BBC Breakfast star devastates fans with 'incurable' condition that will 'never get better'
The TV star is aiming to raise awareness of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), a group of lung conditions

Strictly Come Dancing judge Shirley Ballas has opened up about her mother's health condition on BBC Breakfast. The 65-year-old said her mother’s lung condition, which causes her to choke and struggle to breathe, is “really quite scary”. The dancer said her mother, who she said had smoked since childhood, had been “suffering for many years” before her diagnosis, after which Shirley said doctors told her that if her mother ever caught the flu, she risked being “really poorly”, potentially escalating to pneumonia. She also said she will speak to MPs in Parliament to raise awareness of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), a group of lung conditions that cause breathing difficulties, after her mother, Audrey, was diagnosed with it in 2022.
She told BBC Breakfast: “I don’t want anyone to witness the things I’ve witnessed, when you sit opposite somebody who’s choking and cannot open the airways to breathe, it’s really, really quite scary.”
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'We need to help people that may be struggling to get the right care'
— BBC Breakfast (@BBCBreakfast) November 18, 2025
Strictly judge Shirley Ballas spoke to #BBCBreakfast about a rise in people needing hospital treatment for asthma or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and the challenged faced by her mother Audrey Rich… pic.twitter.com/bZyiELlDkR
Shirley said the diagnosis led her to work with pharmaceutical company Sanofi’s Breathe Equal campaign to raise awareness of issues related to respiratory conditions.
The BBC judge added: “I’ve witnessed a choking, I’ve been out with her when she’s out of breath, and of course, she lives with me, and it’s… it’s quite sad, it’s debilitating, and also it’s never going to get any better.
“So it’s about finding a way to help her care for that, and, of course, keeping us safe from any of the flus that are going around.
“I’d also like to see that in certain deprived areas that everybody you know has that opportunity to be able to get care…
“I just want to get that word out generally to everybody, if you’re feeling unwell, or coughing or not feeling the best, to go and try to see the doctor and get diagnosed.”
The NHS says COPD mainly affects middle-aged or older people who smoke, with many sufferers not realising they have the condition.