The Sunday Post (Inverness)

As docs struggle to diagnose him, Aviva group refused help

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me is that I have inflammati­on in the lower part of my spine.”

Paul has had the critical illness insurance policy since 2013 and pays around £500 a year for it. Yet insurers have said that without a diagnosis, he cannot make a claim.

“I called them and described my condition,” Paul said.

“They said it wasn’t a critical illness. I was completely paralysed from the waist down for eight days and can’t walk unaided or work now. How is that

Paul and Kerrie fear they may lose their family home. not critical? I have paid the premiums every year and now I want the company to do what they promised in the sales pitch and look after me.”

Paul, who has worked since school and invested in a new van the week before he was struck down, said: “I can’t work like this. I can’t drive. I can’t kneel down and work hands-free on a job.

“I have to hold on to something. I can’t balance on roof joists or even lift my tool bag. “If I can’t work, then I can’t pay my mortgage or put food on the

table.

“My partner Kerrie works, but it doesn’t bring in nearly enough to keep the family. I don’t know what we will do. I can’t even bend down to change my baby’s nappy or to play with my kids.”

Paul – dad to Olivia, five, and Georgia, two – had been suffering with a cold on July 29 and went to the Asda store in Aberdeen’s Garthdee for a flu remedy.

He said: “I went to work as usual and at about 11am drove to Asda to get flu capsules for my sore throat and runny eyes.

“By the time I got them, I started to get cramps in my legs. I made my way back to the van but it felt like walking on the moon; I had no sense of my feet touching the ground.

“Then the pain started. It was excruciati­ng, from my back down to my toes. I felt so ill, I knew it was serious.

“I had made an appointmen­t for the GP but knew I needed to go to hospital, so I called Kerrie and she took me to Aberdeen Royal Infirmary’s Accident and Emergency department.”

Paul was seen quickly and was given an MRI scan.

“Within an hour of having that scan, I could not feel anything from my waist down,” Paul said.

“It was petrifying. I didn’t know if I would ever walk again.”

The young dad endured two painful lumbar punctures ( in which a needle is used to draw fluid from the spine); a further three MRI scans ( radiologic­al tests that look at bones, muscles and tendons); a CT scan ( which takes x- ray images of internal organs) and two nerve conduction­s ( electrical shocks used to detect nerve conditions).

Doctors initially diagnosed the rare and potentiall­y deadly Guillain- Barre syndrome, which occurs when the body’s immune

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