YLAA

Daniel’s Story

When I originally planned to raise money for The Air Ambulance Service charity it’s because they are a great cause – there was no way I could have known that I would need their help just a few weeks before the match.

Daniel Bainger

Boxer Daniel Bainger was training for a fight to raise funds for the Air Ambulance Service charity when a road traffic accident meant he urgently needed their help.

Daniel was just two months away from the charity bout when he was knocked from his motorbike on his way to work in Northampton in the early hours of 15 January 2024. He suffered serious injuries to his spine and needed to be stabilised before being taken by helicopter to hospital for surgery to save his ability to walk.

Now after a long fight back to fitness he is ready to lace his gloves up and finish what he started.

Daniel said: “When I originally planned to raise money for The Air Ambulance Service charity it’s because they are a great cause – there was no way I could have known that I would need their help just a few weeks before the match. Recovery has been hard but this experience has made me even more determined to give something back.”

He explains what happened that day. “It was a cold morning and I decided to ride a different way to work than usual because of the frosty conditions. I was waiting at a junction to merge with traffic, but the next thing I knew I was on my back and people were rushing to help. A car had hit me from behind while I was stationary.”

The motorcyclist – who fortunately had recently invested in new safety gear including leathers, a high visibility vest and helmet – realised straight away that his back was in pain. “When I said this one of the people who had come to help told me I had to lie still and not to try to get up as I may have a spinal injury. It was a good job he was there as it turns out he was absolutely right. I later learned I had a burst fracture in one of my vertebrae and was leaking spinal fluid. Too much movement may have put me in a wheelchair.”

A crew from The Air Ambulance Service covering Northamptonshire were called by the attending emergency services and arrived by helicopter within minutes. After treating him for the pain and ensuring Daniel was safe to travel he was loaded onto the helicopter and taken to University Hospital Coventry & Warwickshire (UHCW). The journey took just 17 minutes as opposed to nearly an hour by land.

Daniel underwent an operation that resulted in two titanium rods and six screws being used to support his damaged spine. He also suffered a fractured ankle, lacerated liver and bruised lungs.

After 12 days in hospital and seven months off work he tentatively decided to return to light training to regain some lost fitness. Now, just over a year and a half later, he will step into the ring again.

Daniel explained: “I’ve spent the past year and a half working incredibly hard on my recovery, and I’m taking part in a charity boxing match on 19 July to give back to this incredible organisation that helps people like me having the worst day of their lives every day.”

You can donate to Daniel’s fundraising page here.

Did you know?
£5
Per month
Could pay for some fuel towards flying 6.5 miles towards the nearest major trauma centre.
£15
Per month
Could help pay for essential pads to be used with a defibrillator when a patient suffers cardiac arrest.
£25
Per month
Could help provide a mask and oxygen to assist patients who stop breathing.
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