Esther Rantzen’s daughter admits assisted dying prosecution fear as family face ’scanxiety’
GB NEWS

Rebecca Wilcox joined Nana Akua on GB News to discuss her mother's diagnosis
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Rebecca Wilcox has opened up about the emotional toll of her mother Dame Esther Rantzen's terminal cancer diagnosis, describing a state of "scanxiety" that grips the family between medical appointments.
Speaking to GB News, Ms Wilcox explained how they exist in a cycle of anticipation, moving from one scan to the next while monitoring the progression of the 85-year-old broadcaster's lung cancer.
The family has benefited from medical advancements that have extended Dame Esther's life beyond initial expectations following her 2023 diagnosis.
However, Ms Wilcox acknowledged that her mother is now making contingency plans should upcoming test results indicate the disease is advancing rapidly, which would create complications if she remains in the UK.
Rebecca Wilcox explained her mother's predicament
|PA / GB NEWS
The financial and legal barriers surrounding assisted dying abroad have become painfully clear for the Rantzen family.
Ms Wilcox revealed that traveling to Dignitas would require a payment of £15,000, an amount she acknowledged represents a significant privilege not available to many families facing similar circumstances.
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More troubling than the financial burden are the legal implications that would prevent family members from accompanying Dame Esther on such a journey.
"We would very likely face prosecution for assisting her death," Ms Wilcox told GB News, explaining why her mother would need to travel alone to Switzerland.
Ms Wilcox joined Nana Akua on GB News
|GB NEWS
The broadcaster's daughter emphasized that neither she nor her siblings could accompany their mother, and Dame Esther has decided against allowing her grandchildren to make the trip due to potential legal consequences.
Dame Esther has been making concrete arrangements for a potential journey to Dignitas, revealing in a pre-recorded conversation with Kate Garraway on Good Morning Britain that she would need to travel to Zurich unaccompanied.
"I'm making arrangements because it's the only way I can have an assisted death, to go by myself to Zurich, to Dignitas," she stated.
The Childline founder expressed deep sadness about the isolation this would entail, saying: "I just wish that I was allowed to say goodbye to my family and for them to see that I have a good death."
She clarified that while she doesn't fear death itself, she is "afraid of dying badly" and wants to avoid a painful end.
Her daughter described the stark contrast between her mother's desired "fairytale death" surrounded by loved ones and the reality of dying alone in an unfamiliar place.
Ms Wilcox voiced strong support for reforming UK legislation, pointing to Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer's commitment to changing the law. "It's just horribly messy and that's why Sir Keir Starmer promised a change in the law," she told GB News.
The Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill, which passed the House of Commons in June, underwent debate in the House of Lords on Friday. The proposed legislation would permit terminally ill adults over 18 with less than six months to live to end their lives, subject to approval from two doctors and an expert panel.
Dame Esther issued a direct appeal to peers: "Please, House of Lords, give us terminally ill patients the hope, the confidence, the choice that if life gets unbearable, they can ask for help."