Miranda Hart and Justin Bieber suffer from it: What you need to know about Lyme disease

Hollywood star Alec Baldwin said he feared he would die when he was diagnosed with Lyme disease

Kerri-Ann Roper
Wednesday 09 October 2024 05:31 EDT
Miranda Hart at the signing of her new book, The Best of Miranda, at Waterstones bookshop in Piccadilly, London
Miranda Hart at the signing of her new book, The Best of Miranda, at Waterstones bookshop in Piccadilly, London (PA)

Your support helps us to tell the story

Our mission is to deliver unbiased, fact-based reporting that holds power to account and exposes the truth.

Whether $5 or $50, every contribution counts.

Support us to deliver journalism without an agenda.

Louise Thomas

Louise Thomas

Editor

British actor Miranda Hart has revealed that she was left bedbound by Lyme disease.

In her new book, I Haven’t Been Entirely Honest With You, Hart, 51, opens up about health challenges, including chronic fatigue caused by Lyme disease. “It’s been a tough few years,” she said.

She has now joined other high profile sufferers such as Avril Lavigne, Justin Bieber, model Bella Hadid and US actor Alec Baldwin who have also spoken out.

Lyme disease is a bacterial infection often associated with walkers or ramblers. It is something you might have been warned about when running through the woods as a child. It is estimated there are 2,000 to 3,000 new cases of Lyme disease in England and Wales each year.

The debilitating illness is spread to humans by infected ticks and symptoms can include headaches, muscle and joint pain, tiredness and loss of energy.

Miranda on The Graham Norton Show
Miranda on The Graham Norton Show (PA Archive)

The infection is spread to humans if they are bitten by an infected tick. The tiny spider-like creatures are found in woodland and heath areas throughout the UK and in other parts of Europe and North America.

Not everyone who gets bitten by a tick will be infected with Lyme disease as only a small proportion carry the bacteria which causes the condition. A tick bite can only cause Lyme disease in humans if the tick has already bitten an infected animal.

What are the symptoms of Lyme disease?

Many people with early symptoms of Lyme disease develop a circular red skin rash around a tick bite, often described as looking like a bullseye on a dart board. The rash can appear up to three months after being bitten and usually lasts for several weeks. Most rashes appear within the first four weeks after being bitten.

Not everyone will get a rash, and some will experience flu-like symptoms in the early stages, such as a high temperature, or feeling hot and shivery, as well as headaches, muscle and joint pain, tiredness and loss of energy.

A female tick
A female tick

Lyme disease may be difficult to diagnose as people can have common and unspecific symptoms, like a headache or fever, and they may not notice or remember a tick bite. But if left untreated it can lead to conditions such as meningitis or heart failure.

How is it Lyme disease diagnosed and treated?

Anyone who thinks they may have Lyme disease should visit their GP, who can carry out two types of blood test to help confirm or rule it out.

If confirmed, patients will be prescribed a three-week course of antibiotics. Most people will get better, although this can take several months. A small proportion will continue to have symptoms, such as tiredness, aches and loss of energy, which can last for several years.

What precautions can be taken to prevent it?

The South of England and the Scottish Highlands have been earmarked as high risk areas for Lyme disease. Exmoor, the New Forest and other rural areas of Hampshire, the South Downs, parts of Wiltshire and Berkshire, parts of Surrey and West Sussex, Thetford Forest in Norfolk, the Lake District, the North York Moors and the Scottish Highlands are all known to have a particularly high population of ticks.

Covering up bare skin while walking outdoors, using insect repellent, staying on paths whenever possible, and wearing light-coloured clothing so ticks are easier to spot and brush off are all ways to reduce the risk of being bitten.

What have celebrities said about it?

Justin Bieber is just one of many famous faces to have gone public with a Lyme disease diagnosis.

His fellow Canadian singer Avril Lavigne revealed in 2015 she had been battling the condition for a year and said she was bedridden for five months.

Justin Bieber is another famous face to suffer from Lyme disease
Justin Bieber is another famous face to suffer from Lyme disease (PA Archive)

Shania Twain has told how the disease left her unable to sing after she was bitten by a tick in 2003 while in the US.

Hollywood star Alec Baldwin said he feared he would die when he was diagnosed with the illness.

Perhaps the most vocal campaigner trying to raise awareness of Lyme disease is the Dutch former model Yolanda Hadid, who said the illness has left her “often wishing to die of utter hopelessness and exhaustion”.

Hadid’s children, the models Bella and Anwar, are also said to suffer from the condition.

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in