Family's heartbreak as woman goes on birthday night out and never wakes up
www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk
Joanne Barker had been out for a meal to celebrate her 53rd birthday in July when she died suddenly. She appeared “well” with “nothing wrong” after a “lovely” evening but became unresponsive that night and died in hospital the next day.
Doctors identified a brain aneurysm - a type of bulge in the artery wall - as to blame, having resulted in a fatal haemorrhage. Her family were unaware of any symptoms prior to her death, and say Joanne appeared fit and healthy.
READ MORE: The pretty village which turned down the chance to become part of Greater Manchester
She walked her dog three times a day and was on no medication, the Liverpool ECHO reports.
Joanne, from Runcorn, worked in admin and sales for an engineering firm and was mother to Neve Hayter, 22, and Lee Barker 29. Neve said her mother’s nature was to “always put others before herself”.
That kind outlook continued beyond life due to her being registered for organ donation, with her heart donated to a woman in her 60s in need of an “urgent transplant”, while her kidneys went to two men in their 30s, potentially saving three lives in all.
Joanne’s family hope sharing their experience will encourage others who may have any early warning symptoms of a possible aneurysm to seek medical help.
Neve said: “We feel there’s not enough awareness. None of us knew she had an aneurysm and none of us knew what it’s like, it was like ‘where the hell has this come from? It’s important.
“My mum had no past medical history, she took no tablets, she walked the dog three times a day.”
Neve, a trainee nurse, said aneurysm symptoms can be difficult to spot as they can overlap with other conditions, such as “feeling under the weather”.
Others can be more pronounced, such as visual disturbance, pain near the eye, weakness or numbness on one side of the face, loss of balance, difficulty speaking, and headaches.
Neve said: “If you have persistent headaches push for an MRI or be referred to The Walton Centre. Don’t sit there and be fobbed off with painkillers. We’ve all been referred to The Walton Centre now.”
Outlining the motivation for raising awareness, she said: “Even if someone just had a scan, it could potentially save someone’s life, even if it’s one person.”
Remembering her mum during life, Neve said: “She put everyone else before herself, and she had a heart of gold, and for her funeral we took donations for Mind because she tried to help a lot of people with mental health, she’s done a lot for them.”