Where is dianne oxberry
She looked healthy and happy, a professional doing her bit for her community. Eight weeks later she was dead, aged 51, just ten days after being diagnosed with an aggressive form of ovarian cancer. Dianne Oxberry pictured died aged 51, just ten days after being diagnosed with an aggressive form of ovarian cancer.
There had been no warning, no time to make plans. Suddenly Dianne was gone. Understandably, the pain and shock is still visible in the eyes of her grieving husband, Ian Hindle. She was a brilliant wife and mother and I miss all the things we did together.
Christmas, which brought back all the memories from last year, was really hard. You know you have to face it and getting through it is just another step forward. Dianne's warm, natural presenting style made her a hugely popular broadcaster on both television and radio. Although she had worked alongside stars such as Radio 1's Simon Mayo and Steve Wright, she was best known as just Dianne, who told the North West when to get the barbecue out of the garage at the weekend.
The couple are pictured on their wedding day. Local boy and comedian Peter Kay once gatecrashed her weather report, getting down on his knees to say: 'Dianne Oxberry God love her When she died in January , her death left a gaping hole in her family's lives.
Sometimes it does and sometimes it doesn't. The couple, whose family home is in south Manchester, met in when Dianne started working on a Saturday-morning TV show, The 8. Dianne came in, saw me and she told me later that was the moment she thought, 'Yep, he's the one'. They married in and Dianne set to work making their dream home. Fifteen years later, their two children were born.
Ian has never revealed their names or ages in any interview and wishes them to remain anonymous. I spent a fair amount of time away from home because of work but she just got on with it. She had children, a horse, dogs — I can't imagine how she managed to cope with them all and do a job.
But she did. There is no history of ovarian cancer in her family. That November she'd had a bit of abdominal pain and said she felt tired, but that was all. She had a scan and they thought she might have an ovarian cyst but there wasn't any panic. Ovarian cancer is known as 'the silent killer' but in fact it 'whispers'. There are symptoms such as bloating, loss of appetite, abdominal pain and tiredness which together may point towards it. The news that she had stage 3 ovarian cancer arrived on New Year's Eve — a Monday — and she was transferred to Manchester's Christie Hospital.
After tests, she underwent a full hysterectomy and tissue was sent off for biopsies. Ovarian cancer is one of the most common cancers in women, with almost 7, new cases a year in the UK. And with 4, deaths a year — 11 a day — it is the deadliest gynaecological cancer. It is called 'the silent killer' because its symptoms can easily be mistaken for those of less serious conditions such as irritable bowel syndrome, especially in the early stages. For more than two decades, she was a key part of one of the most watched regional news programmes in the country.
This article is more than 2 years old. Photograph: BBC. Oxberry had two children with her husband Ian Hindle, a camera operator. Topics BBC news. She had endless energy and a can-do attitude, a fervent pragmatist who was full of fun and quite simply… an irreplaceable loss.
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