Family angered by man's ER death - Action News
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Manitoba

Family angered by man's ER death

Family members of a wheelchair-bound man who died in a Winnipeg emergency room say they are shocked and angered he was ignored by hospital staff for more than a day.

Family members of a wheelchair-bound man who died in a Winnipeg emergency roomsay they are shocked and angered he was ignored by hospital staff for more than a day.

Brian Sinclair, a double amputee with a speech problem,was found dead in his wheelchair after spending 34 hoursin the waiting room of theWinnipeg Health Sciences Centre's emergency department last weekend.

A catheter that the 45-year-old had as a result ofa bladder problem was blocked,andhe hadn't been able to urinate for 24 hours, said the province's chief medical examiner, Dr. Thambirajah Balachandra.

He died of complications from a serious bladder infection that spread to his bloodstream, said Balachandra.

Robert Sinclairtold CBC News he can't understand how hiscousin could sit in the hospital for such a long time without being noticed.

"He's my blood," Sinclair said. "I don't like to see any of my blood relatives die for no reason and I believe that. It was for no reason. The guy sat there for 34 hours for what reason?"

Brian Sinclair took a taxi from a community health centre to the Health Sciences Centre on Friday afternoon. He was found dead after midnight on Sunday, when someone in the waiting room alerted hospital staff.

Sinclair appearsnever to have been assessed by a triage nurse and was not registered as a patient seeking care, so reassessment nurses didn't know he was there for help, officials with the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority said Tuesday.

He was apparently dead for some time before staff members were alerted, officials said. The exact time of his death is not known.

Bradley Sinclair, a brother, said he has also waited in the emergency room for long periods while seeking care.

"I waited, waited, waited with people that were there. They waited long times to see a doctor. That's what happens there."

Balachandra said Brian Sinclair could have been saved bya catheter change and a course of antibiotics.

"I didn't like that," Bradley Sinclair said. "I wish he was alive, but I can't bring him back alive."

Speech problem likely a factor, says pastor

Winnipeg pastor Ken McGhie, whoknew Brian Sinclair, said the man's speech impedimentmay have made him reluctant to ask for help.

"These have got to be the most vulnerable people in our city, anywhere, people that can't communicate and he should have beenknown to have not been able to effectively communicate," McGhie said.

"He was very hard to understand and especially if he got a little bit excited there was no way in the world you could understand his excited mumblings."

Balachandra has called an inquest into the death and he expects it to begin almost immediately.

The Winnipeg Regional Health Authority has also issued a directive requiring clinics that send people to the emergency department to follow up by phone. Manitoba Health has asked emergency department staff to ensure every person in the waiting room is spoken with to determine whether he or she has been registered.

Followupa standard practice, says ex-ER director

But Dr. Moe Lerner, a former hospital emergency room director, said those measures should already be standard practice for health-care professionals.

Lerner, now medical director at the Four Rivers Clinic, said something went terribly wrong for Sinclair to sit untreated for 34 hours and then die.

The inner-city clinic Sinclair initially visited sent him to the hospital with a letter explaining his medical situation. But he appears to have never reported to the triage desk at the emergency room.

"What should have happened, what should always happen is communication.Doesn't matter who it is or what the problem is if a physician thinks a person needs an ER, it means communication," Lerner said. "That includes if a person drives to an ER. The minute they get through the door, they should go to a triage desk."

Phoning the ER whena patient is sent to hospital is the "usual courtesy," he said.

Emergency rooms can be busy places and it can be hard for staff to keep track of who's waiting for care, Lerner said.

"In fairness to those involved, sometimes the departments are so busy you cannot get through or you're on hold, and then it's necessary to write a note," he said. "But then it's also necessary to make sure that the person will get there somehow in a reasonable fashion."