Nunavut man waiting for access to home dialysis feels 'like a hostage' in Winnipeg - Action News
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Manitoba

Nunavut man waiting for access to home dialysis feels 'like a hostage' in Winnipeg

A Nunavut man with kidney failure says he is caught in a jurisdictional limbo that means he doesnt have access to home dialysis.

Elder, former Nunavut MLA Peter Kattuk has been waiting for home dialysis assessment since January

Peter Kattuk has to have dialysis in Winnipeg because the treatment cannot be done in his community of Sanikiluaq, Nunavut. He wants to go home, but is still waiting for an assessment for home dialysis. (Trevor Brine/CBC)

A Nunavut elder and former MLAwith kidney failure says he feels like he's being held hostage in Winnipeg as he waits to find out if he's eligible for home dialysisand if so, which government will pay for it.

Peter Kattuk, 68, appears to be caught in the middle of a funding clash over home dialysis services between the Manitoba and Nunavutgovernments.

"I will not live here. I don't want to live here,"Kattuk told CBC from his temporary residence at the Kivalliq Inuit Centre, a boarding home for Inuit patientsin Winnipeg.

"I have a home, I have grandchildren.I know the environment over thereand my body can be stronger if I am home."

At the centre of the clash is the lack of a funding agreement between the two jurisdictions on providing home dialysis.

Kattuk says being away from home any longer isn't an option:

Inuk elder living in medical limbo

5 years ago
Duration 0:42
Peter Kattuk has kidney failure and had to have dialysis in Winnipeg because the treatment is not available in Nunavut.

While there is a reciprocal agreement for Nunavut patients receiving in-hospital services in Manitoba, there is no agreement between the two jurisdictions when it comes to home dialysis.

That'sresultedin months of uncertainty for Kattuk.

He has been living nearly 1,400 kilometres away from his home in Sanikiluaq, Nunavut, since early January, when he was medevaced to Winnipeg due to kidney failure.

With no option for in-hospital dialysis in Nunavut,residents in Kattuk's community must either move to Winnipeg or get set up andtrainedfor dialysis that can be done at home (referred to as home peritoneal dialysis).

Appointment abruptly cancelled

Thatoption was presented to Kattuk when he first arrived in Winnipeg.

However, for reasons that remain unclear, a Feb. 22 appointment to assess whetherhe qualifies for the home dialysis was abruptly cancelled and has not been rescheduled. Kattuk says he knows two other people from his community who were able to go home, after being set up for peritoneal dialysis.

That treatment allows people to do their own blood-filtering procedure at home.

Now, he says he's beentold he must move to Winnipeg permanently and get a Manitoba health card to continue receiving treatment.

"It looks like they are holding me as hostage, like a hostage. They won't let me train [for dialysis]or get assessment from them," he said.

"It's not fair. Why not me?"

Peter Kattuk, hunting in an area about two hours away from his home in Sanikiluaq. (Submitted by Annie Iqaluq)

While almost 150 patients were assessed andtrained for home dialysis in Manitoba last year at no cost, it appears Kattuk's status as a non-resident of the province has placed him in limbo.

The onus for paying for Nunavut patients' dialysisfalls to the Nunavut government, said Amie Lesyk, a spokesperson for the Manitoba Renal Program, whichis responsible for providing care for people with chronic kidney disease and is funded by the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority.

It costs about $35,000 for the first year of home dialysis, but the cost increases significantlywhen the patient is outside Manitoba because of shipping, she said.

Lesyk could not comment on Kattuk's case, but said there has been an increase indemand for home dialysis for patients originating from Nunavut, who want to return home.

She said fewer than fiveNunavut patients who received care in Manitoba have previously accessed home dialysis, and their plans were madebetweenthe two jurisdictions on a "case-by-case" basis.

"To ensure home peritoneal dialysis patients residing in Nunavut receive uninterrupted care and continuous access to life-sustaining dialysis treatments, it's imperative for Manitoba Renal Program, [Manitoba Health],and the Government of Nunavut to have a clear agreement on service provision and funding for a patient returning to Nunavut on home dialysis,"she said in an email statement.

"These conversations are currently underway."

Nunavut government responds

CBC News reached out to the government of Nunavut to comment on the nature of its agreement with Manitoba for dialysis and why a patient from Nunavut was not being accessed for home dialysis. CBC News also asked what solutions the government is looking at in its discussions with Manitoba.

No answers were given, but a brief statement was provided.

"We can't speak to the specifics of this case. The government of Nunavut pays for peritoneal dialysis for Nunavummiut. We work with several different jurisdictions to provide care out of territory.We work with our partners to address client concerns and needs," a spokesperson for the Nunavut governmentsaid in a written statement.

As a residential school survivor, Kattuk says he doesn't want to spend any more time away from his community. He devoted decades of his life to serving in public office, first asSanikiluaq's mayor in the 1990s, and thenas the representative for Hudson Bay in Nunavut's legislature from 1999 to 2008.

He says he never imagined he would have to spend his last days away from the community he has spent his life serving.

"I've been away from home for so many years.I was sent out to residential school, I was separated from my parents. Now I am an elder andI still have to be separated from my family and from my community," he said.

"It is not fair."

About 850 residents live in Sanikiluaq, which is located in the Belcher Islands in the southeastern part of Hudson Bay,about 150 kilometres off the coast of Quebec.

Now he spends his days at the Inuit Centre with his partner, Annie Iqaluq, and gets dialysis three times a week at Winnipeg's Health Sciences Centre. When they have enough money, they go to Polo Park shopping centre to eat dinner.

An example of an at-home dialysis machine. (Kaitie Fraser/CBC)

"It's very hard for me right now, but I'll fight for it, as much as I can," he said.

"[Sanikiluaq]is not like the city. You have to have money to ride around in the city, but at home, it's free. You can go picnic, take the family out."

Separation from home affects health:Inuit association

Rachel Dutton is the executive director of the Manitoba Inuit Association, which advocates for Inuit living in Manitoba. Shesays accessing health care is one of the main reasons Inuit end up in Winnipeg.

According to Statistics Canada, there are just under 600 Inuit living in Manitoba.

Dutton says living far away from their home community can affect the health outcomes of patients coming here.

"[There's]no access to being out on the land, which is what they know no access to traditional food, perhaps not being fluent in English, and therefore encountering a lot of barriers within the services they are provided," she said.

Being sent to urban centres for health care, she said, "is a huge dislocation culturally, socially, in terms of family support and it has an impact on them as an individual."

As of Tuesday afternoon, Kattuksaid he had received no further communication from any healthofficials regarding the status of his assessment for home dialysis.

Lesyk said the renal program isworking with the Manitobaand Nunavut governments "for a solution that will support patients wanting home peritoneal dialysis in Nunavut moving forward."