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Home / Northern Advocate

Unable to walk after accident

By Susan Strongman
Northern Advocate·
27 Aug, 2015 08:53 PM3 mins to read

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Barry Beech with his brother Andrew Beech, who is in Ward 1 at Whangarei Hospital, partially paralysed after tripping over a kerb.

Barry Beech with his brother Andrew Beech, who is in Ward 1 at Whangarei Hospital, partially paralysed after tripping over a kerb.

A Whangarei man is unable to walk, more than two weeks after he tripped over a kerb on a pedestrian crossing, severely injuring his spine.

Andy Beech, 46, was heading to the carpark, after having lunch at McDonald's with his brother Barry on August 11, when he tripped on a concrete kerb that encroached on a pedestrian crossing over the store's drive-through lanes.

Barry Beech with his brother Andrew, who is in Ward 1 at Whangarei Hospital, partially paralysed after tripping over a kerb at McDonald's, in the Regent. Photo / John Stone
Barry Beech with his brother Andrew, who is in Ward 1 at Whangarei Hospital, partially paralysed after tripping over a kerb at McDonald's, in the Regent. Photo / John Stone

"I heard this big thump and when I turned around he was face planted on the ground," Barry Beech said.

His brother was rushed to hospital, where he was diagnosed with central cord syndrome - an injury of the vertebrae immediately below the skull.

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As a result, Mr Beech has lost motion and sensation in his arms and hands. He is unable to walk and cannot use his hands.

After two surgeries - one to cut his vertebrae to create more space for his spinal cord and one to insert a catheter - Andy Beech remains in Whangarei Hospital but will be sent to the Auckland Spinal Rehabilitation Unit in Otara. His orthopaedic surgeon Dr Johnny Manson said he was likely to recover, but often the legs would recover better than the arms in people with the syndrome.

"You wouldn't wish this problem on anyone."

Barry Beech said his brother had autism spectrum disorder and suffered from epilepsy, and because of that he did not work. He believed his brother simply did not see the kerb.

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"He'd been stable for months," he said.

"We were just having lunch and he'd been fine - just his normal self. The kerb overshot the end of the crossing by a foot and a half. He was just walking along the crossing behind me and just tripped right on the edge of it. He didn't get a chance to put his hands out or anything. It could have happened to anybody."

Since the fall McDonald's has shortened, rounded off and painted the kerb. When contacted last week, a WorkSafe spokesman said the report of the incident received from McDonald's indicated the only injury was a broken nose and therefore no further action was taken.

But after information was received about Andy's more serious condition, the spokesman said further inquiries would be made, including a visit to the site.

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"WorkSafe New Zealand is still making follow-up inquiries. No decision has yet been taken whether or not to launch a formal investigation," the spokesman said.

McDonald's spokesman Simon Kenny said the company had asked Barry to sign a privacy waiver so they could pay a contracted doctor to review Andy's medical records to help with their internal investigation, and so they could provide the correct information to WorkSafe and ACC.

"We can do a more full and thorough investigation if we do have that information."

He said it was an unfortunate accident.

A spokeswoman for the Whangarei District Council said staff had inspected the site and found McDonald's "identified the safety issue for their customers and have taken sensible measures to widen the gap in their barrier [kerb] to ensure it lines up with their crossing".

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