After a cryptic Instagram post declaring she had only four days left to live plunged followers into panic, Virginia Giuffre steps forward with a raw explanation that reframes the desperation many feared was her final goodbye.
On March 30, 2025, Giuffre shared a bruising hospital-bed selfie, revealing she had entered kidney renal failure following a collision with a school bus near her Australian home. “They’ve given me four days to live,” she wrote, expressing readiness to go but longing to see her children one last time. The raw vulnerability—paired with frustration over unfulfilled wishes—sparked widespread concern, amplified by her history as a prominent Epstein survivor.

Within days, her family issued a statement clarifying the post was unintended for public eyes. Giuffre had mistakenly shared it on her open Instagram instead of a private Facebook page, where she meant to update close ones about her condition. She was “overwhelmed with gratitude” for the support, they said, confirming she remained in serious condition but receiving care after the March 24 incident.
Police described the crash as minor, with the bus driver prioritizing children’s safety before reporting it. Giuffre initially went home bruised but worsened, leading to hospitalization. Her brother Sky Roberts later noted underlying health issues may have contributed, emphasizing that without prompt treatment, the prognosis could have been dire.
The episode underscored Giuffre’s ongoing struggles: estrangement from her children amid separation, compounded by lifelong trauma from Epstein’s network. Yet the clarification eased immediate fears, reframing the post not as farewell but as a private cry amid pain—one accidentally broadcast. Giuffre, a fierce advocate through her nonprofit, continued fighting, reminding supporters of survivors’ complex realities behind public strength.
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