The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Councillor in jag plea after Covid ordeal

- CRAIG SMITH, LOCAL DEMOCRACY REPORTER

Aprominent Fife councillor has pleaded with people to get the Covid-19 vaccine after being convinced the jags saved his life.

Craig Walker, who is convener of the region’s education and children’s services sub-committee, has issued the rallying call following a harrowing 11day stint in hospital battling Covid and pneumonia as his loved ones and friends anxiously waited for news on his condition.

The 50-year-old was already at high risk having received a lifesaving kidney transplant in 2019, and had been taking immunosupp­ressants to lower the chances of his body rejecting the organ.

Despite shielding and diligently taking extra precaution­s, the SNP councillor for Glenrothes West and Kinglassie revealed he was taken into hospital on October 21 and feared on several occasions over the next week-and-ahalf that he might not make it out. “There’s no doubt in my mind that I’d be dead if I hadn’t had the vaccine,” Mr Walker insisted.

“The vaccine gave me a fighting chance as someone who is vulnerable and luckily with treatment, I’ve managed to come through it.

“But I can’t understand the mindset of those who willingly aren’t getting the jab – vaccines have been proven to work in a whole host of other areas and I am positive the vaccine saved my life.

“Covid is not a joke. “You know from watching the news that it can be serious, but you don’t really understand it until you get it.”

Mr Walker, whose wife Lynda is pregnant, went into 10 days of isolation after developing flu-like symptoms and receiving a positive PCR result, but he said he went rapidly “downhill” on the final day.

He said: “I’ve no idea how I got it because the kidney transplant meant I’ve had to shield and I’ve been pretty meticulous in terms of watching myself.

“The first part wasn’t too bad actually and just felt like a bad flu initially, but the nearer I got to the end of isolation I started to feel worse and I was eventually wheeched into hospital after phoning NHS24.”

Almost a month on, Mr Walker admits he remains “pretty rough” and has not yet returned to full strength, although doctors say that is to be expected.

He said: “It got a bit hairy in hospital and there were four or five days where things were a bit dodgy and I needed oxygen to support me.

“There was talk of having to go to the Covid unit and I was told I was getting close to the point where the use of a ventilator might have been in the equation.

“I just think that those people who are putting themselves at unnecessar­y risk need to think again.

“I can’t thank the NHS enough for pulling me through this.”

 ?? ?? HARROWING TIME: Craig Walker, 50, during the 11 days he spent in hospital.
HARROWING TIME: Craig Walker, 50, during the 11 days he spent in hospital.

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