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Swansea man paralysed by wave says AI could help him walk again

January 1, 2026
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After a New Year’s Eve swim in 2023, Dan Richards’ life changed forever

When Dan Richards went for a New Year’s Eve swim in 2023, he never could have imagined how drastically his life would change.

In a freak accident, he injured his neck when a wave caused him to flip and hit the sand in Langland Bay, Swansea.

“I knew instantly that I was paralysed,” the 37-year-old said.

“I couldn’t move anything.”

Doctors told him he would be bed-bound but, two years later, he uses a wheelchair and can move his arms and fingers.

He has even walked with the help of Artificial Intelligence (AI) technology in Wales and Germany.

Dan and his partner Anna, 40, were celebrating the new year with a cold water dip when the accident happened.

“I remember all of it, unfortunately. Being pulled out. And then everything changing,” Dan said.

“I got hit by a wave, it flipped me over and folded me backwards, and snapped my neck. I knew it was bad.”

Anna Thomas Dan Richards using a machine to walk. He is standing and smiling, as he wears a harness and belts around his body.Anna Thomas

Dan is determined to move as much as possible after becoming paralysed

Anna recalled hearing Dan shouting for help as she got ready to get into the water.

“I just remember looking over and just seeing Dan’s head coming up and then going back under,” she said.

“We dragged him out. But he was just dead weight and the sea was coming in really fast.

“We waited for emergency services, and then [I remember] begging them to let me go in the helicopter. It was horrendous.”

After being taken to hospital in Bristol, the couple from Swansea were given life-changing news.

Anna Thomas A selfie of Dan (left) and his partner Anna (right) standing in the sea. Dan has short, dark hair and and Anna's red hair is tied back. They are both smiling. There are two people in the background also in the sea.Anna Thomas

Dan and Anna loved to swim in the sea before the accident

Dan said he was told he was paralysed form the neck down, would not be able to move and it was “highly likely” he would be bed-bound for the rest of his life.

Anna – who had only started dating Dan a few months before the accident – had to make dreaded phone calls to family members.

“It was New Year’s Eve, I was put in a room on my own but you could hear people laughing and joking, and I had to tell Dan’s parents.

“How do you phone someone’s mum and say that their son is paralysed?”

A man with short brown hair and facial hair, wearing hospital gown and lying in a hospital bed. Beside him is a woman with long red hair, wearing a white jumper. They are both looking at the camera with serious expressions.

Dan was given life-changing news while in hospital in January 2024

Anna said every day since the accident has brought a new challenge.

“It’s our reality. Until you’re in this situation… you don’t realise just how much you have lost.”

But in the months that followed the accident, when Dan was in hospital, even the slightest movement in his toes gave the couple hope things would change.

Dan and Anna smiling in their living room. Dan (left) is wearing a green jumper and Anna (right) is in a pink winter jumper with yellow and blue pattern.

Dan and Anna have returned to Wales from Germany to celebrate Christmas

“Luckily I’m quite stubborn,” Dan said.

“I just wanted to see the physios as soon as possible. I wanted to work. I didn’t accept what they were saying.

“I’m proud of the progress I’ve made. It’s a long time since laying in bed in Bristol, that’s for sure.”

He continued: “The feeling in my toes then translated into full feeling through my legs and feet, some movement in my right leg [and] core strength – which I was told was gone – started to come back. Movement in my arms, my fingers, being able to hold things.

“I’m still hopeful, I’m still positive. With modern technologies, I’m not giving up.”

Dan had private physiotherapy at a specialist clinic in south Wales which used a world-first combined treatment to help him walk with a machine.

Anna Thomas A man with brown hair wearing a white t shirt, black shorts and sunglasses, sat in a wheelchair in a car park with cars in the background. A woman with red hair, dressed in a black t shirt and neon green tutu is leaning down and kissing him.Anna Thomas

Family and friends have fundraised for Dan’s private physiotherapy treatments

Jakko Brouwers, a neurophysiotherapist from Morello clinic in Newport, said Dan was “an immensely motivated guy” when he visited them after being discharged from hospital.

“The technology is two-fold,” he explained.

“The first part we tried with Dan is a robot. The robot will mimic normal human gait as much as possible.

“The other part of the system that we developed is a stimulation suit that has got sensors. The trousers are also fitted with electrodes and we can stimulate muscle activity at the right time.

“Through a little bit of algorithm – and dare I say AI – it will start developing a walking pattern.

“It’s super exciting. It’s not often that you see that in Wales.”

A robotic chair. It is black and white and made of metal.

This robot helped Dan to walk at Morello clinic in Newport shortly after he was discharged from hospital

Dan said the experience was “surreal” but “the best feeling”.

“It just made me want to push harder. That’s on our doorstep here in Wales, so it spurred us on to do some research, and do other things.”

But private physiotherapy and innovative treatment does not come without cost.

From raffles to ultramarathons and charity nights, family and friends have fundraised meaning Dan and Anna could set off for a trial abroad in October.

Anna Thomas A selfie of a woman with long red hair, wearing a teal puffer jacket and smiling at the camera. Behind her are large blue letters spelling BOCHUM, and in front of them is a man, dressed in all black and sat in a wheelchair with his arms up in the air.Anna Thomas

Dan and Anna spent two months in Bochum, Germany, for treatment

Dan explained he was trying two different treatments simultaneously in Germany – a stem cell treatment straight into his spinal cord, alongside using a Hybrid Assistive Limb (HAL) suit, which is a machine that works on brain waves.

“It’s one of the first times it’s ever been done,” he said.

“Sensors translate signals into movement, which then get my legs working, get me walking.

“The more you do it, the stronger the signals get, the faster it gets and eventually you’re able to walk without the suit.”

With six weeks of treatment left in Germany in the new year, Dan will have to apply for an EU Medical Visa, which is another challenge he said he is determined to overcome.

He does not know what the future holds, but is determined not to give up.

“Technology is advancing so fast, things aren’t where they were 10 years ago.

“New research is incredible. There is no limit. I don’t want there to be a limit.

“The more progress I can make now, the better our future will be.”



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Tags: ManparalysedSwanseawalkwave

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