Health

Man paralysed from neck down after falling off three-storey balcony


A man has been left paralysed from the neck down after a harrowing fall from the balcony of his three-storey flat. Callum Falconer, 26, regards it as a “miracle” to be alive following the incident where he sustained severe injuries, including a broken neck, spine, ribs, and hips.

Callum was on the balcony railing of his flat—a decision he takes responsibility for, acknowledging it was “his own fault.” Following the accident, he was urgently airlifted to the Royal London Hospital, where his fight for recovery continues. Despite his grave condition, Callum, a mechanic from Leigh-on-Sea, Essex, holds onto a determination to recover as fully as possible, grateful simply to be alive.

He has endured three weeks of hospital treatment, including a complex three-part neck surgery which involved inserting metal rods, correcting the break, and removing bone fragments. Currently, limited movement in his arms is all he has regained.

He vividly recalls the terrifying moment of the accident, saying, “I remember my neck snapping and I thought that this was it,” and “I remember I couldn’t speak, feel my arms and everything went still.”

The aftermath of the event saw him drifting into unconsciousness, eerily aware of the severity of his injury as he heard the snap and then felt an ominous absence of sensation.

The location of Callum’s neck break—a mere three millimetres below a point that doctors say would have cost him his life on the spot—highlights the narrow margin between life and death he experienced. Although he faces a possibly lengthy recovery that could span over the next two years with hopes of regaining partial body movement, Callum’s optimism doesn’t wane; he remains hopeful about his ability to make a comeback from his catastrophic injuries.

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Despite the catastrophic injuries, which could see Callum regain partial movement of his body across two years, he is remaining confident he will be able to recover.Callum is currently on the waiting list for spinal rehabilitation at the London Spinal Cord Injury Centre, Middlesex, but his care team says it could take ” to get the treatment he needs. His family has been informed that the first two years post-accident are critical for his recovery, and any lasting issues after this period are likely to be permanent.

Callum expressed his gratitude for being alive: “It is amazing I am alive, one of the amazing things is knowing I have the support of my family who are doing everything they can for me. I am just grateful that I have that breath of air, that my brain hasn’t been destroyed and that I am not dead.”

Despite the challenges, Callum tries to remain upbeat, although he admits, “It is very hard, it is so annoying when you wake up and you have an itch, the basic things you can fix if you can move. I try to stay positive, but it is lonely and upsetting, it was something so simple that changed my life and I would say never to take life for granted.”

Callum highlighted the everyday activities he misses, saying, “All those little things, everyone can go to work, everyone gets to eat and with me, I cannot, so I have to wait for that with my life.”

His twin brother Marley, 26, echoed Callum’s sentiments about the fragility of life, urging people not to take things for granted. Reflecting on Callum’s condition before the accident, Marley said, “Before the accident, Callum was quite fit, healthy and very, very independent,” and noted how difficult it has become for him to ask for help: “He found it hard to accept and ask for help. But, he’s seeing everything in a new perspective – he won’t take anything for granted again.”

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A GoFundMe page has been set up to help alleviate Connor’s financial burden and fund necessary accessibility equipment, click here to donate and find out more. 



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