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I can still hold my dead sister’s hands – they’ve got a new life but I recognised them instantly, it’s such a comfort

A WOMAN has revealed the incredible moment she was able to hold her dead twin’s hands again after they were donated to an amputee.

Deborah Gosling’s sister Julie Wild died suddenly from a brain bleed in 2019, aged 51.

Corinne Hutton, a double hand transplant recipient, meets the twin sister of her donor.
This Morning/ITV
Deborah Gosling, right, can still hold her dead sister’s hands after they were donated[/caption]
Hand transplant recipient holding hands with her donor's sister.
This Morning/ITV
Quadruple amputee Corinne Hutton underwent a 12-hour surgery to have the hands attached[/caption]
Deborah Gosling, whose sister's hands were donated, on a TV show.
This Morning/ITV
Julie Wild died suddenly from a brain bleed in 2019[/caption]

Deborah, from Sheffield, and healthcare worker Julie’s twin sons – Sam and Tom – immediately agreed to donate her organs and hands to save other lives.

Paying tribute to her sister, she said: “Julie was a beautiful soul, very kind, caring, loving natured, do anything for anybody. She worked all her life in healthcare.

“She was absolutely perfect. My best friend in the whole world.”

And she reunited with the recipient of her sibling’s hands, Corinne Hutton, in emotional scenes on This Morning today.

Corinne, from Lochwinnoch, Renfrewshire, lost hers to sepsis in 2013 along with her legs.

She waited four-and-a-half years for the perfect hands to present themselves for a transplant.

Surgeons then worked tirelessly for 12 hours to attach Julie’s hands to Corinne’s body and she now has almost full feeling in them, and they have transformed her life.

“I get so excited about my hands,” said Corinne.

“I’m so proud of them, but never ever do I think of my hands without thinking of Julie and what the other family went through.”

Deborah added: “Absolutely amazing. When you die your organs and limbs are no good to you and if it can change someone’s life, evidently.”

The pair then held hands as Deborah said: “They’re still Julie’s hands to me. It’s amazing. They couldn’t have gone to anybody better.”

Visibly emotional host Cat Deeley gushed: “Until I read about this incredible story, I had no idea that there was even the medical capability to be able to do it.

“It is absolutely miraculous.”

Meanwhile, co-host Ben Shephard added: “You’re holding on to her. It’s wonderful. It’s magical.

“And Corinne, it’s lovely to see you thriving and flourishing as you always do. It’s brilliant.”

Julie Wild’s hands, pancreas, liver, and both kidneys were all donated after she died.

Her sister is now campaigning for people to opt-in for limb donation.

Corinne Hutton, a double hand transplant recipient, meets her donor's twin sister on a morning show.
This Morning/ITV
Deborah and Corinne held hands as they appeared on This Morning[/caption]
Woman sitting on a couch, looking pensive.
ITV
Cat Deeley was visibly emotional over the story[/caption]

She said: “To give somebody a chance of enhancing their life is absolutely incredible. I didn’t hesitate. Julie didn’t need them any more but someone else did.

“I always wanted to meet Corinne and I will always keep in touch.

“It’s hard to describe but it’s quite comforting to know someone has got her hands, that part of her lives on in a way.

“I couldn’t take my eyes off them when we met.”

Corinne added: “I was hopeful that, for Deborah, holding the hands and touching and seeing them would give them some light after an otherwise dark situation.”

She now has about 95% function in her right hand and about 75% in her left hand.

“The difference the transplant has made has been absolutely life-changing,” she said.

“I’m so grateful to Julie and her family. I’ll never forget that I am lucky and I will never forget where they’ve come from. And hopefully I will give them a good life.”

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St Patrick’s Athletic ace Breslin warns League of Ireland rivals about what’s yet to come this season

ANTO BRESLIN has warned St Pat’s rivals that they are top of the table without hitting top gear.

The Saints scored twice in the last three minutes to defeat Waterford 2-1 last Friday and take top spot from Drogheda United who were held by Cork City.

Given they won their final nine games of 2024 to climb from seventh to third, the sight of Stephen Kenny’s side setting the pace this year may not come as a surprise.

But the Saints have already lost two — to Galway United and Shamrock Rovers — of their first seven matches.

And, ahead of defending champions Shelbourne’s visit to Richmond Park on Friday, Breslin, 28, admitted that they have not yet hit their stride.

He said: “Our performance Friday wasn’t good enough, we started really slow and it’s very unlike us.

“Our performances have been quite good, but not as good as the end of last year.

“We’ve had a few lads come into the team and they are still adapting to the way we want to play.

“We haven’t been playing well but it is a good thing if you’re not playing really, really well and still winning games, we’ll take it.”

The left-back admitted that they had been left in no doubt that their display at the RSC was not up to scratch.

Breslin said: “Stephen Kenny, he demands high standards in everything he does and definitely he wasn’t happy with the performance.

“At half-time he let us know about it for sure. After the game and scoring the 90th-minute winner, you’re not dissecting the game, you’re still high after winning a game that you probably weren’t great in for 80 minutes.

“But then we come in Monday morning and analyse and work on things we could have done better, and what we will do better going forward.”

And Breslin does expect it to be difficult for any team to build up a head of steam because of the increased competitiveness of the Premier Division.

He said: “I think it will be like this all year. It’s a mad league.

“Everyone is taking points off each other and I think that will continue for the year.

“Whoever, I suppose, can be the most consistent and can bounce back from when they do have a bad defeat will probably go on to win the league.

“I don’t think there’s going to be a team that is going to completely run away with it.

“The standard is really good, all the teams are playing well and have really good players from all over the world so it’s going to be an exciting league.”

It is a far cry from his first introduction to the League of Ireland when he signed for Longford Town ahead of the 2019 season having been released by Wolves the previous summer.

3 March 2025; Anto Breslin of St Patrick's Athletic before the SSE Airtricity Men's Premier Division match between St Patrick's Athletic and Derry City at Richmond Park in Dublin. Photo by Stephen McCarthy/Sportsfile
He feels it’ll be a highly unpredictable league from start to finish

Breslin recalled: “It was difficult because you come in from a full-time, Premier League set-up to part-time at Longford. I found it quite hard.

“But you just want to get back playing. I had stopped a while, a few months, and I was just buzzing to get back.

“It was just the way the season fell. We finished up in June, there was no point in me going in for five or six games.

“I said I’d rather go in straight away in pre-season so, no, there was never a thought of not coming back.

“I wanted to get my foot on the ladder again, getting back into the League of Ireland, getting my name out there because I wouldn’t say when I first came back that many people knew who I was.”

He made an instant impression, being named in the PFA Ireland First Division Team of the Year and earning a move to Bohs, for whom he shone in Europe and helped reach an FAI Cup final in 2021.

They were defeated on penalties by St Pat’s who completed the signing of Breslin shortly afterwards.

When the clubs met again in the 2023 decider, he was on the winning side.

The defender said: “I was always confident in my ability. I knew if I had a good run of games and got fit I’d get to this level.

“I suppose when I came into the league it was starting to really grow and it’s a great time to be part of the league with everything that is going on.

“On and off the pitch, it seems to be going really well.”

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