Family still seeking answers 2 weeks after man's death in N.B. ER waiting room - Action News
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New Brunswick

Family still seeking answers 2 weeks after man's death in N.B. ER waiting room

Alain Therrien, son of Robert Therrien, says he's still seeking answers about how his father died waiting for care in the emergency department of the Edmundston Regional Hospital on Dec. 7.

Robert Therrien died of heart attack in Edmundston waiting room, son says

A photograph of a man's face.
Robert Therrien died in the waiting room of the emergency department at the Edmundston Regional Hospital on Dec. 7. (Radio-Canada)

Alain Therrienis still looking for answers more than two weeks after his father diedin a hospital emergency room.

Robert Therrien, 76, died in the waiting roomat the Edmundston Regional Hospital's emergency department on Dec. 7.

The father of fivefromRivire-Verte, southeast of the city, had been triaged, monitored and cared for, and his condition was deemed stable at the time,according to Vitalit Health Network.

However, he died after waiting for hours for followup care.

"Apart from the coroner, as we speak, no one from the hospital has ever called me to tell me whathappened," Alain Therrien said of the response to his father's death.

Therrien said he's been in contact with the coroner and was told his father died of a heart attack.

It's a revelation that's left him wondering why his father wasn't attended to more urgently.

"At one point he fell out of his chair," Therrien said.

"Staff were never able to resuscitate him.They tried to resuscitate him for 25 minutes.This was also told to me by witnesses who were there."

A man stands in the kitchen of a home.
Alain Therrien says a coroner has told him his father died of a heart attack. (Radio-Canada)

Therrien said the coroner also viewed more than five hours of videotapes showing his father in the emergency department's waiting room.

Therrien said the footage shows his father drop his identification cards when the triage nurse asked for them.

"He was really not well," Therrien said. "Even his vital signs were low.

"But they classified it as non-urgent.The whole time he was there, he always had his arms crossed and he changed his position often."

Therriensaid his father lived in a nursing home in the Edmundston area.He had suffered from Alzheimer'sdiseasefor almost eight years.

Network reviewing case

Vitalit Health Network said the hospital's ER was experiencing a "high level of traffic and long wait times" when Robert Therriendied, but the health network doesn't believe this caused his death.

Vitalitis now undertaking a review of what happened, and plans to share the results with his family.

Therrien said that for now, questions remain as to how his father died, and why the hospital didn't call him about his father.

"We have many questions, but we have no answers," Therrien said."And it will take answers."

With files from Radio-Canada