Why woman had to drop out of Miss England

Why woman had to drop out of Miss England

A woman who thought she had a good chance at being crowned Miss England was forced to drop out of the beauty pageant after becoming partially paralysed.

Alanta Richards had two beauty titles under her belt when she entered the competition but was forced to drop out following a meningitis scare.

Alanta, 18, says she is unable to feel her left leg properly and relies on crutches to get around after a highly invasive procedure to check for the disease, The Sun reported.

She said: “I’m still really suffering. I can’t do any of the things I love anymore like horse riding and I can hardly feel my left leg at all.

“It’s got no reflex reaction and one side of my body is much weaker than the other. I’ve no idea what’s happened but feel something has gone really wrong.

“I’m worried that I will never feel well again.”

Alanta believed she had a decent chance at becoming Miss England after getting a second chance at the prize.

She is the current Miss Surrey and also entered as Miss Hampshire 2023.

She said: “I was super happy and really excited because I thought I had a good chance this year with it being the second time I’ve competed.”

But ten days before last month’s contest she woke up with a blinding headache, sore throat, body pains and a sensitivity to light before her temperature soared to 41 degrees.

She said: “I’d gone to bed with a bit of a headache but when I woke up it was absolutely awful.

“There were pains all down my body and my boyfriend Shane couldn’t even touch me it was so bad.”

Alanta called emergency services who said they would send an ambulance but when it failed to turn up within three hours, her dad Wayne rushed her 16km from their home in to Frimley Park Hospital in Camberley, 47km southwest of central London.

The former tourism student said: “When I arrived I was in absolute agony all over. I could walk but was very dizzy.”

Doctors suspected meningitis and quickly hooked Alanta up to a drip before a brain scan which was clear of problems.

When she woke up in a hospital bed the next morning in “excruciating agony” doctors decided to carry out a lumbar puncture – a painful procedure which uses a needle to extract spinal fluid.

She said: “The doctors explained I might feel a pins and needles sensation and to tell them if I did.

“They tried to get the needle in three times before it worked, then all of a sudden I felt a stabbing pain go straight down my left leg. I felt like it was being slashed open.

“At this point I was screaming in pain telling them to take it out.

“Afterwards, the doctors told me to lie flat for 15 minutes but when I stood up my legs went dead as I stood up and my back was in agony.”

Alanta needed a Zimmer frame to get back to the ward and says she has been unable to feel her left leg properly ever since – fearing it is partially paralysed.

She claims the hospital gave her just two short sessions of physiotherapy at the hospital but she was still unable to walk properly when she was sent home on May 15.

Alanta says she was later told she didn’t have meningitis and that she had a curve in her spine that made the procedure difficult.

The following night, as contestants took the runway for the Miss England contest, Alanta was laid up in her bed virtually disabled.

She said: “I felt really awful because I should have been there on stage, competing.”

“When I’m tired my leg feels heavy but otherwise I can’t feel hardly anything. If someone were to pinch me I wouldn’t be able to feel it as much as I can in my right leg.”

A spokesman for Frimley Health NHS Foundation Trust said: “We are sorry to hear that Alanta was unhappy with her care and we would encourage her to share her concerns with us so we can investigate them.”

This story originally appeared on The Sun and reproduced with permission