Martin Frizell has offered a deeply moving update on the health of his wife, beloved broadcasterĀ Fiona Phillips, revealing that the realities of her dementia diagnosis have left the couple navigating days that are āno longer good or bad ā only bad or wretched.ā
Speaking candidly onĀ NewsnightĀ during an interview with Victoria Derbyshire, the formerĀ This MorningĀ editor described how Fionaās condition has continued to worsen, particularly her short-term memory, which now fades almost instantly.
āGood days and bad days are goneā
Frizell admitted that the language he once used to track Fionaās progress no longer applies.
āI used to say we had good days and bad days,ā he reflected. āNow I say bad days or wretched days. Thatās where we are.ā
The comment captured the painful emotional toll the couple has experienced since Fiona ā a widely respected journalist and TV host ā was diagnosed with early-onset Alzheimerās in 2022 at the age of 61.

In new excerpts from their joint memoir, Fiona Phillips and husband Martin Frizell get candid about her Alzheimerās diagnosis (Picture: Leon Neal/Getty Images)
72 repeated questions in 35 minutes
Frizell recounted one particularly stark moment: a short taxi ride to a medical appointment that revealed the extent of Fionaās memory loss.
In the span of justĀ 35 minutes, Fiona asked himĀ 72 timesĀ where they were going.
āItās most days now,ā he said quietly. āHer short-term memory is shot. Completely gone.ā
He explained that Fiona often becomes confused or anxious when trying to process simple information, describing a version of his wife who is still loving, warm and present, but increasingly disconnected from reality as moments slip away faster than he can reassure her.
A couple trying to adapt ā and grieving in real time
Fiona Phillips has been open in the past about her fear of dementia, which runs in her family. Both her mother and father died after battles with Alzheimerās, and she once admitted that she worried she might follow the same path. That fear became reality in 2022 when doctors confirmed her diagnosis.
Frizell said the couple now live in a world measured minute-by-minute ā one where Fionaās vibrant career, sharp wit and tireless work ethic feel agonisingly distant.
āShe was someone who thrived on work. Someone who never stopped,ā he said. āTo see her now, confused, frightened, asking the same question again and again⦠itās heartbreaking.ā
A reminder of a national crisis
Beyond his personal grief, Frizell used the interview to highlight the challenges families across the UK face in accessing support for dementia patients ā calling the system āoverwhelmed, underfunded, and nowhere near prepared.ā
He stressed that hundreds of thousands of families are quietly fighting the same battle, often without adequate resources.
Fiona is āstill hereā ā but changed forever
Despite the grim outlook, Frizell emphasised that Fionaās personality still shines through in moments of clarity: her humour, her warmth, and flashes of the journalist Britain came to love.
āSheās still with us. Sheās still Fiona,ā he said. āBut the Fiona who could hold a conversation, remember details, organise a day⦠she slips away a little more each week.ā
As the interview closed, Frizellās voice wavered ā a man grieving the loss of the woman he loves while she is still physically beside him.