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'I felt more tired than usual - doctors gave me a 1% chance of survival'

'I felt more tired than usual - doctors gave me a 1% chance of survival'

Daily Mirror29-07-2025
Nikki Owen, 65, asked her sister to call an ambulance, then went into cardiac arrest
A woman who was "rescued" by her sister following a cardiac arrest that left her paralysed and "unlikely to survive" has expressed her determination to demonstrate there is "life after a spinal injury". Nikki Owen, 65, experienced a cardiac arrest in February 2025 after feeling "more tired than usual".

Her sister Sally, 63, administered CPR until paramedics arrived and Nikki was rushed to hospital, where her family was advised to brace for the worst. After awakening paralysed from the chest down, Nikki has made an astonishing recovery and now aims to participate in the Inter Spinal Unit Games in September, where she will compete alongside patients from across the UK who are recovering from spinal injuries. She will be participating in swimming, shooting, badminton and table tennis events.

"There is life after a spinal injury, and there is hope," Nikki said. "If we open our minds to what we can do, rather than focus on what we can't, then you suddenly start to realise that all sorts of things are possible. I just want to make every second of my life count now, however it unfolds."

Nikki, a trauma counsellor from Sevenoaks, Kent, said she "always kept very fit" and attended the gym every morning. She only has "a hazy recollection" of the weeks leading up to her cardiac arrest in February, but added: "Everybody who knows me said there were no warning signs, except I had complained of feeling more tired than usual."
In a stroke of luck, her sister Sally decided to bring forward a planned visit by a few days. "I was tired that night, which was unusual for me," Nikki remembered.
"She's normally a late riser, but she woke up early and messaged me. I went into her room and said: 'I don't feel very well, would you call an ambulance?' Then I passed out and went into cardiac arrest."
Sally promptly dialled emergency services and began performing CPR on her sister. By pure chance, an ambulance was in the vicinity and arrived within six minutes, taking over from Sally.
Nikki said: "All she could hear was 'no heartbeat, nothing'. Finally, they managed to get a heartbeat of nine beats a minute. I feel quite upset that my heart was really struggling to stay alive."

Nikki was rushed to hospital with a tear in her aorta, meaning CPR was pushing blood into her lungs. "My family was told that I had a 1% chance of survival," she revealed. Nikki's daughter Rosie, 31, had just touched down in Singapore when her husband rang her with the news.
Nikki said: "She had to do a 30-hour journey back, praying that I wasn't going to die before she got there. She phoned my brother and asked if he could hold the phone near my ear, even though I wasn't conscious, and she just said how much she loved me and everything."
Doctors warned her family she was "likely to be brain-damaged". She also had collapsed lungs and broken ribs from the CPR, as well as pneumonia and sepsis. Upon waking up, she was informed that the incident had left her permanently paralysed from the chest down.

"My legs felt like I was wearing tight socks made of fire, and the injury site felt like a really tight elastic band," she remembered. "I've had to get used to those two feelings."
She also experiences a "phantom" sensation when she's lying in bed that her legs are bent and her feet are "squashed into really tight shoes". "Sometimes it feels so real that I have to look at my feet to see where they are," she added.

In May, Nikki was moved to Stoke Mandeville Hospital's spinal unit, where she is learning to adapt to her new life. This includes how to use a wheelchair and get into bed.
"It took a lot of energy to just sit in a wheelchair because I have no core (strength) – I'm like a floppy doll," she explained. After a career of helping others, Nikki said learning to accept help has been humbling but "lovely in its own way".
She added that her background in trauma counselling was beneficial. "You have to accept what's happened, and that you're not being punished – you're not a bad person," she said. She had to "let go" of things such as swimming in the sea, going on long walks with friends and "dancing to lovely music".

She added: "The thing that was hardest to come to terms with is the thought that I can't help my daughter like I was hoping to at the point when she has children. That took a little bit longer, but I can still be there and present."
Now, Nikki concentrates on the "amazing things" she can still accomplish, including joining the Stoke Mandeville squad at the Inter Spinal Unit Games in September. "They just said it's because I'm good for team morale," she added.
She will be taking part alongside patients from other spinal units across the UK in shooting, swimming, table tennis and badminton competitions. She said: "I'm really useless at everything – but I do give it a good go."

The competition is attended by talent scouts for the Paralympics. She explained: "I'm not saying they'd be looking at me, but isn't it great that people who have been injured in life-changing ways have suddenly got this whole new life?"
Nikki is currently adjusting to her new requirements, including purchasing shoes that accommodate her swollen feet and replacing her wardrobe of flowing garments for clothing that won't become tangled in her wheelchair. Because she hopes to one day regain her independence, she will also require accommodation with ramps, lower kitchen worktops, and light switches she can reach.

Whilst the council helps with some expenses, many are not covered – and so Nikki's daughter Rosie established a fundraiser which has raised more than £16,000. "When she showed me what she'd done, it was just so overwhelming," Nikki expressed.
"People have donated that I knew over 30 years ago, and other donations are from total strangers."
She acknowledges there's still "a long road" to recovery, and at times, Nikki feels like she's "going backwards". She added: "I've always been very resilient, but this is the hardest thing I've ever had to go through.
"But to have a 1% chance of survival, and for my sister to have been there unexpectedly, for the ambulance to have been just around the corner, I feel that I'm supposed to be alive."
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Nikki Grahame's mum's fat jab warning after one comment sparked star's death
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time2 hours ago

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Nikki Grahame's mum's fat jab warning after one comment sparked star's death

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Fat jabs are a nightmare for anorexics – I'll never get over my girl Nikki's death but I'd worry if she was still here
Fat jabs are a nightmare for anorexics – I'll never get over my girl Nikki's death but I'd worry if she was still here

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Fat jabs are a nightmare for anorexics – I'll never get over my girl Nikki's death but I'd worry if she was still here

Sue Grahame makes a stark warning four years on from her beloved daughter's death, and recalls Big Brother star Nikki's tragic last days in unbearable pain and unable to bathe or dress herself DYING TO BE THIN Fat jabs are a nightmare for anorexics – I'll never get over my girl Nikki's death but I'd worry if she was still here Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) NIKKI Grahame was just seven years old when her mum said she came home from gymnastics club upset because another child had said her bum looked big in her leotard. That one tiny comment sparked the beginnings of an eating disorder in Nikki, which would see her spend the next decade in more than 18 different institutions, including two-and-a-half years in Great Ormond Street Hospital. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 16 Nikki Grahame shot to fame on Big Brother in 2006 Credit: Getty 16 Nikki with mum Sue Grahame before her 2021 death from anorexia Credit: David Cummings 16 Sue said she'll never get over the loss of her 'darling Nikki' Credit: David Cummings When she shot to fame on Big Brother in 2006, fans had no idea that behind her iconic diary chair meltdowns was a lifelong struggle with anorexia so severe that even the most experienced doctors described it as "the worst they'd ever seen." Now in a raw and emotional interview, Nikki's devoted mum Sue relives her gruelling journey with anorexia and recalls the last days before her tragic death from the disease, aged just 38. And she warns against the use of skinny jabs such as Ozempic or Mounjaro by people who are already slim - saying it could trigger or worsen eating disorders. 'Worst they'd ever seen' "I think these jabs are a nightmare for people with eating disorders because they are already skinny and it means they can restrict their food even more," Sue, now 71, told The Sun. "It would have been a worry for me while Nikki was alive. I don't know if Nikki would have taken them or not. She was already limiting her calories every single day, that was a huge part of her life. "I wouldn't have let her take the jabs, I'd have said, 'over my dead body'. "For people like Nikki, everything is counted, measured and weighed; it becomes their whole life. She would weigh herself before breakfast and again after each meal. It's constant. "To me, it's a short-term fix, to get an injection, because you need an education on how to look after your body, how to nurture it, how to nourish it. And just getting an injection, that's not going to change your ways, is it?" When shown examples of "thinspiration' content which can be found on social media sites such as TikTok, where influencers post images of ultra thin women and what they eat, Sue was shocked. 'Nikki used to go on sites like this and look at this kind of thing," she said. Nikki Grahame goes mad in Big Brother house in emotional scenes in new documentary 'I know when I've walked into the room and she suddenly turned her phone off. 'Back then there were lots of websites about how to be as thin as you can. These people should be bloody locked up. It's disgusting. 'People should be locked up' 'I can honestly say I've never been on a diet. Never. And so it wasn't something Nikki learned from me." Sue said the first signs of Nikki's anorexia came when she was seven and she suddenly stopped eating and became withdrawn. 'There was the comment from the girl in gymnastics and she started to become withdrawn, that was the first sign," Sue said. "She started to get smaller and very picky with her food, so the alarm bells started to ring. 'I took her to the GP and he stood her in front of him and he asked her what she had eaten today. Of course she lied to him. 'She was so young, doctors refused to believe there was anything wrong with her." 16 Nikki became known for her meltdowns and tantrums in the diary room Credit: Rex 16 Nikki was just seven when she started suffering from anorexia Credit: David Cummings 16 Nikki on the balcony of the London flat where she died age 38 Credit: David Cummings Sue remembers being fobbed off by doctors until one day, Nikki was so weak she couldn't stand, and she carried her into the GP surgery where she refused to move until they admitted her daughter to hospital. "I didn't want her to be admitted to hospital but I couldn't get her to eat anything, she'd trick me," Sue said. 'It got to the point where I had to make her eat naked so she wouldn't stuff food in her knickers or anything. 'Because it started so young, by the time Nikki became an adult it was so engrained for her. Her purpose, her way of life, was to stay as thin as possible. 'She was very competitive about it. She'd walk on to a ward and want to be the skinniest anorexic in there. I would despair. 'When she was in Great Ormond Street, she had this wonderful doctor Professor Bryan Lask and he said 'You're not the worst I've ever seen Nikki, you are by far the worst I've ever seen' - and he travelled the world lecturing on anorexia." 'Don't leave me mummy' Sue recalls the heartbreaking day she left seven-year-old Nikki as an inpatient in hospital for the first time. 'She kept saying 'Mummy don't leave' and I said, 'Nikki I don't have a choice because you won't eat for me'," Sue said. 'Then they said, 'You can't see or speak to her for two weeks'. I said no, but they insisted. 'As we were leaving Nikki was screaming and these people just came from nowhere and pinned her down on the floor while we were rushed out of the unit. It was hell on earth, it was unnecessarily cruel." Sadly, Nikki did not improve. She refused to eat and became so thin nurses would have to force her to eat through a nasal tube. 'It got to the point where I had to make her eat naked so she wouldn't stuff food in her knickers or anything Sue Grahame Later on, she had to have a tube fitted surgically direct to her stomach as she kept pulling the nasal tube out, but that didn't work either as she pulled the tube out of her body. Sometimes she'd be sedated for a month at a time, as doctors desperately tried to increase her BMI with forced feeds. Sue said it some of the treatments were so "cruel" it was "gut-wrenching". 'The whole system of trying to treat anorexics it doesn't work," Sue said. 'I've been to all those units and some of them are pitiful. 16 Nikki spent most of her life from age 7 to 18 in and out of eating disorder units Credit: David Cummings 16 Nikki before she entered the Big Brother house Credit: David Cummings 16 Nikki's anorexia worsened during Covid Credit: Splash 'In my mind none of them delivered for Nikki, it just strengthened her resolve. 'There was one place that I'd have to bring her back to after a weekend visit home or something, and she'd lie on the floor and beat her hands and feet and scream and cry and say 'Mum don't leave me here, please don't leave me!' 'But I didn't have a choice because she wouldn't eat for me, what was I supposed to do? 'Barbaric' treatments 'There was one place where they'd melt Mars bars down and make them set the table until it was gone and if they didn't finish it they'd have to sleep on the kitchen floor. "At one point she was put her under for a month to be tube fed. So I just used to go and sit by her bed and talk to her and hold her hand. 'She'd wake up and say 'I can feel all that food inside of me - I can't take it mum, it's torture'. 'Staff weren't always very kind. A lot of things I could accept if it was making a difference but it wasn't. 'It was very barbaric and cruelty just doesn't work." Nikki's admissions to hospital stopped when she reached 18, but her struggles with anorexia continued and she also developed severe OCD behaviour around hygiene and preparing food. Sue said she was supportive of Nikki entering Big Brother because she was pleased to see her having some fun after the "hell" she'd been through as a child, however she did worry about how she'd cope with her eating disorder in such an environment. 'Going on Big Brother was great for her, it did give her a taste of a normal life, but obviously those demons were always there," she said. Because it started so young, by the time Nikki became an adult it was so engrained for her. Her purpose, her way of life, was to stay as thin as possible Sue Grahame "When she got a call to say she had been chosen she started jumping around saying, 'I'm in, I'm going into Big Brother!' 'I was pleased for her but worried because at the time she couldn't eat in front of people and she wouldn't allow people to cook for her. 'I couldn't even cook for her because it she had this OCD as part of her illness and she became obsessed with hygiene. 'She had to clean her own plates before she'd eat on them, she had lots of rules. "That was the thing that worried me. But I just thought you know she's been in hospital from age seven til 18. Give the girl a bloody break. She had no life up to that point. 'This is why she used to have hissy fits in the Big Brother house because she learned in these units that if you shouted the loudest you'd get attention. "I used to watch her on the live stream and I could see she was having fun but I also knew when the s**t was going to hit the fan. I could predict it when she was heading for a meltdown. I'd think 'Christ here we go' and all of a sudden she'd let rip." 16 Nikki won a National TV Award for her appearance on Big Brother in 2006 Credit: Rex 16 Mum Sue with Nikki as a baby Credit: David Cummings 16 Sue said she vowed to always support Nikki through her illness Credit: David Cummings After Big Brother, Nikki enjoyed the fame the show brought and would travel the country doing appearances, even landing herself a magazine column. She entered the Big Brother house a total of five times, including the Canadian version. When TV work dried up, she moved to Nice, France where she worked in a Hard Rock Cafe branch, and learnt to speak French. After moving back to London, she went back to college to try and get her Maths and English GCSE and got a job in a local junior school as a teaching assistant. Sue said that in the years after Big Brother "she held her own" in her battle against anorexia, but Covid exacerbated her condition. Nikki would walk on to a ward and want to be the skinniest anorexic in there. I would despair Sue Grahame 'She had a flat with a gym so she wouldn't come and stay with me during Covid, but then they closed the gym and so she spent £900 on a cross trainer," Sue said. 'I used to illegally drive up to London because she was so isolated. 'And while I was there she'd get on this cross trainer obsessively and I'd beg her to stop. I'd say, 'I don't want to lose you' and she'd say 'I'm not going anywhere. I said, 'Yeah that's what Karen Carpenter said'. 'Covid definitely didn't help Nikki, but I can't help feeling she'd already thrown the towel in. 'Because for months before, we'd be walking. I'd turn around, she'd be on the floor. Her legs would just gave way. 'Her body was packing up. She had been starved for so long. She never even had periods. "I don't think she was ever meant to make old bones in this world." 16 Big Brother gave Nikki the chance to travel the country doing PAs and writing magazine columns Credit: PA 16 Nikki with her friend Imogen Thomas Credit: INSTAGRAM/IMOGEN THOMAS 16 Mum Sue was pleased to see Nikki enjoy life after her difficult childhood Credit: David Cummings 16 Sue said life has been tough since Nikki's death but she's trying hard to heal Credit: David Cummings In the weeks before her death, both Sue and social services tried to encourage Nikki to become an inpatient again but she refused. Instead she decided to travel to her mum's in Dorset, stopping on the way at a pharmacy to pick up her meds. 'She was only 10 minutes away when she passed out in the pharmacy, hit her head on the floor and they had to blue light her in to Dorchester hospital," Sue said. 'She was in there for two weeks and I went in every day for the two weeks because it was just a regular ward, not an eating disorder unit and I wanted to take the weight off of the nurses because she needed supervising. 'If they brought her food, it would either go down the toilet or in the bin or out the window. 'I moved into a Premier Inn so that I could just walk there each day and I used to shower her and and watch her eat her meals. 'The mental health team said there was an eating disorders unit but it only had six beds and they were full. That might have made the difference. I have never been loved as much as Nikki loved me Sue Grahame 'The nurses at the hospital were quite aggressive with her. Maybe they resented her. No one ever has any patience for anorexics. 'Her BMI was dangerously low. She was just skin and bones. She was pitiful to look at. "Then this nurse came in and said 'This isn't the place for you. This is a surgical ward. Nikki if you can walk up and down those steps outside there you can go home tomorrow. 'And I looked at her and the state Nikki was in and I couldn't believe it." Final journey Nikki was discharged from hospital later that day alone and took a taxi to her flat in London. 'She rang me from the taxi and said 'Hi Mum, I'm on my way home'. She was so weak, I couldn't believe they'd discharged her," Sue said. "She told me she really needed the toilet and the poor thing had an accident in the taxi she was so ill. I told her to get her friend to come over when she was at home and help her clean up and then I'd come over in the morning. 'Then she rang me up half three that morning. She used to do that a lot but it was usually when she was out clubbing. 'She said 'My friend came around and she helped me in the bath and put me in my jimmy jammies and then she saw me into bed, but I just wanted to tell you that I'm coping all right. ''I've just got up and been to the loo by myself on my walker.' 'I said, 'Every day take it slowly, you're not in a hurry, you'll get there. 'She said, 'Mum I'm tired. I love you.' I told her to go to bed and that I loved her." Nikki died that same morning. Sue was on a train on her way to London when Nikki's friend called her and broke the news. 'Goodbye darling' She rushed to Nikki's flat, where she said her final goodbye. 'I just lay on the bed with Nikki and cried," she said. 'The worst thing was watching the undertakers come and put her in a body bag and taking her out. 'I went down in the lift with them and we got to the outside door and I said 'Which side is her head?' 'They said it's up there. I just stroked the bag from the outside and said 'Goodbye darling'. It's awful, awful. I'll never get over it. It was the worst day of my life." Sue said she blames the hospital for Nikki's death and even looked into taking legal action but no law firm would take the case. She believes it was irresponsible for them to discharge her when she "couldn't even bathe herself or dress herself" and says she should have been transferred to a mental health unit. 'Even if I'd have taken it to court and won, I didn't want the money," Sue said. "I wanted things to change. Maybe I would have tried to get a unit built somewhere that would help others with anorexia. 'That nurse shouldn't have said, 'If you walk up and down the stairs, you can leave', because she clearly wasn't well enough to leave the hospital. If that's a rule, it shouldn't be. 'Nikki died on a Saturday morning. And I was walking my dog on the Monday morning when that same nurse rang. She was crying and she said, 'I'm so, so sorry. She shouldn't have gone home.' 'They shouldn't have let her home just because she put a bit of pressure on. She didn't know what was best for her." Signs and symptoms of anorexia if you're under 18, your weight and height being lower than expected for your age if you're an adult, having an unusually low body mass index missing meals, eating very little or avoiding eating any foods you see as fattening believing you are fat when you are a healthy weight or underweight taking medication to reduce your hunger (appetite suppressants) your periods stopping (in women who have not reached menopause) or not starting (in younger women and girls) physical problems, such as feeling dizzy, dry skin and hair loss Four years on from Nikki's April 2021 death, Sue says she's still struggling emotionally. She has relocated from Dorset and lives in East Sussex with her chihuahua Joey. Just two months ago, she suffered another heartbreak when she had to have Baby, Nikki's chihuahua who she had cared for since before her death, put to sleep aged 19. 'Until the day I take my last breath I won't get over Nikki's loss," she said. 'Nothing in this world scares me anymore because the worst possible thing has happened. "Life is tough, but since I came down here I'm trying extremely hard. I've made a couple of really good friends. 'But I have to say I have never been loved as much as Nikki loved me. And it wasn't because I was a pushover, it was because from day one of her illness I was fighting for her. 'I try and be philosophical because at the end of the day, she was mine for 38 years. How lucky was I? And people still write lovely things about her. They still love her. 'She wasn't everybody's cup of tea but for me she was very special. And even if I died tomorrow, I know I was truly loved in my life, and that's something not everybody can say." If you or a loved one is struggling with an eating disorder, the charity Beat offers support, call the helpline on 0808 801 0677

Crow returns to visit vet who treated it for a fractured wing
Crow returns to visit vet who treated it for a fractured wing

The Independent

time31-07-2025

  • The Independent

Crow returns to visit vet who treated it for a fractured wing

A vet who helped a crow fly again after it suffered a fractured wing has said he feels he 'truly made a difference' because the bird keeps returning to visit him. The crow was taken to Portsmouth Vets for Pets practice owner Dr Justyn Loveridge after it was found by a member of the public. An X-ray showed it had fractured a bone and Dr Loveridge assessed that the wing could be repaired and the bird rehabilitated with a couple of weeks of care. So he checked with his fiancee that she would not object to him bringing the crow home to care for it. He said: 'I called Sally, my fiancee, straight away to ask if I could bring the crow home, but I already knew she'd say yes; we both love animals.' They decided to name it Morrigan, after the goddess of war in Irish mythology, who is known for her strong character and presence and is often depicted as a crow. Dr Loveridge said: 'Crows are omnivores, so I bought a mix of everything: insect mix, peanuts, chopped tomatoes, and even blueberries, which were a firm favourite with Morrigan. 'Obviously, with the lack of exercise, I was concerned about potential weight issues, so we kept portion sizes minimal to avoid overfeeding.' He said that after two weeks, Morrigan had recovered, and they released it from its crate in the garden and the bird flew away. But Dr Loveridge said he was surprised when Morrigan kept returning to visit. He said: 'There's a lot of evidence to suggest that crows are just as clever as primates. Knowing that an intelligent animal keeps coming back to visit makes me feel like I've truly made a difference.' Dr Loveridge said he was inspired to become a vet by a grandmother who was also an animal lover and rehomed stray cats, and he went on to open his Vets for Pets practice in 2012.

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