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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
Entertainment
Jessica Gibb

Jeremy Paxman rushed to A&E three times in 24 hours in terrifying health scare

Jeremy Paxman has revealed a health scare that took him to A&E three times in the space of 24 hours.

The former Newsnight presenter, 72, said he was on “first-name terms” with staff at Chelsea and Westminster Hospital following the ordeal.

Paxman, who previously opened up about his Parkinson's diagnosis, was at home when he was "seized by a pain in my chest" that saw his partner rush him to hospital for the first time that day.

He said there was a 24-hour ambulance strike on the day that he was admitted and so he arrived by taxi to the hospital.

“I was minding my own business, watching a family of squirrels chasing up and down the tree outside my window, when I was seized by a pain in my chest," he wrote in an article for Saga Magazine.

“I have read enough to know that heart attacks are usually accompanied by pains down the arm, though I couldn’t remember which one. Since both seemed to be in working order I assumed I was all right.

“Not all right enough for my partner, who, instantly, deemed I was in need of attention at the A&E department of Chelsea and Westminster Hospital, where I was speedily admitted and then examined by a quite charming German-born cardiac specialist.”

At midnight, his partner headed home to see to the dog but suffered a painful accident on the way - breaking her ankle after falling into a hole in the road.

"At about midnight, my partner remembered we had left the dog at home, and that Derek would be needing a bit of pavement or failing that, the bottom of the outdoor steps of the house of the nearest high-court judge," he wrote.

Paxman was seized by a pain in his chest while relaxing at home (BBC/Lion Television/The Van Gogh Museum)

“She took a taxi home. She emerged from the taxi to fall straight into a hole dug for gas-mains repairs, breaking her ankle.

“After she had passed an uncomfortable night at home, the fracture necessitated visit number two to A&E the following day.”

But the couple's woes weren't over and after returning home, Paxman said his partner was convinced that he was “breathing oddly”.

“Suddenly, with no warning, I was attacked by my chair and thrown against the leg of my desk,” he said.

“The back of my head took the full force of the impact. There was an awful lot of blood on the floor and down the back of my shirt.

“Back to A&E. But this time, the one-day strike being over, in a smart new ambulance driven by a Frenchman from Toulon and his Australian oppo.”

He later smashed his head resulting in another trip to hospital (SUNDAY MAIL)

Paxman said he was shown to his “usual bed” and wheeled out for a CT scan before being “wired up to the familiar machines”.

He added: “Some time well after midnight, I was allowed home with my head glued together, looking for all the world like some tonsured ninth-century Irish monk who had got involved in a rather vicious punch-up.

“It was by now the early hours of Friday the 13th and I thought I was very lucky to have received such excellent treatment from a workforce genuinely world-recruited.

“In fact, I felt rather proud of them all.”

The full column can be found in the March issue of Saga Magazine out now.

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