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Wales Online
Wales Online
National
Ryan O'Neill

Welsh triathlete left with life-threatening injuries in bike crash

A Welsh triathlete paralysed from the neck down after falling from his bike during a race has spoken about the life-threatening injuries which led consultants to fear it was "touch or go" whether he would survive. Nathan Ford was competing in the British Triathlon Championships in Aberfeldy in Scotland last August when he came off his bike at high speed and sustained serious spinal and brain injuries.

Fortunately a doctor was also competing in the event and stopped to perform CPR and an ambulance was on the scene within minutes. The 38-year-old from Killay in Swansea was taken to intensive care at Ninewells Hospital in Scotland where he remained for four weeks before being brought back to intensive care in Cardiff.

“I don’t remember anything from the accident and I was put into a coma when I got to hospital," Nathan said. "The first part of my stay was a bit of a blur because of all the medication I was on. I remember speaking to my family but I was so heavily on morphine I do not recall much about it."

Read more: Welsh athlete in coma after suffering fractured skull and neck in bike crash

Nathan was diagnosed with two life-threatening injuries, a spinal injury and a brain injury, although the latter was not as severe as initially thought. He underwent an operation to put a metal plate in his neck which slipped, necessitating a further operation to stabilise the fractures in his neck followed by 14 weeks wearing a ‘halo’ neck brace. His journey home to Cardiff was organised through the Adult Critical Care Transfer Service (ACCTS), which launched in August last year, the Emergency Medical Retrieval and Transfer Service (EMRTS), and Wales Air Ambulance. He began his physiotherapy in Cardiff but after more than 200 days in hospital he discharged himself and has since been undergoing a programme of rehabilitation.

“A few days before I was due to come home there was a lot of planning. There were high winds and they were trying to find a suitable time with the weather," he said. "I was sedated for the journey so I do not remember any of it at all.

Nathan and his wife Catrin (Swansea Bay University Health Board)

"The first thing I remember is waking up in hospital in Scotland. The consultants were saying to my family it was touch or go whether I would survive or not. But I am making good progress although it is very small steps. Initially I was told I would barely be able to move my legs and I was told I would be on a ventilator for the rest of my life and I would not be an independent person again."

Nathan also had a tracheostomy which allowed him to breathe independently and has started taking steps with the aid of a frame as his rehabilitation continues. He said he has since been back to visit the hospital staff who looked after him, of whom he said: "I literally owe them my life."

He added: "I was also told if I had not been as fit as I was I would not have survived. I was in the best shape of my life and I’ve got the triathlon to thank for that. It has allowed me to make progress, mentally as well. Since my accident I’ve come across people in similar situations and some don’t seem to be fighting for their life but you have to remain positive.

"I've been back to the hospital to see everyone who helped me and it was emotional and humbling. They will never truly understand just how thankful I am because they were 'just doing their job. I literally owe them my life along with everyone else involved.

“And without my wife Catrin by my side there is no way I could have done what I have. I owe her everything – she is so supportive in everything I do."

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