'I'm going to get through this': After boating accident, Florida 19-year-old fights to walk again

Jorge and Rocio Castro talk about their son Jose's recovery from a spinal cord injury during a press conference at Broward Health Medical Center Thursday Feb. 4, 2021 in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. The Coral Springs teen had a full academic/tennis scholarship at University of Florida when he suffered a traumatic spinal cord injury and near drowning on Dec. 20 after falling into shallow water during a boating excursion with friends. After 45 days in intensive care, Castro can move his arms, hands and has some movement in his leg. (Susan Stocker/South Florida Sun-Sentinel via AP)
Jorge and Rocio Castro talk about their son Jose's recovery from a spinal cord injury during a press conference at Broward Health Medical Center Thursday Feb. 4, 2021 in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. The Coral Springs teen had a full academic/tennis scholarship at University of Florida when he suffered a traumatic spinal cord injury and near drowning on Dec. 20 after falling into shallow water during a boating excursion with friends. After 45 days in intensive care, Castro can move his arms, hands and has some movement in his leg. (Susan Stocker/South Florida Sun-Sentinel via AP)

CORAL SPRINGS, Fla. -- Jose Castro, a strapping 19-year-old tennis player who was attending the University of Florida on an academic scholarship, had it all.

He was a former honor student at Coral Springs Charter School, a district champion tennis player, a top 100 tennis player in Region 8 of the United States Tennis Association, an altar boy, accomplished cook, and, by his family's description, an "incredible square dancer."

Now he's in a wheelchair at Broward Health Medical Center, paralyzed after falling off a boat into shallow water in Boca Raton on Dec. 20. He severely injured his spinal cord and nearly drowned.

Now, Castro is fighting to walk again. But he was a fighter from the moment he was born, five months premature and in an incubator for the first days of his life.

"I'm going to take it day by day," Castro said about his recovery process. "But I am praying for a full recovery. Personally, I know it's going to happen."

Dr. Jose Lozada, the trauma surgeon who has cared for Castro, said Castro's positive attitude and strong physical condition have helped his recovery. It's constantly on display.

"I told my parents, I think in Week 3, even in the ICU room, 'Don't worry, Dad. I'm going to get through this,'" Castro said.

Castro can now move his arms and hands. During a news conference with his parents and doctors, he frequently gestured while talking.

He even has small movements in his leg.

But his rehabilitation, which began at Broward North Hospital, moved to Broward Health Medical Center and will continue at Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami, remains an uphill battle.

Beyond that, the expenses are immense. The family has established a fund to help with the costs of hospitalization and equipping their home. Donations are tax deductible.

Castro was on winter beak during his freshman year at Florida when the accident happened.

"When I first saw my son, we were devastated," Jorge Castro said.

Jose Castro, who was on a ventilator and required a feeding tube, had surgery for a cervical spinal fracture, fought through collapsed lungs, a battle with pneumonia and a positive test for covid-19.

He was eventually moved to Broward Health Medical Center.

"That was a hairy ambulance ride," Lozada said.

The positive covid test meant his parents, Jorge and Rocio, who have three other children, could only see him through a glass in the Covid Intensive Care Unit when they came to visit. Worse, they had to have short visits because they couldn't stay with him the entire day or night.

It was an added complication on an already tough situation, a situation so grim a few times Lozada said he started rehearsing his conversation with Jorge and Rocio.

But slowly, Jose began to recover and gain strength.

"It's a miracle," Rocio Castro said while stroking her son's hair. "Jose here is a miracle."

Jose told his doctors to push his rehabilitation. He began requesting grooming so he'd look good for his Zoom calls.

"One thing I learned about Jose," Lozada said, "is he definitely cares what he looks like."

Overall, things are looking up a bit nowadays.

"When I first saw him he wasn't moving anything from the neck down," Lozada said. "Now I see him on an iPad all the time. I see his legs twitching. There's some activity there."

There's also a load of positivity there.

Jose said it isn't tough finding motivation to wake up each morning. He said he thinks about all the people sending him well wishes.

"For me not to give my best back, I feel like I'm failing them, and I don't like to fail anyone, especially the people like my family, God, everyone," he said. "I just don't want them to look at me like I didn't succeed at something I could have."

Distributed by The Associated Press.

Rocio Castro listens as her son, Jose, 19, speaks about his recovery from a spinal cord injury during a press conference at Broward Health Medical Center on Thursday Feb. 4, 2021 in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. The Coral Springs teen had a full academic/tennis scholarship at University of Florida when he suffered a traumatic spinal cord injury and near drowning on Dec. 20 after falling into shallow water during a boating excursion with friends. After 45 days in intensive care, Castro can move his arms, hands and has some movement in his leg. (Susan Stocker/South Florida Sun-Sentinel via AP)
Rocio Castro listens as her son, Jose, 19, speaks about his recovery from a spinal cord injury during a press conference at Broward Health Medical Center on Thursday Feb. 4, 2021 in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. The Coral Springs teen had a full academic/tennis scholarship at University of Florida when he suffered a traumatic spinal cord injury and near drowning on Dec. 20 after falling into shallow water during a boating excursion with friends. After 45 days in intensive care, Castro can move his arms, hands and has some movement in his leg. (Susan Stocker/South Florida Sun-Sentinel via AP)
Broward Health nurse Brooke Freeman and Dr. Jose Lozada escort Jose Manuel Castro, 19, to a press conference at Broward Health Medical Center Thursday Feb. 4, 2021 in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. The Coral Springs teen had a full academic/tennis scholarship at University of Florida when he suffered a traumatic spinal cord injury and near drowning on Dec. 20 after falling into shallow water during a boating excursion with friends. After 45 days in intensive care, Castro can move his arms, hands and has some movement in his leg. (Susan Stocker/South Florida Sun-Sentinel via AP)
Broward Health nurse Brooke Freeman and Dr. Jose Lozada escort Jose Manuel Castro, 19, to a press conference at Broward Health Medical Center Thursday Feb. 4, 2021 in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. The Coral Springs teen had a full academic/tennis scholarship at University of Florida when he suffered a traumatic spinal cord injury and near drowning on Dec. 20 after falling into shallow water during a boating excursion with friends. After 45 days in intensive care, Castro can move his arms, hands and has some movement in his leg. (Susan Stocker/South Florida Sun-Sentinel via AP)
Jorge and Rocio Castro and their son, Jose, 19, attend a press conference at Broward Health Medical Center with Dr. Jose Lozada to talk about Jose's recovery from a spinal cord injury, Thursday Feb. 4, 2021 in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. The Coral Springs teen had a full academic/tennis scholarship at University of Florida when he suffered a traumatic spinal cord injury and near drowning on Dec. 20 after falling into shallow water during a boating excursion with friends. After 45 days in intensive care, Castro can move his arms, hands and has some movement in his leg. (Susan Stocker/South Florida Sun-Sentinel via AP)
Jorge and Rocio Castro and their son, Jose, 19, attend a press conference at Broward Health Medical Center with Dr. Jose Lozada to talk about Jose's recovery from a spinal cord injury, Thursday Feb. 4, 2021 in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. The Coral Springs teen had a full academic/tennis scholarship at University of Florida when he suffered a traumatic spinal cord injury and near drowning on Dec. 20 after falling into shallow water during a boating excursion with friends. After 45 days in intensive care, Castro can move his arms, hands and has some movement in his leg. (Susan Stocker/South Florida Sun-Sentinel via AP)
Jose Manuel Castro, 19, speaks about his recovery from a spinal cord injury during a press conference at Broward Health Medical Center on Thursday Feb. 4, 2021 in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. The Coral Springs teen had a full academic/tennis scholarship at University of Florida when he suffered a traumatic spinal cord injury and near drowning on Dec. 20 after falling into shallow water during a boating excursion with friends. After 45 days in intensive care, Castro can move his arms, hands and has some movement in his leg. (Susan Stocker/South Florida Sun-Sentinel via AP)
Jose Manuel Castro, 19, speaks about his recovery from a spinal cord injury during a press conference at Broward Health Medical Center on Thursday Feb. 4, 2021 in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. The Coral Springs teen had a full academic/tennis scholarship at University of Florida when he suffered a traumatic spinal cord injury and near drowning on Dec. 20 after falling into shallow water during a boating excursion with friends. After 45 days in intensive care, Castro can move his arms, hands and has some movement in his leg. (Susan Stocker/South Florida Sun-Sentinel via AP)

Distributed by The Associated Press.

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