Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Cancer Patient Denied Chemo Due To Condition Of Homeless Shelter

The Canadian Press, 25 Sep, 2018 11:47 AM
    VICTORIA — Terry Willis says he's praying for a clean, safe place to live to undergo the cancer treatments he needs after he was denied chemotherapy because he stays in a Victoria homeless shelter.
     
     
    The 50-year-old is facing his second fight against blood cancer in seven years, but he says his oncologist won't start chemotherapy treatments because the shelter where he lives in not a suitable recovery environment.
     
     
    Victoria housing and health advocates say this isn't an isolated case and that many other vulnerable people living in shelters or on the streets are not getting the care they need because of their poor living conditions.
     
     
    Willis, a former warehouse worker who ended up living on the streets after his wife died, says he originally disagreed with the decision to deny him treatment, but now realizes he needs a clean, quiet home to rest.
     
     
    The Portland Hotel Society, which operates the downtown shelter where Willis lives, says in a statement that it is working with Willis and his doctors to facilitate his treatment for non-Hodgkin lymphoma.
     
     
    The Island Health authority says discussions are underway with the B.C. Cancer Agency, B.C. Housing, and the Portland Hotel Society to get the help that Willis needs.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Manitoba Trucker Covered In Hot Tar In North Dakota Crash Dies In Hospital

    Manitoba Trucker Covered In Hot Tar In North Dakota Crash Dies In Hospital
    A Manitoba truck driver who was covered in hot tar when his semi truck rolled in North Dakota is being remembered as a fighter.

    Manitoba Trucker Covered In Hot Tar In North Dakota Crash Dies In Hospital

    Birthplace Doesn't Necessarily Guarantee Citizenship, Feds Tell Supreme Court

    Birthplace Doesn't Necessarily Guarantee Citizenship, Feds Tell Supreme Court
    "Indeed, no European countries, for example, grant an unqualified automatic citizenship by birth and they have no obligation to do so," the federal submission says.

    Birthplace Doesn't Necessarily Guarantee Citizenship, Feds Tell Supreme Court

    Ontario Woman Charged After U.S. Border Officer Slapped In Niagara Falls, N.Y.

    Ontario Woman Charged After U.S. Border Officer Slapped In Niagara Falls, N.Y.
    NIAGARA FALLS, N.Y. — U.S. officials say a Kitchener, Ont., woman was arrested after allegedly assaulting a border officer at the Rainbow Bridge in Niagara Falls, N.Y.

    Ontario Woman Charged After U.S. Border Officer Slapped In Niagara Falls, N.Y.

    Vivek Agnihotri Forced To Delete Abusive Tweet Against Swara Bhasker

    Vivek Agnihotri Forced To Delete Abusive Tweet Against Swara Bhasker
    Vivek Agnihotri in a reference to the #MeToo movement against sexual harassment and sexual assault said, "Where is the placard - #MeTooProstituteNun?"

    Vivek Agnihotri Forced To Delete Abusive Tweet Against Swara Bhasker

    Pot Advocates Say $63K Remitted To Vancouver For 4-20 Festival Expenses

    Pot Advocates Say $63K Remitted To Vancouver For 4-20 Festival Expenses
    The organizers of the annual 4-20 marijuana celebration in Vancouver say they have paid the City of Vancouver and the Vancouver Park Board for expenses related to the unsanctioned event.

    Pot Advocates Say $63K Remitted To Vancouver For 4-20 Festival Expenses

    Surrey, B.C., Walmart Linked To Outbreak Of Legionnaire’s Disease Reopens

    A Walmart in a Surrey, B.C., that was closed after public health officials discovered the bacteria that causes Legionnaires' disease in the store's cooling towers has reopened.

    Surrey, B.C., Walmart Linked To Outbreak Of Legionnaire’s Disease Reopens