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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
National
Kate Pounds

Car crash saves man’s life after paramedics discover meningitis infection

Nicola Welford/SWNS

A man says he believes being involved in a serious car crash saved his life – because hospital tests later showed he had meningitis.

Thomas Crook, 25, collided with a silver Mercedes Sprinter van as drove home from work along the A5 in April.

Emergency workers raced to the scene and, when he was rescued from his blue Ford Transit, paramedics noticed a very high fever.

Taken to hospital, tests revealed Mr Crook had meningitis, which doctors said could have been fatal if found later.

The HGV driver was in a coma for a week and has lost 80 per cent of his hearing because of the meningitis.

But he is battling back to health, and his family are speaking out to urge people to check out any scares right away.

Mr Crook, from Kings Norton, Birmingham, said: “It’s completely bizarre. Having a car crash probably saved my life.

“If I hadn’t been taken to hospital I wouldn’t have known I had meningitis and could have been worse off, or maybe not here at all.

“My injuries have altered my life and it will be hard to come back from this. But I am relieved to be here and so glad to be with the people I love.”

Usually fit and healthy, Mr Crook felt fine when he left home at 7am and drove to his employer’s yard on 7 April.

He then mentioned he had a slight headache when he made his regular morning call to his fiancée, Anna-Marie Sedgwick, 26, at 7.30am.

And another driver told him to phone in sick because he vomited and looked pale when he arrived to collect his haul at 8am.

So Mr Crook took a company van and set off on the 60-mile journey home, which usually takes an hour, at 8.30am.

But just over two hours later someone called 999 to report that a blue van was on its side following a crash on the A5 near Gailey Island, Stafford.

A blue Transit van involved in the crash (Courtesy of Nicola Welford/ SWNS)

The exact circumstances surrounding the crash remain unclear.

Mr Crook was rescued and taken to Royal Stoke University Hospital, where his feverish temperature alerted staff to the meningitis.

He was put on antibiotics immediately and suspicions were confirmed by a lumbar puncture later that evening.

Mr Crook’s family said they could not get hold of him initially, and were only alerted when a colleague called Ms Sedgwick because the tracker on the van stopped working.

His mother Nicola Welford, 50, said: “It was awful. We just stayed together. I was panicking, I’ve never felt like that before.

“We kept ringing and ringing his phone and speaking to the police. He always said we should only worry if he doesn’t call us himself.

“We just kept phoning all the local hospitals to see if he had been admitted. None of us even knew where he was.

“Then in hospital, we didn’t know if he would ever wake or what he would be like. It was soul-wrenching. I sobbed my heart out every night. It was unbearable.”

Thomas Crook in hospital being treated for meningitis (Nicola Welford/ SWNS)

Mr Crook was sedated at the roadside and stayed in a coma for seven days, while a CT scan showed a bleed on his brain.

He was transferred to Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Birmingham, for rehabilitation after three weeks, on 28 April.

There he was diagnosed with fluid on the brain – called hydrocephalus – which was causing poor eyesight, and a fractured vertebrae.

For weeks he was not able to see his family, and he cannot go back to his old job.

But friends have rallied round to support him and raise money for him to get equipment and manage without his normal wages.

Ms Welford, a complex care nurse, said: “This has been a really tough few months for the whole family. Tom is just devastated.

“We’ve never been able to get to the bottom of what happened to him that day. He was going in completely the opposite direction to home.

“They think he was hallucinating; they aren’t sure if he lost consciousness.

“The doctor said if someone had taken him home and he’d gone to bed he would have been in a critical state at best.

“They wouldn’t have known about the meningitis and wouldn’t have been able to keep on top of it. He would be much worse off than he is now.

“If he hadn’t had the accident he might not be alive, and we also wouldn’t know about his heart condition.

“If you aren’t sure about an illness don’t wait. We’re such a close family and I’m sure that’s what got us through this.

“We don’t know what Tom’s future will look like but he’s a fighter and we’ll be there to support him.”

Both drivers were taken to hospital following the crash, West Midlands Ambulance Service said at the time.

“When ambulance staff arrived on scene they found the driver of one van, a man, in a serious condition,” a spokesperson said.

“The team worked together to administer treatment to the man to stabilise his condition before he was conveyed, by land ambulance on blue lights, to Royal Stoke University Hospital for further specialist care.

“The driver of the second van, a man, received treatment by ambulance staff for non-life-threatening injuries before being taken to New Cross Hospital by land ambulance for further checks.”

Staffordshire Police have been approached for more information on the incident.

However, Mr Crook’s family said a probe was dropped after medics revealed his meningitis diagnosis.

SWNS

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