HomeNewsOver £3,000 raised to help Burnham-On-Sea man get specialist physio treatment

Over £3,000 raised to help Burnham-On-Sea man get specialist physio treatment

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Thousands of pounds have been raised to help a Burnham-On-Sea man get vital specialist physio and hydrotherapy treatment after four years in a wheelchair following a serious accident.

Mother Alison Cox from Wedmore launched a fundraising appeal on Facebook earlier this month and has already raised over £3,100 to help raise funds for specialist physio for her son Steve.

He suffered serious head injuries during a trip to Thailand in 2014 and has been in a wheelchair ever since.

Alison explains the emotional story: “Nothing can prepare you for a phone call like the one I received on 23, December 2014. It was from my son’s girlfriend in Thailand to say my son Steve had been found unconscious at 2am on the side of the road with severe head injuries.”

“My son had gone out for an evening in a local bar in Thailand and didn’t return home. He was found on the side of the road by an ambulance going to another shout. He had a fractured skull and severe brain damage. Nobody called an ambulance for my son, we think he was lying there for nearly three hours before being discovered.”

“Straight away, we had to organise a private medi plane to fly Steve from where he had been found in the coastal village of Krabi to Bangkok where he could get treatment. We also had to find three seats on a plane to Bangkok on Christmas Eve with less than 24 hours’ notice.”

“After two and a half weeks, Steve was still in a coma in Bangkok but the hospital gave the go-ahead for us to fly him back home to the UK where he could receive continuing care. On 9 January 2015, we arrived back in the UK with my son who had remained comatose through it all.”

“The costs of the private medi jet came to £13,000, then the Bangkok hospital charges were another £20,000, and the costs to fly him home with a doctor and nurse from Thailand came to £19,000. Not surprisingly, this, along with the cost of our own flights, wiped out our savings – and forced us to borrow from friends and family.”

“After five and a half weeks hospitalised in Taunton, Steve eventually began his slow ‘wake up’. Gradually, over a period of months, he began to show signs of movement in his right side, and after six months we finally got a smile from him. Whilst that was a very special moment, he still had not uttered a single word – and hasn’t done so to this day.”

“For the first three months, I spent eight to nine hours a day by Steve’s side, travelling an hour each way to Taunton. For the following three months, I spent every other day with him, and after that I had to return to work to earn some money but continued to visit him as much as possible.”

“Steve spent a total of nine months in the brain rehabilitation unit at Musgrove and later at Dean Barton Rehab Unit in Cotford St Luke before they relocated him. Unfortunately, his progress was considered slow and we were told that he had entered a plateau stage and they were not in a position to continue his rehab because of financial constraints.”

“This caused me many sleepless nights and I really wanted him to come home, but everyone was telling me that I just wouldn’t be able to cope. I had to do what was best for Steve and listen to what those around me were saying – to let him go into a nursing home. His first day at the home was just awful; I stayed with him for seven hours and didn’t want to leave. I vowed I would find a way to give him a better life, and last September we finally managed to do that for him, moving him into Alfred Court, where he lives with three other men and their carers.”

“This has been a long, exhausting journey for Steve’s family. But at no stage have we ever stopped believing that his health would continue to improve.”

“Now, we need to raise a total of £5,000 to cover Steve’s special therapy for the next six months. Steve’s family are eternally grateful for all support.”

“Steve wants to walk, something we all take for granted, but he needs professional help, and your help. Please help by sharing as much as you can and if you can please consider giving a donation no matter how small, it all counts.”

Click here to see the fundraising page and how you can help.

 

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