The local community was rocked by the news that much-loved business owner, Tim Perkins, had suffered a severe injury after falling 10 metres from a palm tree on the 3rd December.
Tim, who co-owns Whitpro Pty Ltd with his wife Norina, was performing a task he had completed thousands of times before, as an arborist— climbing and cleaning numerous palms on a local property, when the catastrophic accident occurred.
Five months on and Tim is sharing his story to help create change for other spinal patients so that when the worst happens, they can also stay in Townsville rather than heading to Brisbane for specialist rehabilitation.
Sign The Petition To Help Continued Funding For Specialist Spinal Care In Townsville
From the rehabilitation centre at the Townsville University Hospital, Tim recalls every moment of the fall, looking up at the head of the palm while plummeting to the earth,
thinking “this is going to hurt”. Tim landed with such impact, that the force bounced him from his back onto his chest. The impact breaking 26 bones and crushing Tims spinal cord.
Tim instantly realised that he could not feel his legs.
When Norina arrived onsite, she recalls his first words to her “will I walk again?” and she replied, “I don’t know, it’s not looking good”, as Tim’s back had a large visible bulge which she correctly deduced was a broken back.
“What we did not realise at that point was the extent of Tim’s other internal injuries which were worsening by the second,” she explained.
Norina recalls with gratitude, the Whitsunday ambulance and fire brigade crews acting swiftly to get Tim as stable as possible and transporting him to the PCYC where the BMA CQ Rescue helicopter flew in from Seaforth.
On arrival the paramedic reviewed Tim and told Norina that he would not survive the flight and that they would need to operate immediately on location.
“She said I could say goodbye before they got started,” shared Norina, painfully reliving the tragedy.
Tim was placed in an induced coma, and emergency surgery was performed on the grass of the PCYC field, blood that had been flooding his lungs was drained out, saving his life.
Tim was then airlifted to Townsville Hospital and Norina, with the support of their sons, made the long 3.5 hour drive north, not knowing if Tim would survive the flight.
“The paramedic called me when they arrived at Townsville University Hospital to tell me that Tim had made it, that there was a team of doctors waiting as they landed and that Tim was in the best possible hands, he would make it.”
Nearly five months later, Norina has not left Tim’s side since that day.
Tim was fortunate in that there was no brain damage and his cognitive abilities remained intact. After a seven-hour surgery, which took place a few days after the accident, Tim was told he would likely never walk again. The grief of this news still sits heavily with both Tim and Norina, who now spend long days rehabilitating at the Townsville Rehabilitation Unit. Every day is dedicated to Tim’s recovery, so he can become as mobile and active as possible while Norina supports him through his daily tasks.
The NQSIS (North Queensland Spinal Injury Service) is a team of 10 spinal injury specialists that have given support and knowledge to the rehab team and Tim in his recovery, giving him the best possible outcome and strong foundation for the rest of his life.
Without this team, spinal patients like Tim are not able to stay close to home but rather are sent to Brisbane for rehabilitation.
“Nobody could understand what he’s going through on a daily basis if they have not been on this journey,” Norina explained.
“It’s like being reborn; you’ve got to learn to do so much all over again, even sitting up unassisted has been a challenging exercise.”
The hospital’s rehabilitation department had received a Federal government grant to trial a specialist spinal cord consulting team, who has been integral to Tim’s rehabilitation.
Unfortunately, that funding will end in June.
Tim is one of the last few spinal injury patients fortunate enough to remain in Townsville Hospital Rehabilitation Unit with the NQSIS to be dispersed as of the 30th June due to state funding not being allocated in 2025 - 26 to this specialty service in our region.
Tim and Norina now hope to use their story to help push for this important funding for government support and recognition, that regional Australia in North Queensland need this service.
“North Queenslanders are being sent to Brisbane, over 1,300 Kms away from family, friends, local community and personal resources, at a time when individuals are coming to terms with a life altering injury,” expressed Norina.
“It is demoralising, lonely, depressing and demotivating, not only for patients but for family too and that is going to affect not only health outcomes but also relationships.”
“You can’t change what has already happened to you in life, but you can choose how you deal with it,” she added.
“If what we are going through can help others and can change a system in regional Australia, that lets down spinal and brain injury patients, then at least our heart breaking journey is given a silver lining.”
Tim and Norina are now appealing to you, to lobby the government to fund the specialist spinal consulting team to continue and create a 10 bed dedicated spinal ward at Townsville University Hospital, with specialist spinal medical staff for regional Queenslanders. This would mean families can stay close to their loved ones during recovery knowing they are in safe hands, with strong outcomes, setting the foundation for the best possible life moving forward.
“I resisted going to Brisbane for rehabilitation because I did not want to be separated from my family while I was learning to accept, navigate and re-learn to use my body, for nine months or longer,” shared Tim.
As the Federal Election approaches, Tim and Norina are asking for federal funding promises from candidates including MP Phillip Thompson, they are also reaching out to MP Amanda Camm, Minister for Families, Seniors, and Disability Services, to lobby for urgent funding relief at the state level.
Those who know Tim will fondly recall his big smile, quick wit, and kind personality, always stopping to chat with anyone. As Tim and Norina embark on the long road to recovery, they want everyone to know that Tim still embodies these traits, along with a stubbornness to prevail, a dogged determination to fight, and an unshakeable will to not only survive but to embrace life as a paraplegic, a husband, a father and an active community member.
Together they asked:
“Help make a difference to not only Tim’s recovery but to the next spinal injury in your town, the next mate, friend, family member who never thought a spinal injury would happen to them.”
“We are asking that you, our community be a voice and to get online or use the QR code and sign the petition to lobby for funds to ensure the North Queensland is not neglected when it comes to regional spinal injury health requirements. It is not just the capital cities that should receive the bulk of health funding.
“Join us and have a voice regional Australia, before North Queensland’s Spinal Specialist team are dispersed for good.”
Sign the petition giving your support via the QR code and help Transform lives of people with spinal cord injury.
SIGN THE PETITION HERE: https://chng.it/nQSWGb6XSs
Tim and Norina at the rehabilitation Centre at Townsville Hospital. The couple say they want to use their tragedy to help create change for others
Tim in a coma shortly after the incident
Together with family at Townsville Hospital. They are now campaigning so other spinal patients can receive rehab close to home