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Ex-Arsenal academy player left tetraplegic & needing 24-hour care in wheelchair after drink ‘spiked’ on night out

A FORMER Arsenal academy player has been left a tetraplegic and needs 24-hour care after his drink was “spiked” on a night out.

Daniel Cain, 23, was fit and healthy footballer and qualified electrician until a night out with his friends took a devastating turn.

Daniel was a fit and healthy footballer before he suffered life-changing injuries after having his drink spiked

The footballer’s brain and spine were starved of oxygen and he spent 25 days in a coma

On June 9, 2020, the young footballer’s friends noticed he looked a “funny colour” and was not responding.

They called an ambulance for Daniel and attempted to perform CPR on him as they waited for paramedics to arrive.

After working on him for 24 minutes, paramedics finally got his heart beating again but his brain and spinal cord had been starved of oxygen.

Speaking to The Independent, his mum, Tracey Cain, said: “When I found out I just went into automatic mum mode.

“I phoned his father who was at work and his sister came back from Essex.

“At around 3-4am in the morning they tried to prepare us that he was not going to wake up but I said to keep trying.

“I wasn’t going to accept he wasn’t going to come around”.

Doctors told the family to be prepared that even if Daniel did wake up he would be in a vegetative state.

But after 25 days in a coma he defied all odds and “woke up”.

His cognitive function began to return, something that his mum describes as a “miracle”.

Daniel’s short-term memory was significantly damaged by his injuries but he could still remember things from his childhood and Tracey says that he is “gradually coming back and improving all the time”.

Two and a half years on Daniel is now at home with his family, but he needs round-the-clock care, something that his mum has taken on herself.

Daniel has also been given the opportunity to stand and walk again through an organisation called Neurokinex, which provides him with intensive rehabilitation therapy, but the treatment is only part-funded by the NHS.

His rehabilitation through Neurokinex costs £60 an hour, which means the family needs to find around £1,008 to £2,016 per month to give him the best chance of being able to walk again.

They have launched a GoFund Me campaign for the physio which is set to last a minimum of two to three years at a cost of £12,096 to £24, 192 per year.

Tracey said: “He responds really well to the physio – that’s like his happy place when he’s exercising. It’s more frustrating when he isn’t able to do it.”

You can find Daniel’s GoFundMe campaign HERE


Daniel’s family is raising money for treatment in order to give him the best chance of being able to stand and walk again