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Daily Record
Daily Record
National
Naina Bhardwaj

Scots dad who suffered stroke when he turned on car engine unable to speak for three years

A Scots dad who suffered a severe stroke when he turned on his car engine has been unable to speak for three years.

James Rosie, of West Calder, had been at the shops the day before a family trip to Spain in March 2019.

The 51-year-old had gotten back to his car and switched the engine on when he suddenly realised he couldn't move.

Hours later his wife Joanne was shocked to find two police officers on her doorstep holding her husband's car keys, wallet and phone.

James was rushed to ICU at St John's hospital in West Lothian after doctors found swelling in his brain.

Medics realised he had developed Aphasia, a condition brought on by a stroke that can affect the ability to speak and understand and to read and write.

Joanne opened her front door to two police officers holding her husband's car keys, wallet and phone (Derek Anderson/CHSS)

Wife Joanne said: "James had no warning of what was about to happen.

"He only has a vague memory of turning on the car engine and then not being able to move.

"The police told me he’d been in an accident, and they thought he’d had a stroke.

"He ended up in the ICU for 24 hours because of the swelling on his brain.

James' aphasia has made verbal communication almost impossible for him.

Both he and Joanne had never heard of the condition before and the couple were told that James was unlikely to ever speak again.

After three months James was discharged to his now specially adapted home.

Joanne, who works full-time for the Royal Bank of Scotland, and son Matthew, 16, are now helping James adjust to a new reality.

The couple had struggled to adapt to their new life with it often becoming a frustrating and lonely experience for both of them.

James, continues to live with the after-effects of his stroke, and had to give up his job as an apprentice training officer, which he started after a long career in the NHS.

The family both found a lifeline in a weekly online aphasia support group, organised by Chest, Heart and Stroke Scotland (CHSS).

James was able to meet other stroke survivors with the condition, while Joanne was able to join in with partners and carers who gave her the support and confidence she was once missing.

Joanne said: "James gets confidence from being part of a peer group.

"He’s seeing others who are all in the same situation as he is but at different levels and stages.

"It’s been such a positive experience for both of us. Life has changed so much, and it’s difficult."

Jackie Slater said: "In an instant people’s lives are completely turned upside down by the condition" (CHSS)

CHSS estimates around 2,400 stroke survivors are diagnosed with aphasia each year in Scotland but many are unaware of it.

James chose to share his story as part of Aphasia Awareness Month in the hope of helping others with the condition so they don't need to deal with it alone.

Jackie Slater, Aphasia Development Manager at CHSS, said: “Aphasia can be very frightening and isolating. In an instant people’s lives are completely turned upside down by the condition, but many people have never even heard of aphasia until it affects them or a loved one. They’re forced to become experts overnight.

“With the help of people like James, who are bravely sharing their stories, we want to make sure that more people in Scotland are aphasia aware."

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