
Atomic Kitten's Natasha Hamilton reveals skin cancer diagnosis
Atomic Kitten singer Natasha Hamilton has revealed she was diagnosed with skin cancer, saying she initially thought it was a "mosquito bite".
The 42-year-old said she received the diagnosis last year after feeling an itch on her back following a holiday in Majorca while speaking on Good Morning Britain.
She said: "I'd been on holiday, and I wasn't actually in the sun a lot, because my baby was only about five months old, and I was breastfeeding.
"And one afternoon I had her on my lap, and my back was in the sun and I burnt, and I don't know whether it was later that day or the next day, I had, like an itchy spot on my back, and I just thought it was a mosquito bite.
"Didn't think nothing, you don't get to look at your back very often, do you? It's tucked away.
"I felt it and went, 'oh, mosquito bite', it wasn't until maybe four weeks later, when I was at home and it was itching, and I was like, hang on a minute that seems a bit long for a mosquito bite.
"I asked my husband to have a look, and he went, 'oh, that's not a bite', and he took the picture, and when I looked at it, I went, 'okay, I think I know what that is'.
"Originally it had just been a dark freckle that I'd had on my back for many years, it wasn't raised, it wasn't a mole, it was just a freckle."
Hamilton went on to say she was later diagnosed with a "basal-cell carcinoma", and added that she thought her use of sunbeds during her early days in the girl group in the late 1990s and early 2000s could have contributed.
She added: "People of my age will probably feel the same, or remember, if you were going on a night out you used a sunbed because you wanted that sunkissed look to make yourself feel good and give you a bit of confidence.
"If I was going to do something like Top Of The Pops or a big TV show, I'd want my look sunkissed, so we would go to the sunbeds.
"There was a sunbed shop based in the hotel that we stayed in all the time in London, and I'd use tan accelerators, and I can honestly say I don't think there was ever a time when I went on a sunbed that I didn't burn.
"Looking back now, because I'm type one skin anyway, I'm not supposed to be in such intense sun."
Hamilton's mother Maria was diagnosed with the same type of cancer after Hamilton noticed a mark on her face, and urged her to get it checked.
She said her mother was initially told by doctors that the patch of skin was "nothing", before she urged her to ask to be referred to a dermatologist a year later, who told her it was skin cancer "straight away", before arranging for her to have them removed.
Speaking in 2022, the singer, who has four children, said she had changed her lifestyle to lower the risk of increasing her chances of skin cancer following her mother's diagnosis.
As part of Atomic Kitten alongside Kerry Katona and Liz McClarnon, before Katona was later replaced by Jenny Frost, Hamilton scored 13 UK top 10 singles and four UK top 10 albums – they are best known for the songs Whole Again and Eternal Flame.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


RTÉ News
09-06-2025
- RTÉ News
TV doctor Hilary Jones says assisted dying for terminally ill is 'kind and compassionate'
British TV doctor Hilary Jones has described assisted dying for the terminally ill as "kind and compassionate", adding that he would help a patient to end their life if the law was changed. The GP, often seen on Good Morning Britain and the Lorraine show, said medicine will go "back to the Dark Ages" if proposed legislation being considered at Britain's Westminster is voted down. The Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill will return to the House of Commons for debate on Friday, with MPs expected to consider further amendments. In its current form the Bill, which applies only to England and Wales, would mean terminally ill adults with only six months left to live could apply for assistance to end their lives, with approval needed from two doctors and the expert panel. Last month, MPs approved a change in the Bill to ensure no medics would be obliged to take part in assisted dying. Doctors already had an opt-out but the new clause extends that to anyone, including pharmacists and social care workers. Dr Jones said medics are "looking over their shoulders because of the legal repercussions of the law" as it stands. Encouraging or assisting suicide is currently against the law in England and Wales, with a maximum jail sentence of 14 years. Asked about the significance if the law does change, Dr Jones told PA: "It will relieve healthcare professionals who deal with terminal illness. "There are wonderful people who are caring and compassionate, who just live in fear of their actions being misinterpreted, of being accused of wrongdoing, and because of that fear, people at the end of life are often undertreated. "People are looking over their shoulder because of the medications they're using or the doses they're using, it means that patients aren't getting the best palliative care that they could have. "And I think the Bill, if it passes, will alleviate a great deal of that, and put people's minds at rest that they're not going to suffer unnecessarily at the end of life." Ahead of last month's Commons debate on the Bill, two royal medical colleges raised concerns over the proposed legislation. The Royal College of Physicians (RCP) said it believes there are "concerning deficiencies", while the Royal College of Psychiatrists (RCPsych) said it has "serious concerns" and cannot support the Bill. Dr Jones, who has been practising medicine for more than 45 years and spent time working on cancer wards during his career, said he has "always supported it (assisted dying)". He added: "I've always felt it is the most humane, kind and compassionate thing that relatives and doctors can provide, knowing that that person's wishes are respected and known, that there is full mental capacity and that they're surrounded by love. "And for me, it's always been very clear." Asked if, were the law to change, he would be content to help someone who had chosen assisted dying at the end of their life, he said: "Absolutely, if I know the patient, I know what their wishes are, I see them suffering, and there's nothing more I can do to help their suffering then, absolutely, I would hold their hand and help them achieve what they want to achieve." Some of the Bill's opponents have urged MPs to focus on improving end-of-life care rather than legislating for assisted dying. But Dr Jones said his mother, who was a nurse and died "suffering unnecessarily" despite the "best possible palliative care" would be "proud of me speaking on this subject now, in the way I am". He told of his respect for people's "religious beliefs, cultural beliefs and personal feelings" in being opposed to assisted dying but insisted it should be an area of choice. He said: "The bottom line is that I think it's the patient's individual choice. I think we should respect the right of the individual to choose what they want. "This is not a mandatory thing. This is not being imposed on anybody. "And I think people should have the individual right to make a decision about how they end their life if they've got a terminal illness where there's no prospect of cure and they're suffering and they fear an undignified death." Asked about the prospect of the Bill being voted down by MPs, Dr Jones said: "We would be back to square one, back to the Dark Ages, in my opinion, medically, and that would be a shame. "I don't think we would be advancing medicine if the Bill is not passed."


Irish Independent
09-06-2025
- Irish Independent
TV doctor Hilary Jones says he would help terminally ill to die if law changed
©Press Association Today at 19:01 TV doctor Hilary Jones has described assisted dying for the terminally ill as 'kind and compassionate', adding that he would help a patient to end their life if the law was changed. The GP, often seen on ITV's Good Morning Britain and the Lorraine show, said medicine will go 'back to the Dark Ages' if proposed legislation being considered at Westminster is voted down. The Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill will return to the House of Commons for debate on Friday, with MPs expected to consider further amendments. If I know the patient, I know what their wishes are, I see them suffering, and there's nothing more I can do to help their suffering then, absolutely, I would hold their hand and help them achieve what they want to achieve Dr Hilary Jones In its current form the Bill, which applies only to England and Wales, would mean terminally ill adults with only six months left to live could apply for assistance to end their lives, with approval needed from two doctors and the expert panel. Last month, MPs approved a change in the Bill to ensure no medics would be obliged to take part in assisted dying. Doctors already had an opt-out but the new clause extends that to anyone, including pharmacists and social care workers. Dr Jones, in an interview with the PA news agency, said medics are 'looking over their shoulders because of the legal repercussions of the law' as it stands. Encouraging or assisting suicide is currently against the law in England and Wales, with a maximum jail sentence of 14 years. Asked about the significance if the law does change, Dr Jones told PA: 'It will relieve healthcare professionals who deal with terminal illness. 'There are wonderful people who are caring and compassionate, who just live in fear of their actions being misinterpreted, of being accused of wrongdoing, and because of that fear, people at the end of life are often undertreated. 'People are looking over their shoulder because of the medications they're using or the doses they're using, it means that patients aren't getting the best palliative care that they could have. ADVERTISEMENT 'And I think the Bill, if it passes, will alleviate a great deal of that, and put people's minds at rest that they're not going to suffer unnecessarily at the end of life.' Ahead of last month's Commons debate on the Bill, two royal medical colleges raised concerns over the proposed legislation. The Royal College of Physicians (RCP) said it believes there are 'concerning deficiencies', while the Royal College of Psychiatrists (RCPsych) said it has 'serious concerns' and cannot support the Bill. Dr Jones, who has been practising medicine for more than 45 years and spent time working on cancer wards during his career, said he has 'always supported it (assisted dying)'. He added: 'I've always felt it is the most humane, kind and compassionate thing that relatives and doctors can provide, knowing that that person's wishes are respected and known, that there is full mental capacity and that they're surrounded by love. 'And for me, it's always been very clear.' Asked if, were the law to change, he would be content to help someone who had chosen assisted dying at the end of their life, he said: 'Absolutely, if I know the patient, I know what their wishes are, I see them suffering, and there's nothing more I can do to help their suffering then, absolutely, I would hold their hand and help them achieve what they want to achieve.' Some of the Bill's opponents have urged MPs to focus on improving end-of-life care rather than legislating for assisted dying. But Dr Jones said his mother, who was a nurse and died 'suffering unnecessarily' despite the 'best possible palliative care' would be 'proud of me speaking on this subject now, in the way I am'. The bottom line is that I think it's the patient's individual choice. I think we should respect the right of the individual to choose what they want. This is not a mandatory thing. This is not being imposed on anybody Dr Hilary Jones He told of his respect for people's 'religious beliefs, cultural beliefs and personal feelings' in being opposed to assisted dying but insisted it should be an area of choice. He said: 'The bottom line is that I think it's the patient's individual choice. I think we should respect the right of the individual to choose what they want. 'This is not a mandatory thing. This is not being imposed on anybody. 'And I think people should have the individual right to make a decision about how they end their life if they've got a terminal illness where there's no prospect of cure and they're suffering and they fear an undignified death.' Asked about the prospect of the Bill being voted down by MPs, Dr Jones said: 'We would be back to square one, back to the Dark Ages, in my opinion, medically, and that would be a shame. 'I don't think we would be advancing medicine if the Bill is not passed.' Our Duty Of Care, a group of healthcare professionals campaigning against a change in the law, said the question must be whether someone is making a 'true choice' if they apply for assisted dying. Dr Gillian Wright, a spokesperson for the group, said: 'If someone has not had access to palliative care, psychological support or social care, then are they making a true choice?' 'At a time when the NHS is on its knees, when palliative are social care are struggling and our amazing hospices are having to close beds and cut services because of lack of money, as someone who has cared for people at the end of life, I would urge MPs to vote against this Bill but instead invest in excellent specialist palliative care, social care and psychological support.'


Irish Examiner
06-06-2025
- Irish Examiner
Atomic Kitten's Natasha Hamilton reveals skin cancer diagnosis
Atomic Kitten singer Natasha Hamilton has revealed she was diagnosed with skin cancer, saying she initially thought it was a 'mosquito bite'. The 42-year-old said she received the diagnosis last year after feeling an itch on her back following a holiday in Majorca while speaking on Good Morning Britain. She said: 'I'd been on holiday, and I wasn't actually in the sun a lot, because my baby was only about five months old, and I was breastfeeding. 'And one afternoon I had her on my lap, and my back was in the sun and I burnt, and I don't know whether it was later that day or the next day, I had, like an itchy spot on my back, and I just thought it was a mosquito bite. 'Didn't think nothing, you don't get to look at your back very often, do you? It's tucked away. 'I felt it and went, 'oh, mosquito bite', it wasn't until maybe four weeks later, when I was at home and it was itching, and I was like, hang on a minute that seems a bit long for a mosquito bite. 'I asked my husband to have a look, and he went, 'oh, that's not a bite', and he took the picture, and when I looked at it, I went, 'okay, I think I know what that is'. 'Originally it had just been a dark freckle that I'd had on my back for many years, it wasn't raised, it wasn't a mole, it was just a freckle.' "Were you using sunbeds a lot?" Atomic Kitten singer Natasha Hamilton says she had a 'massive wake up call' after she was diagnosed with skin cancer. In 2024, Natasha found this suspicious mole on her back, which was subsequently diagnosed as what's called a 'basal-cell… — Good Morning Britain (@GMB) June 6, 2025 Hamilton went on to say she was later diagnosed with a 'basal-cell carcinoma', and added that she thought her use of sunbeds during her early days in the girl group in the late 1990s and early 2000s could have contributed. She added: 'People of my age will probably feel the same, or remember, if you were going on a night out you used a sunbed because you wanted that sunkissed look to make yourself feel good and give you a bit of confidence. 'If I was going to do something like Top Of The Pops or a big TV show, I'd want my look sunkissed, so we would go to the sunbeds. 'There was a sunbed shop based in the hotel that we stayed in all the time in London, and I'd use tan accelerators, and I can honestly say I don't think there was ever a time when I went on a sunbed that I didn't burn. 'Looking back now, because I'm type one skin anyway, I'm not supposed to be in such intense sun.' Hamilton's mother Maria was diagnosed with the same type of cancer after Hamilton noticed a mark on her face, and urged her to get it checked. She said her mother was initially told by doctors that the patch of skin was 'nothing', before she urged her to ask to be referred to a dermatologist a year later, who told her it was skin cancer 'straight away', before arranging for her to have them removed. Speaking in 2022, the singer, who has four children, said she had changed her lifestyle to lower the risk of increasing her chances of skin cancer following her mother's diagnosis. As part of Atomic Kitten alongside Kerry Katona and Liz McClarnon, before Katona was later replaced by Jenny Frost, Hamilton scored 13 UK top 10 singles and four UK top 10 albums – they are best known for the songs Whole Again and Eternal Flame. Read More It's important to think about how to protect our skin from the sunshine