Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
National

Judge Makes Recommendations In Death Of Woman Sent Home From Hospital In Cab

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Dec, 2015 01:03 PM
    WINNIPEG — A judge says the death of a senior hours after she was sent home from a Winnipeg hospital in a cab was not preventable.
     
    But Judge Margaret Wiebe says in an inquest report that Heather Brenan's death was still a tragedy that has raised concerns about her medical care.
     
    The judge made 25 recommendations, including one calling for more patient beds at the Seven Oaks hospital.
     
    Brenan, who was 68, spent four days in the emergency room at the hospital before she was discharged on the night of Jan. 27, 2012.
     
    She collapsed at her back door and was rushed back to Seven Oaks, where she died the next morning of a blood clot in her lung.
     
    Months later, two other patients were sent home in taxis from a different hospital and died on their doorsteps.
     
    The judge noted that the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority has since made several changes and is planning to move 19 geriatric patients in Seven Oaks into a long-term care facility. It will then convert that space to 30 medicine beds.
     
    She said she understands it will take time but hopes the plan will be made a "higher priority."
     
    The judge added that the health region now requires patients staying in the ER longer than 24 hours be admitted so they can be placed under the care of a dedicated doctor. It also has a protocol for safe discharges for elderly and vulnerable people.
     
    "Heather Brenan is responsible for many of these changes," wrote Wiebe in the report released Tuesday.
     
    "Her experience at (Seven Oaks), and the circumstances of her treatment and discharge, has resulted in a number of positive changes in policies and protocols which will benefit other people going forward."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Manitoba's First Openly Gay MLA Looks Back On Career, Struggle For Rights

    Manitoba's First Openly Gay MLA Looks Back On Career, Struggle For Rights
    WINNIPEG — The early 2000s were not that long ago, but seem like a different era to Jim Rondeau.

    Manitoba's First Openly Gay MLA Looks Back On Career, Struggle For Rights

    How A Trade Feud With Canada Built Hundreds Of Homes In Places Like New Orleans

    How A Trade Feud With Canada Built Hundreds Of Homes In Places Like New Orleans
    One little-known legacy of the now-expiring softwood lumber agreement: it spawned a massive, Canadian-funded humanitarian effort in the United States that people north of the border have never heard of.

    How A Trade Feud With Canada Built Hundreds Of Homes In Places Like New Orleans

    Put Away Your Shovel: On-demand Snow Removal Service Launching In Maritimes

    Put Away Your Shovel: On-demand Snow Removal Service Launching In Maritimes
    HALIFAX — A New Brunswick man wants Atlantic Canadians to give their backs a break from shovelling this winter with a new on-demand snow removal service.

    Put Away Your Shovel: On-demand Snow Removal Service Launching In Maritimes

    Quebec Legislators Mulling Giving Themselves Hefty Pay Hike

    Quebec Legislators Mulling Giving Themselves Hefty Pay Hike
    The proposal is essentially the result of recommendations in a report from retired Supreme Court justice Claire L'Heureux-Dube on how to improve their pay conditions.

    Quebec Legislators Mulling Giving Themselves Hefty Pay Hike

    Up To 20 Centimetres Of Snow Expected In Nova Scotia, New Brunswick

    Up To 20 Centimetres Of Snow Expected In Nova Scotia, New Brunswick
    Environment Canada has issued snowfall warnings for parts of mainland Nova Scotia and southern New Brunswick.

    Up To 20 Centimetres Of Snow Expected In Nova Scotia, New Brunswick

    Wave, Area, Company All Eerily Similar In B.C. Whale-Watch Tragedies

    The survivor accounts and official reports from two deadly British Columbia whale-watching tragedies 17 years apart bear eerie similarities.

    Wave, Area, Company All Eerily Similar In B.C. Whale-Watch Tragedies