense of self and a deep need to belong to a peer group. If they don't feel they belong at home, if they don't feel they belong at school and they don't feel that they belong in their peer group, it can often go one of two ways — they can isolate themselves, or they can try to exert some sense of control and that's when the bullying can start. One of the best ways to tackle this sensitive issue is by helping your child feel like they 'belong' at home. This means approaching a conversation about bullying with a sense of curiosity rather than anger or judgment. The worst thing we can do is to ignore it or pretend it's not happening. Remind your child that you want to understand why they have done these things, that you are here to help and that they are still loved. Even if there are consequences for their actions and behaviours, as there should be for bullying, reassure them you will still accept them and be there for them. Taking this approach of 'connection before correction' can lead to significant behaviour shifts — helping your child feel heard, understood and not judged makes them more open to change. So, if you're worried that your child might be a bully, take a deep breath, be brave, be curious and approach it with love. Dr Cher McGillivray is an Assistant Professor of Psychology at Bond University

‘Real worry': New report reveals children are suffering from ‘climate anxiety'
‘Real worry': New report reveals children are suffering from ‘climate anxiety'

Sky News AU

time9 hours ago

  • Sky News AU

‘Real worry': New report reveals children are suffering from ‘climate anxiety'

Sky News host Chris Kenny says a new report has found that lessons about climate change and global warming should be delayed until high school due to the rise of 'climate anxiety' in Australian children. 'I want to get back into what I reckon is a real worry for parents and their kids – that is climate anxiety,' he said. Mr Kenny sat down with child and adolescent psychologist Clare Rowe to discuss the findings from the report.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store