Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Kind Of Lacking:' Injured Bronco Wonders Why Canada Won't Fund Spinal Surgery

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Dec, 2019 09:26 PM

    CALGARY - A hockey player paralyzed in the Humboldt Broncos bus crash says it feels good to be home after spending five weeks in Thailand, where he underwent spinal surgery.

     

    "It feels good. I mean I felt that cold, cold wind hit my legs, so I'm feeling good. It's good to be back," Ryan Straschnitzki said Sunday night as he wheeled himself into the Calgary airport.

     

    The 20-year-old from Airdrie, Alta., who is paralyzed from the chest down, had an epidural stimulator implanted in his spine while he was in Bangkok. A week later, doctors also injected stem cells above and below his spinal injury to try to reverse some of the damage.

     

    Videos posted by Straschnitzki and his father in Thailand show him straightening a leg. In another, Straschnitzki kicks a ball.

     

    In another clip, while he's strapped into a harness, physiotherapists slowly help him walk with a wheeled machine.

     

    "It was incredible. I mean the last time I walked beside my dad was before the accident and before I moved away," said Straschnitzki. "So doing that again and just seeing the look in his eyes is motivating to me."

     

    Straschnitzki was one of 13 players injured when a semi truck blew through a stop sign and into the path of his junior hockey team's bus at a rural intersection in Saskatchewan in April 2018.

     

    Sixteen others on the bus were killed.

    Tom Straschnitzki said he's not an emotional guy, but watching the progress his son made in Thailand has given him hope.

     

    "When I actually saw him move his leg, it just took me back to imagining his last steps going onto that bus on that fateful day. And I was just thinking maybe he can go back on the bus one day," he said.

     

    The surgery can cost up to $100,000 but isn't covered by public health care or insurance, because it has not been approved by Health Canada. The Straschnitzkis say they're frustrated the treatment isn't available here.

     

    Ryan Straschnitzki hopes his experience might at least get the conversation going.

     

    "Our health-care system is kind of lacking in this area for spinal cord injuries and I think it's huge that Thailand and some other places are getting this started," he said.

     

    "I think if Canada can step in and advance this program, I think it'll help a lot of people out."

     

    Tom and Michelle Straschnitzki said they have been flooded with comments and questions about their son's procedure.

     

    "They want to try it and ask why doesn't Canada do it? I don't have the answer about Canada but they do it in Thailand and it is not experimental," said Tom Straschnitzki.

     

    Health Canada has said it provides licensed spinal cord stimulators but only for pain relief. A spokesman said it has not received an application to have stimulators used to regain motor skills.

     

    Ryan Straschnitzki said he isn't expecting a cure but hopes his implant will restore some muscle movement.

     

    "Just getting that feeling of being able to move something that I wasn't able to move before — and I know core is a huge part of my disability, so anything below my chest is crucial. And after the programming it really helped," he said.

     

    Straschnitzki is hoping to make the Canadian sledge hockey team and compete in the Olympics. He even took his sled with him to Thailand and sat in it as part of his rehabilitation there.

     

    He said he plans to take a few days off before returning to physiotherapy and hitting the ice again back home.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    $7M Award Upheld For Girl Disabled After Jumping From Moving School Bus

    TORONTO - A bus company is on the hook for a $7 million award to a girl who suffered a brain injury when she jumped from a moving vehicle in keeping with an informal last-day-of-school tradition, Ontario's top court has ruled.    

    $7M Award Upheld For Girl Disabled After Jumping From Moving School Bus

    Canadian Pork And Beef Exports To China To Resume After A Four-Month Suspension

    Canadian Pork And Beef Exports To China To Resume After A Four-Month Suspension
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says Canadian pork and beef exports to China will resume.

    Canadian Pork And Beef Exports To China To Resume After A Four-Month Suspension

    First Nations, B.C. Cabinet Discuss Updating Laws To Align With UN Declaration

    British Columbia's Indigenous leaders and provincial cabinet members are holding their annual meeting and Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs Grand Chief Stewart Phillip says,

    First Nations, B.C. Cabinet Discuss Updating Laws To Align With UN Declaration

    University Of B.C. Launches 5G Campus

    University Of B.C. Launches 5G Campus
    VANCOUVER - Rogers Communications and the University of British Columbia have fired up what is believed to be Canada's first 5G-powered smart campus.    

    University Of B.C. Launches 5G Campus

    27 Yr-Old Anmol Saggu Charged With Second-Degree Murder of 50-Yr-Old Brampton Man Taranjit Singh

    Police say the incident happened in Mono, Ont., when a allegedly assaulted the victim after an argument.

    27 Yr-Old Anmol Saggu Charged With Second-Degree Murder of 50-Yr-Old Brampton Man Taranjit Singh

    Crown Seeks To Overturn Bail For RCMP Intelligence Official In Secrets Case

    Crown Seeks To Overturn Bail For RCMP Intelligence Official In Secrets Case
    The Crown is asking an Ontario court to overturn a decision to grant bail to a senior RCMP official accused of breaching Canada's secrets law.

    Crown Seeks To Overturn Bail For RCMP Intelligence Official In Secrets Case