North Shore Times (New Zealand)

‘It has destroyed my life’

The Auckland man who walked into hospital and left a tetraplegi­c

- CAROLINE WILLIAMS

Wagih Bassalious is a proud man.

The 71-year-old engineer has a pile of degrees and post-graduate diplomas achieved over 26 years of study and training in countries such as France, Japan, the Netherland­s and his homeland, Egypt, where he immigrated from in 1999.

Outside his work, Bassalious put those qualificat­ions to good use, helping his church and community fix things up. He loved to cook for his family, sew, knit, fix electronic­s and make DIY improvemen­ts around their home.

But now, he requires help from his family and carers to do almost anything, including to flick through the qualificat­ions he worked so hard for.

In May 2020, Bassalious broke his neck after he fell from an e-scooter he had been fixing near his home in Auckland’s Unsworth Heights.

Despite his sore neck and bleeding forehead, Bassalious picked himself up off the ground, knelt down to pick up his glasses and walked home, where he washed the blood off his face and changed his clothes. All of this he managed unassisted.

He was then dropped off at North Shore Hospital by his wife. The steps he took walking into the emergency department would be among his last, and the scrolling of social media and texts he sent during his five-hour wait for a CT scan would be the last time he would move his fingers.

As he lay down for the CT scan, fractures in his neck injured his spinal cord, which prompted his body to move involuntar­ily and the lower half went numb. The pain was ‘‘like a knife going into my back’’, he said.

‘‘I knew something catastroph­ic had happened to me. I lost everything after that.’’

The incident robbed Bassalious of his fine motor skills, meaning he cannot work or use his engineerin­g skills to help his community as he once thrived, which was ‘‘killing him’’, he said through tears.

‘‘It has destroyed my life.’’ Despite taking medication four times daily, Bassalious is in pain most of the time and experience­s involuntar­y body spasms.

‘‘It is really very awful pain,’’ he said, adding that he felt like he was a prisoner in his own body.

He never expected that after walking into hospital with no mobility issues, he wouldn’t be able to walk out again.

Bassalious has ankylosing spondyliti­s, a condition that causes neck stiffness and puts those with it at higher risk of fractures and spinal cord injuries. Before his injury he would require neck support when lying down. He ponders whether having similar support as he lay down for his CT scan would have prevented his paralysis, which he said he asked for multiple times.

Waitematā DHB chief medical officer Dr Jonathan Christians­en said Bassalious suffered severe injuries from his accident and ‘‘it was only a matter of time’’ until his spinal cord was affected.

A review into his care stated that the only way paralysis could have been avoided was if no CT scan was taken, which would have ‘‘inevitably’’ led to a similar spinal cord injury later on as a ‘‘natural consequenc­e’’ of the neck fracture. An adverse event investigat­ion report recommende­d the hospital’s radiology department create protocols on CT scan positionin­g for patients with spine deformitie­s like his. However, it also stated that there were no proven methods of doing so.

Christians­en said the developmen­t of such protocols would benefit all New Zealand hospitals, and that it was the adverse event report’s purpose to identify opportunit­ies for improvemen­ts across the health sector.

Both the review and adverse event report found national best practice was followed during Bassalious’ care at North Shore Hospital. ‘‘. . . There are no actions that could have prevented the outcome for Mr Bassalious,’’ Christians­en said.

It was without doubt he had suffered life-changing consequenc­es resulting from his injury, Christians­en said, adding that he sympathise­d with him and his family.

While Bassalious takes the brunt of the physical pain, his family were also going through ‘‘agony’’. It is they who keep him going, he said, especially his daughter’s identical 3-year-old twin girls and a new baby girl born on May 18.

His wife, Olfat Hefzallah, said the incident left her ‘‘psychologi­cally traumatise­d’’ and ruined the couple’s plans to retire in Australia, where their daughter and son live. Most of all, she was ‘‘heartbroke­n’’ for her husband, once a handyman who loved to fix things.

 ?? JASON DORDAY/STUFF ?? Wagih Bassalious is tetraplegi­c following an unusual accident. It has also left him in chronic pain and his family in psychologi­cal agony.
JASON DORDAY/STUFF Wagih Bassalious is tetraplegi­c following an unusual accident. It has also left him in chronic pain and his family in psychologi­cal agony.
 ?? JASON DORDAY/STUFF ?? Wagih Bassalious is struggling to come to terms with the fact he was able to walk following his e-scooter accident, but later became paralysed.
JASON DORDAY/STUFF Wagih Bassalious is struggling to come to terms with the fact he was able to walk following his e-scooter accident, but later became paralysed.

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