Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Inquest To Examine Death Of Woman Sent Home From Winnipeg Hospital In Taxi

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 May, 2015 02:20 PM
    WINNIPEG — A woman whose mother died hours after being sent home in a cab from hospital is hoping an inquest that is to start Monday will provide some answers and help her heal.
     
    Heather Brenan collapsed on her doorstep in January 2012 and was rushed back to Winnipeg's Seven Oaks Hospital, where she died from a blood clot that had moved to her lungs.
     
    Months later, two other patients were sent home in taxis from the Grace Hospital and died before they got inside their front doors. The Winnipeg Regional Health Authority said there was no systemic problem and an internal investigation found the hospital did nothing wrong.
     
    Dana Brenan said her 68-year-old mother spent four days in the emergency room and was sent home at night without her house keys.
     
    "They just shoved her in a taxi and sent her home. That's not right," Brenan said. "I'd like to see things like that stopping, but clearly they're still happening."
     
    Manitoba's chief medical examiner called the inquest in 2013 to look into Brenan's death and to "examine hospital policy regarding the discharge of patients at night, particularly those who are elderly, frail, and who reside alone."
     
    The inquest, scheduled to sit for three weeks, is also to determine whether a shortage of acute-care beds might have been a factor in Brenan's death.
     
    The health authority updated its discharge guidelines, but Brenan's daughter said there are still problems. Hospital staff should be well educated on a standard policy that ensures vulnerable people aren't sent home alone at night, she said.
     
    "The policies are written, put on a shelf, and nobody is ensuring that they're being followed. I'd like more accountability."
     
    Miles Pollack has little faith in the inquest.
     
    His uncle, David Silver, was found frozen on his doorstep about 14 hours after he had been sent home in the middle of a frigid winter night last year.
     
    An autopsy found his death was due to a heart condition, but Pollack said no one at the health authority really examined why a 78-year-old man was sent home alone in a cab in the dead of winter.
     
    He said his confidence is shaken after an internal investigation absolved hospital officials.
     
    "My expectations aren't that high," he said. "I sure hope that they do something because even one death is way, way too much."
     
    After the death of another patient, 62-year-old Wayne Miller, then-health minister Erin Selby instructed all health authorities to ensure that patients sent home in cabs make it into their homes. Miller was  spotted on a sidewalk by a passing driver who called 911.
     
    Brad Hartle, spokesman for Health Minister Sharon Blady, said in a statement that the province is looking for "answers on what could have been done differently or better in the case of Ms. Brenan and to further make sure patients are being discharged appropriately and safely."
     
    Felicia Wiltshire, spokeswoman for the Winnipeg health authority, said in a statement that officials are focused on "continuous improvement" and look forward to the inquest's recommendations. She wouldn't discuss changes to the hospital discharge process.
     
    For Dana Brenan, the inquest is as much about healing as it is about forcing change.
     
    "I am hoping for closure," she said. "I don't know whether this inquest will bring that about."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Afghan Immigrant Who Nearly Decapitated Wife Appeals Conviction, Asks For New Trial

    Afghan Immigrant Who Nearly Decapitated Wife Appeals Conviction, Asks For New Trial
    TORONTO — An Afghan immigrant found guilty of second-degree murder after nearly decapitating his wife is appealing his conviction, arguing the judge who presided over his trial made several errors.

    Afghan Immigrant Who Nearly Decapitated Wife Appeals Conviction, Asks For New Trial

    New Westminster Teen Who Died In Vernon While Rock-Climbing With Friends Identified As Taylor Archer

    New Westminster Teen Who Died In Vernon While Rock-Climbing With Friends Identified As Taylor Archer
    The BC Coroners Service says Taylor Archer of New Westminster, B.C., was climbing near the King Edward access logging area with some friends.

    New Westminster Teen Who Died In Vernon While Rock-Climbing With Friends Identified As Taylor Archer

    2 Pilots From Missing B.C. Plane Found Dead Amid Wreckage Near Mt. Seymour: Official

    2 Pilots From Missing B.C. Plane Found Dead Amid Wreckage Near Mt. Seymour: Official
    VANCOUVER — Search and rescue crews have found the bodies of two pilots in and around the wreckage of a cargo plane that crashed in heavily treed mountains north of Vancouver. 

    2 Pilots From Missing B.C. Plane Found Dead Amid Wreckage Near Mt. Seymour: Official

    B.C. Man Alleging 'false Imprisonment' In China To Get Day In Canadian Court

    B.C. Man Alleging 'false Imprisonment' In China To Get Day In Canadian Court
    VANCOUVER — A British Columbia man has won the right to sue a company in a Canadian court that he alleges conspired with Chinese authorities to force him to spend years behind bars in China.

    B.C. Man Alleging 'false Imprisonment' In China To Get Day In Canadian Court

    Conservatives Fuel Opposition To Ontario's Sex-Ed Curriculum: Liberal Minister

    Conservatives Fuel Opposition To Ontario's Sex-Ed Curriculum: Liberal Minister
    TORONTO — Conservative groups are fuelling the vocal opposition to Ontario's new sex-education curriculum, Liberal Education Minister Liz Sandals said Tuesday as thousands of people protested outside the legislature.

    Conservatives Fuel Opposition To Ontario's Sex-Ed Curriculum: Liberal Minister

    Justin Trudeau Might Be Open To Forming Coalition With NDP, But Not With Mulcair As Leader

    Justin Trudeau Might Be Open To Forming Coalition With NDP, But Not With Mulcair As Leader
    OTTAWA — Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau says he would "maybe" be more open to the idea of forming a coalition with the NDP if Tom Mulcair was not running the party.

    Justin Trudeau Might Be Open To Forming Coalition With NDP, But Not With Mulcair As Leader