Helen Flanagan poses in plunging yellow dress during family Easter celebrations after revealing secret health battle

HELEN Flanagan looked incredible as she posed in a plunging yellow dress during her family Easter celebrations.
The 33-year-old revealed it was a day of double fun for her family while posing with youngest son Charlie.
Former Coronation Street star Helen - who also shares Matilda, seven, and Delilah, five, with ex-fiance Scott Sinclair - told fans Charlie was celebrating his birthday.
Alongside the sweet snap, she wrote: "Happy Easter 🐣 it’s my little boys and nephews 3rd birthday party today."
Fans rushed to comment on the photo, with one saying: "Loving your glam."
Another said: "So beautiful." And a third added: "Wow look at you."
Helen returned to social media this week after a brief hiatus to reveal she was diagnosed with psychosis.
It came in the aftermath of her split from footballer Scott, 35, in July 2022 after 13 years together.
Helen told how it was sparked by a bad reaction to ADHD medication.
She posted online: "Basically I really struggled mental health wise December/January.
"I felt really not great in my head over Christmas and I didn’t really feel that much different when I took the kids away for new year.
"I had a lot of difficult things going on things I just can’t talk about on Instagram. I felt terrible.
"I was due on my theatre tour which I was excited about so when I came back from holiday I thought it was best for me to take some medication so I’d feel better and be able to cope better with being a working single mum of three.
"I was emotionally struggling with the break up from the father of my kids but I had a really bad reaction though to the medication (an ADHD medication) and it sent me into a psychosis for a few days which I didn’t know I was in."
She had been due to make her acting comeback in a UK tour of murder mystery play Cluedo 2, but pulled out because of medical reasons.
PSYCHOSIS is when people lose contact with reality
According to the NHS website, this might involve seeing or hearing things that other people cannot see or hear (hallucinations) and believing things that are not actually true (delusions).
It may also involve confused (disordered) thinking and speaking.
Experiencing the symptoms of psychosis is often referred to as having a psychotic episode.
Psychosis can be triggered by: a traumatic experience, stress, drug misuse, alcohol misuse, side effects of prescribed medicine, a physical condition, such as a brain tumour or dementia, ahead injury or childbirth