âIâve been waiting over a year for a wheelchairâ
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âIâve been waiting so long, it is affecting my mental health â it feels as if Iâm just stuck and relying on everybody else.â
Robert Taylor has a spinal condition that means he is unable to walk unaided.
The 56-year-old, from South Normanton, Derbyshire, was left with mobility issues after complications during spinal surgery in 2019.
He was referred for a wheelchair in February 2024 but is still waiting to receive the custom piece of equipment.
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Mr Taylor has Cauda equina syndrome which occurs when spinal nerves are put under pressure or squashed.
He was referred to AJM Healthcare Wheelchair Service in Derbyshire by his physio at the spinal injuries unit at Sheffieldâs Northern General Hospital.
âIt took me about two months just to get an appointment to be measured,â he told the BBC.
âIt would have been at the end of May [2024] that I went and they measured me up and showed me a couple of options, I decided to go for a lightweight sports one so I could easily get it in and out of the boot of the car.â
After the initial appointment Robert said he spent months âchasingâ the whereabouts of his chair.
âI have to do the chasing, they never ring me, Iâve explained my situation, Iâm really struggling and I just get fobbed off,â he said.
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A spokesperson for AJM Healthcare said: âWe are actively supporting the people affected to reduce any further unnecessary delay and/or miscommunication.
âWe know that a timely resolution is of the utmost priority for everyone experiencing an issue, and we are committed to strengthening our processes and ensuring that our communication channels are clear and effective.â
Mr Taylor currently uses two crutches to move around the house and to walk small distances.
âThere is too much fatigue and pain,â he said. âI could hardly get to the car at the bottom of the drive with crutches, Iâve been needing a wheelchair for a while now.
âWe bought our own wheelchair but itâs not suitable, it just doesnât fit right, itâs far too small, my knees are under my chin so I never used it properly.
Mr Taylor said losing his mobility had turned his life âupside downâ as he is unable to work and is ânigh-on housebound.â
âI canât get out and about, I canât go anywhere with my wife and son,â he said.
Future âtaken awayâ
Gary Dawson, support network manager at the Spinal Injuries Association said that Mr Taylorâs situation was not uncommon.
âWheelchair services are massively burdened by being so under-funded and under-staffed that itâs become incredibly common for people to be waiting not only six months but potentially years for a custom piece of equipment that can be absolutely life changing to them.
âWhen you canât access a piece of mobility equipment thatâs going to enable you to be independent it means that you are stuck
âSo that means all this rehabilitation that youâve already gone through, the future that youâve been set up for all of a sudden has been taken away from you and completely put on hold while youâre waiting, for your own wheelchair.â
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