A Swindon man with a lifelong neurological disorder has described how support from the town’s hospital gave him his life back.
Paramedics rushed Moredon resident Phil Skeates to Great Western Hospital after the 55-year-old suffered a seizure in the North Swindon Asda-Walmart.
He spent three months in the NHS hospital trying to recover, but treatment was not making much of a noticeable difference.
The former lorry driver said: “I completely lost the use of my right arm and my ability to speak.
“It was really scary, doctors initially thought I had a stroke as my symptoms were identical.”
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An MRI revealed that Phil has Functional Neurological Disorder, a condition in which people experience weakness, movement problems, sensory symptoms, and convulsions.
He added: “The best way to describe FND is that your brain is like a computer where the hardware is okay, but your software is completely muddled up.
“I’m a really sociable person so when it affected my speech, it was frustrating.
“It wasn’t just the physical disabilities which impacted me, the mental health side was devastating.
“I couldn't do anything for myself and it was frightening. The nurses in Swindon were amazing and they tried their best to get my arm working and my speech to return.
“But I just wasn’t progressing and I was getting more and more depressed. One day I got so low that I really felt like giving up, it was a crisis point for me.”
Doctors eventually referred Phil to Cygnet Brunel, a 32-bed service providing neuropsychiatric and neurodegenerative rehabilitation for men with mental health difficulties and acquired brain injuries, which is part of the Cygnet Health Care division.
Phil spent three months there and described the referral as “the best thing that ever happened to me” and called the service a “lifeline”.
Mr Skeates added: “I was in a dark place when I got admitted. I was really nervous and anxious when I arrived, but I was greeted with open arms.
“From the minute I went in through the door, the staff were welcoming and the other service users were amazingly friendly and supportive.
“That first day, I was led in hospital, I couldn't even clean myself. I've always been independent and I lost all that.
“Just a couple of hours after I had been admitted, one of the doctors came to me and said ‘I promise I will make you better’.
“He fulfilled that promise and more. To be back in control is incredible. I can't thank them enough for giving me my life back and also treating me with respect and dignity.”
Phil underwent a full treatment programme with support from psychiatrists, specialty doctors, occupational therapists, speech and language therapists and physiotherapists.
“The treatment blew me away. Within a few weeks, my speech was back fully and my right arm felt really strong again.
“Staff were so patient with me and they helped me to see the bigger picture when it came to my health. They encouraged me to invest myself fully in the treatment and the results were mind-blowing.
“They gave me my life back.”
Phil said staff also encouraged him onto a healthy eating plan and he lost five stone from when he was first admitted.
The former patient said: “I felt like a totally changed man to the one who walked in. An improved version, one with real hope for the future.
“I’m not naïve, I know I have a lifelong condition and it is something I will have to battle every day.
“But I have strategies in place to cope now and to overcome hurdles which come my way, thanks to the team at Cygnet Brunel.
“My life has totally changed but I'm really positive and feel amazing at the moment.”
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