Stuffed to the Rafters star Jessica Marais has been taken to a medical clinic in Sydney.
Crisis teams were called to her eastern rural areas home around noontime on Saturday following reports the 35-year-old on-screen character was in unforeseen weakness.
Two squad cars and a rescue vehicle showed up at the house before she was taken to the crisis division of the Prince of Wales Hospital in Randwick for assessment, as indicated by The Daily Telegraph.
NSW Police affirmed they helped a 35-year-old female, however gave no additional data.
"About late morning today police attached to Eastern Beaches went to a unit in Beach St to help NSW Ambulance with a 35-year-old female patient," a representative said.
Marais' delegates couldn't be gone after remark.
Different individuals allegedly saw the occurrence, with one portraying Marais as showing up "obviously troubled".
"It was extremely difficult to look as she was in a downright awful manner," the observer disclosed to The Daily Telegraph.
"They helped her down the steps before placing her on the gurney in the emergency vehicle … It was a furious scene."
Marais won the Logie for Most Popular Actress in 2018. She additionally featured in the well known TV arrangement The Wrong Girl and Love Child.
She was required to show up in a rebooted Packed to the Rafters arrangement this year, yet unexpectedly quit the creation in February refering to "individual reasons".
"Jessica Marais has chosen to step away from the new arrangement Back to the Rafters for individual reasons," an announcement from her administration read.
"She thanks everybody required on the show for their progressing backing and love, particularly her 'Beam's family', and sends them her absolute best wishes for the creation."
Marais likewise quit her job on Channel 9's Bad Mothers in the midst of worries for her wellbeing in 2018.
Marais has recently spoken about her fight with bipolar turmoil.
"There's a background marked by bipolar in my family and I was determined at one point to have bipolar. I've had subjective treatment preparing, so I decide not to be cured," she revealed to The Australian Women's Weekly in 2014.
Marais has a seven-year-old little girl, Scout.
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