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To: Winfastorlose who wrote (1306673)7/6/2021 12:36:27 AM
From: Maple MAGA 2 Recommendations

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Winfastorlose

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Canada Healthcare - Poco says it is great because it is free!!!

cbc.ca

Anne Pommainville, 58, was admitted to Hull Hospital with severe stomach pain

CBC News · Posted: Jul 05, 2021



Anne Pommainville had to lie on the floor of the Hull Hospital's emergency department while waiting to be seen by hospital staff because there were no beds available, her family told Radio-Canada. (Supplied by family)

A Gatineau woman has died after spending several hours in pain, lying on the floor of the Hull Hospital emergency department, leaving her family distraught and demanding change.

Anne Pommainville, 58, went to the hospital in Gatineau, Que., on the evening of June 27, but was unable to sit on a waiting room chair due to extreme stomach pain.

Hospital staff told Pommainville and her husband, Jacques Richard, that her only option was to create a makeshift bed on the floor using blankets.

I will remember that night all my life. I will never forget her.- Jacques Richard, husband of Anne Pommainville"She did not deserve that," said Richard in an interview with Radio-Canada.

"I will remember that night all my life. I will never forget her."

After she waited for hours on the floor, Richard decided to take Pommainville to wait in the car. He then went back and forth between the parking lot and the emergency department to ensure he heard her name called to see a doctor.

Eventually, she did see a doctor and was later transferred to the Gatineau Hospital for surgery.

However, her family said they didn't know she had been transferred until June 29 — almost 48 hours later — when hospital staff called Richard to tell him his wife's heart stopped and staff could not revive her.

'Ridiculous conditions'Veronique Richard said her family doesn't blame the hospital workers for how her aunt was treated, but rather the continued staffing shortages at hospitals in Gatineau.

"To see that we have people lying on the floor in a waiting room in intense pain because there is no stretcher, because there is no room, because they are overwhelmed," she said.

Gatineau Hospital ER closed due to nursing shortage Emergency rooms over capacity at some Outaouais hospitals

"The goal is not to throw stones at employees, nurses, attendants, administrative officers, doctors. ... They work under ridiculous conditions."

Patient advocate Paul Brunet said Pommainville was not treated with dignity.

"I've been a spokesperson for almost 25 years. I've rarely seen that in a hospital in the west, in Canada, in Quebec, that we haven't been able to find a single stretcher and a single bed," said Brunet.



The Centre intégré de santé et de services sociaux de l'Outaouais (CISSSO) says it has launched an internal investigation into the circumstances around how Anne Pommainville was treated at the Hull Hospital. (Michel Aspirot/Radio-Canada)

Health unit launches investigationThe local health unit, Centre intégré de santé et de services sociaux de l'Outaouais (CISSSO), said it has launched an internal investigation.

Intensive care being halted at Gatineau Hospital

"Our thoughts are first with the family and loved ones of this lady," the local health unit wrote in a statement that said they were "concerned about this situation."

"We are doing everything we can to understand what happened and to prevent this kind of situation from happening again."

With files from Radio-Canada's Marielle Guimond, CBC Ottawa's Nicole Williams

Gatineau Hospital ER closed due to nursing shortage

Hull Hospital gurneys only 'good for recycling

' Outaouais health system woefully underfunded, study shows



To: Winfastorlose who wrote (1306673)7/6/2021 12:41:49 AM
From: Maple MAGA 2 Recommendations

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Video captures patient crawling out of Canadian hospital after staff dismiss pleas for help

Official apologizes to family, spokesperson says staff 'were dealt with accordingly'

Erica Johnson · CBC News · Posted: Jan 18, 2021



Man crawls out of hospital6 months ago

David Pontone crawls out of Humber River Hospital, told to leave despite excruciating leg pain. 0:56

David Pontone's voice still shakes as he recalls having to crawl out of Toronto's Humber River Hospital on his hands and knees.

"The pain was unbearable," said Pontone. "To be able to walk properly was impossible."

It happened on April 18, 2018, but involved a lengthy battle for his family to obtain video footage of the event.

The 45-year-old had gone to emergency, complaining of excruciating pain in his legs.

Pontone also told medical staff he took medication for bipolar affective disorder — a mental illness that causes severe depression and episodes of mania — but that he'd been stable for seven years. He says that disclosure affected his treatment.

"They thought I was faking it because I was bipolar," Pontone told Go Public. "There are no words to describe what I went through that night."
One of Canada's leading psychiatric experts says overlooking serious physical health issues in people who struggle with mental illness is a widespread problem — and that it can severely shorten their lifespans.

"We are failing this population miserably," said Dr. Vicky Stergiopoulos, psychiatrist and physician-in-chief at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) in Toronto, Canada's largest mental health teaching hospital.



CBC News has obtained surveillance video of a man forced to crawl away from a Toronto-area hospital after being refused treatment.




The video has raised questions about how people with mental health issues are treated when they need medical help. 2:01

"They go in for a broken leg and get sent to psychiatry to check their head."

Pontone says he hopes sharing his story will prevent others from experiencing an ordeal like his.

"I was mistreated. Misjudged. It should never be repeated, with any person," he said.

When Pontone arrived at emergency he was seen by a doctor who ordered an MRI but also referred him to an on-call psychiatrist after learning about his mental illness.



Pontone reacts to seeing closed circuit video from the hospital of his ordeal. (Mike Cole/CBC)

In medical records obtained by Go Public, the psychiatrist noted that "anxiety" seemed to be Pontone's most dominant symptom — despite Pontone having said he was in a great deal of pain and had been suffering from increasing leg pain for a month.

Another note says the reason for Pontone's visit is "bipolar" — not his inability to walk.

When the MRI didn't find anything unusual, the psychiatrist discharged Pontone.

"As soon as they got the results … they took off the blankets and started saying, 'Come on, get up! You're fine, there's nothing wrong with you!'" said Pontone.

'Totally helpless'Video cameras at the exit captured Pontone as he was ordered to leave. The footage shows Pontone lying on the hallway floor, struggling to stand.

As he gets to his hands and knees and crawls toward the exit, a nurse walks next to him, escorting him out. Passersby stop to look at the spectacle, but the nurse encourages Pontone to keep going.



Pontone is seen lying on his back near a hospital exit, unable to walk due to excruciating leg pain. (Humber River Hospital)

"The nurse kept saying, 'You're a big boy! You're strong! Come on, big boy, stand up!'" said Pontone.

"I've always been a gentleman, but I was angry. I felt totally helpless."

It took Pontone about 20 minutes to reach the exit. A security guard later helped him to a waiting taxi.

He says the doctors had made him think his pain was "all in his head," so a few days later, he made his way to CAMH, where a psychiatrist immediately determined that his suffering had nothing to do with his mental health.

An ambulance took him to Toronto Western Hospital in downtown Toronto, where a neurologist diagnosed Guillain-Barré Syndrome, a rare disorder in which the body's immune system attacks the nerves.

Five weeks later, the family met with Humber management. They hadn't seen the video yet, but chief nursing executive Vanessa Burkoski had screened it and told them she was disturbed by what she saw.



Lucia Pontone says she was in disbelief when she saw the footage of her son crawling out of Humber River Hospital. (Mike Cole/CBC)

She apologized, and told the family they could have the video once people's faces had been blurred for privacy.

In a follow-up meeting two months later, the family viewed the video for the first time.

"They let him go, like a dog, outside," said Pontone's mother, Lucia. "Nobody should be treated like that."

"It's hard to understand how the hospital thought this was OK," said Pontone's sister Laura. "It was humiliating. It was not OK."

Pontone wanted a copy of the video, but in spite of Burkoski's earlier assurances, the hospital now said it couldn't hand the footage over, in case Pontone unblurred the faces of other people.

The hospital took the matter to Ontario's Privacy Commissioner, stating it didn't feel comfortable giving Pontone the video and that a cybersecurity expert would have to be hired for about ten hours to use multi-layered obscuring technology, so Pontone couldn't unblur the faces later.



Humber River Hospital fired the nurse who watched Pontone crawl out, but it won’t say whether any doctors who saw him were disciplined. (CBC)

It also said Pontone would have to pay the cost and sign an agreement, promising not to share the video.

The Pontones met with Toronto personal injury lawyer Harrison Cooper, who offered to work pro bono after hearing about his ordeal.

"In Canada we pride ourselves on evolving to understand mental illness," said Cooper. "And we don't want incidents like this — where someone who has a mental illness isn't treated the same way someone without mental illness is treated."

The fight took two years to resolve.

The privacy commissioner ruled Pontone could have the footage if basic blurring was done, stating that Pontone had shown no indication he wanted to reveal other people's faces.

The hospital paid for the blurring and shared the footage.

Hospital 'deeply troubled'

Go Public requested an interview with a spokesperson for Humber River Hospital, which was declined.

In a statement spokesperson Joe Gorman said the hospital was "deeply troubled" by Pontone's experience and that the staff involved "were dealt with accordingly."

"Every patient at Humber River Hospital deserves compassionate, professional and respectful care from our staff," Gorman wrote.

Go Public has learned that the nurse who escorted Pontone out of the hospital was fired. Gorman wouldn't say whether any of the doctors were disciplined.

'Diagnostic overshadowing'

Stergiopoulos was not involved when Pontone visited CAMH. But she says it's so common for health-care professionals to blame mental illness for people's physical health concerns that there's a term for it — "diagnostic overshadowing."

She recalls, several decades ago, "having to take a patient of mine with serious mental illness to the oncologist who had refused to treat her just because she had a mental illness."

"It was through advocacy that I managed to get her into treatment and she was treated successfully," she said. "And to see that persist so many years later, it's really heartbreaking. I think we can do better and I think we should do better."



Dr. Vicky Stergiopoulos says more training is needed for health-care professionals so patients with mental illnesses are treated with respect. (Jon Castell/CBC)

A 2019 Lancet Psychiatry Commission reviewed the findings of almost 100 systemic reviews that examined the presence of medical conditions among people worldwide with mental illness. It found that people with serious mental illness have a life expectancy that's up to 25 years shorter than the general population.

"The statistics are indeed shocking," said Stergiopoulos. "And what is most shocking is that they're persisting despite us knowing about these issues for many years now."

She says several factors can be behind the shortened life expectancy for people with mental health issues — such as a sedentary lifestyle or a lack of disease prevention services — but a key reason is stigma and discrimination by health-care workers.

At the root of the problem, says Stergiopoulos, health-care professionals see physical and mental health as separate.

"This is flawed and we need to do a better job at seeing people as human beings."

Pontone spent almost four months undergoing intensive rehabilitation, but considers himself lucky to be able to walk again — Guillain-Barré Syndrome can worsen rapidly and attack the organs. It can also lead to full-body paralysis and possibly death.

His mother hopes that speaking out will benefit other people with mental illness who need help with a physical problem.

"I want the hospital to change the way they look at mental health," she says. "So that this doesn't happen again."



Pontone is seen on his hands and knees, while passersby stop beside him. (Humber River Hospital)



To: Winfastorlose who wrote (1306673)7/6/2021 2:15:48 AM
From: pocotrader1 Recommendation

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give it up, your being a Guinea pig by not being vaccinated