Sharon Osbourne dons stylish Gucci sweater as she spends quality time with her family

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Sharon Osbourne spent quality time with her loved ones in Los Angeles on Thursday — amid husband Ozzy’s health struggles.

The TV personality, 70, looked ecstatic as she joined son Jack, 36, his fiancée Aree Gearhart, 31, their daughter Maple, three months, and Jack’s daughter from his marriage to Lisa Stelly, Minnie, four. went.

Sharon looked stylish in a pink, blue and green Gucci sweater, paired with baggy blue jeans and a Chanel handbag.

Family: Sharon Osbourne spent quality time with her loved ones in Los Angeles on Thursday – amid husband Ozzy’s health issues (pictured with son Jack, his fiancée Aree Gearhart and granddaughters Maple, three months, and Minnie, four)

Ozzy, 73, who was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease three years ago, was not at the family outing.

Sharon teamed up with chic shades and sported a radiant makeup palette.

Aree looked stylish in brown dungarees as she rocked the adorable Maple, while Jack wore a plaid shirt as he was hugged by Minnie.

Chic as ever: Sharon looked stylish in a pink, blue and green Gucci sweater, paired with baggy blue jeans and a Chanel handbag

Doting: The TV personality, 70, looked delighted as she went to visit her family for the day

The sighting comes after Sharon gave a moving account of how her life has changed since her husband Ozzy, 73, was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease three years ago.

Sharon was asked about the effect her husband’s diagnosis had on her during a candid conversation with British broadcaster Jeremy Paxman, who was diagnosed 18 months ago, in his recent documentary Paxman: Putting Up With Parkinson’s.

In the documentary, which aired Tuesday night, Jeremy met Sharon to find out what it’s like for the partner of someone who has been diagnosed.

The presenter of the University Challenge asked Sharon if it’s harder for people to care for someone with Parkinson’s than actually having the disease – something she disagreed.

Troubled times: Sharon recently gave a moving account of how her life has changed since her husband Ozzy got Parkinson’s disease in Jeremy Paxman’s ITV documentary

Health issues: 73-year-old Black Sabbath rocker Ozzy was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease in 2019 (the couple pictured in 2020)

Speaking of Ozzy, she said emotionally, “I only think about my husband, and like you, who was very energetic, loved going for walks, doing a two-hour show every night on stage, running around like a crazy man.

“Suddenly your life just stops—life as you knew it.”

“When I look at my husband, my heart breaks for him, I’m sad for myself to see him like this, but what he’s going through is worse. If I look at him and he doesn’t know, I cry.’

Jeremy also asked Sharon about the positive aspects of the illness, to which she replied, “The good thing is that we spend a lot more time together as a family and I love my husband more than I did three years ago.”

She discussed how the Black Sabbath star uses cannabidiol, known as CBD because, like Jeremy, he has disturbing dreams due to Parkinson’s, before joking that she’ll be sneaking the substance through customs out of the US.

She told Jeremy: “[Ozzy] was always on to something, he always liked to dabble with the old drugs.

“But now he takes this stuff at night. What is that stuff everyone smokes? Marijuana. It’s something of that – Cannabidiol.

‘I’ll bring you some, you’ll love it. I’ll bring it back for you, Jeremy. I’ll probably be arrested when I get through customs, but that’s nothing new.’

The former Newsnight host seized the opportunity, declaring that he’s “for it,” while Sharon insisted he should try physical therapy to get his “a**e into gear.”

WHAT IS PARKINSON’S DISEASE?

Parkinson’s disease affects one in 500 people and about 127,000 people in the UK are living with the condition.

Figures also suggest that a million Americans also suffer.

It causes muscle stiffness, slowness of movement, tremors, sleep disturbances, chronic fatigue, reduced quality of life and can lead to severe disability.

It is a progressive neurological disorder that destroys cells in the part of the brain that controls movement.

Sufferers are known to have a reduced supply of dopamine because the nerve cells that cause it have died.

There is currently no cure and no way to stop the progression of the disease, but hundreds of scientific studies are underway to try to change that.

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