Families forced to go out of province for kids' heart surgery amid gap in care at B.C. Children's Hospital - Action News
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British Columbia

Families forced to go out of province for kids' heart surgery amid gap in care at B.C. Children's Hospital

More than a dozen families of children in need of heart surgeries have been forced to travel long distances to get vital care, after B.C. Childrens Hospital informed them there was no pediatric heart surgeon available in Vancouver.

Pediatric heart surgeries cancelled after surgeon takes 'scheduled leave'

Newborn Logan Suzara received heart surgery at Toronto's SickKids Hospital in July after his parents were told there was no longer a team available in Vancouver. (Cody Levien and Alyssa Suzara)

More than a dozen families of childrenin need of heart surgeryhave been forced to travel long distances to get vital care, after B.C. Children's Hospital informed themthere was no pediatric heart surgeon available.

Thirteen children have been sent out of province for surgery since July 1, the hospital in Vancouver says,andseven have since returned. Some parents have travelled as far as Toronto to get the medical care their children need.

Cody Levien and Alyssa Suzara were told less than a month before their scheduled C-section date on July 16that there was no longer a team available to perform urgent heart surgery after their son's birth. Loganwas diagnosed in uterowitha rare heart defect that requiredsurgery within a week of birth.

So the couple, who live in Coquitlam, B.C., flew to Toronto when Suzara was 35 weeks pregnant and spent seven weeks there, from June 20 to Aug.5,includinga two-week stay at Toronto's SickKids Hospital.

Logan Suzara was diagnosed in utero with a rare heart defect that requiredsurgery within a week of birth. (Cody Levien and Alyssa Suzara)

"We were taken by surprise and disappointed. We felt so isolated, as far as family being able to be there in person," says Levien.

The gap in care at B.C. Children's Hospital appears to be due in part to a leave of absence taken by its chief of pediatric cardiovascular and thoracic surgery, Dr. Sanjiv Gandhi. Court documents have revealed there was a dispute betweenGandhi and another cardiothoracic surgeon at the hospitalwho was fired but reinstated on appeal.

The hospital has confirmedGandhi is on a "scheduled leave" but has not said whether the internal conflict is the cause of the cancelled surgeries.

In a statement, the hospitalsaid it isaware there is a gap in care and has apologized to patients and families. The hospital said it will continue to bring in heart surgeons from outside B.C. to temporarily help with procedures.

It added that it is also "providing financial support for travel, accommodation, and food, on an as-needed basis to support those families" who had been affected.

But Suzara says she was "shocked" when they wereoffered support of $100 a weekto help cover their costs in Toronto.

"I [was]35 weeks pregnant. I can easily eat $100 in food and that was for two of us."

The family said they were originally offered $50 a week.

Suzara says having to jump on a flight to Toronto on such short noticewas very stressful.

"We're a new, smaller family. I can't imagine the financial costs and everything for bigger families who are uprooted for several weeks, or longer."

6-month-old suffered cardiac arrests during transfer

When Heather and Steve Lazeski'ssix-month-old's heart problems took a turn for the worsein early August, the Kelowna, B.C., couple wastold there was no team available at B.C. Children's Hospital to help their son.

"They chose to send him to Edmonton by medical transport," says Steve Lazeski.

During the transport, baby James suffered two cardiac arrests.

"The only way I can describe it is,it's like living yourworst nightmare. It was traumatic the transferwas too much for his little heart,"Heather Lazeskisaid.

The cardiac arrests damaged James's kidneys and liver, making him ineligible for a heart transplant until those organs have recovered.

James Lazeski at Edmonton's Stollery Hospital, after the six-month-old suffered two cardiac arrests during his transfer from B.C. (Heather Lazeski)

"Without that transfer, he wouldn't be in the condition he is today," said Heather Lazeski.

In Edmonton, James was put on amachineto help pump oxygen into his heart and lungs.The Lazeskis say they plan to stay in Edmonton until James is strong enough to receive a heart transplant, which could take up to a year.

When asked about the Lazeskis' case, B.C. Children's Hospital said, "we cannot speak to individual cases," but it said it was working to improve elements of its heart transplant program.

'Looming uncertainty'

Laesa Kim, from Surrey, B.C., says she received a phone call on May 31 telling her that the heart surgery scheduled for her five-year-old daughter Evelyn wouldbe cancelledbecause Gandhi would be on leave. The call came five weeks before Evelyn's scheduled surgery.

"I felt shocked ... and devastated. Cancelled meant all the preparation and all the anxiety leading up to that surgery [was]shattered," Kim said.

"And now there is all this looming uncertainty as far aswhen it will happen. Who will be doing the surgery?Where are we going to be for the surgery?"

Evelyn Kim at B.C. Children's Hospital in 2017. The Kim family has spent years in and out of hospital because of Evelyn's heart defect. Her latest surgery has been cancelled. (Laesa Kim)

Evelyn has tricuspid atresia, a congenital heart defect that obstructs blood flow through the heart, andwill require multiple surgeries throughout her life. The family has spent years in and out of hospital.

"I have been by her bedside in that hospital for hundreds of days in the last five years," says Kim.

The Kims were told they would know more about Gandhi's return to work by August, butsaid they have not yet heard from the hospital.

Doctors' dispute

A court of appeal document from April 2021reveals there was a workplace dispute between Gandhi and Dr. Andrew Campbell and that the hospital eventually terminated Campbell's contract.According to the document, Gandhi was not consulted about Campbell's termination.

Campbell appealed the decision.In a Hospital Appeal Board ruling, Supreme Court Justice Nigel Kent said the hospital was aware of the dispute between the two doctors and "chose to do nothing about them." The Provincial Health Services Authority was ordered to reinstate Campbell.

Campbell has yet to resume work at B.C. Children's Hospital.The hospital has not confirmed why.

"We remain committed to providing children and their families with the highest quality patient care, but we acknowledge that in recent weeks, we have been faced with challenges in delivering on this and we apologize for the stress this may have caused the patients and families who need us most," the hospital said in a statement.

Corrections

  • An earlier version of this story stated that the hospital was planning to bring in surgeons from other jurisdictions to cover surgeries this summer. In fact, it has already been taking that measure.
    Aug 29, 2021 8:45 PM PT
  • An earlier version of this story stated that Alyssa Suzara's family was offered support of $100 a day to help cover their costs in Toronto, having originally been offered $50 a day. In fact, they were offered $100 a week after originally being offered $50 a week.
    Aug 27, 2021 12:22 PM PT