Air ambulance delays causing mistrust and grief for N.L. residents - Action News
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Air ambulance delays causing mistrust and grief for N.L. residents

Stories of long waits for the province's medevac flights are surfacing as one Labrador woman rallies patients.

Long wait times prompt woman to collect stories from others who faced delays

Jackie Greenham of Labrador West says her brother needed an urgent medical flight from Labrador City, but it was delayed, putting his life in jeopardy. (Submitted by Jackie Greenham)

When Jackie Greenham's brother suffered a heart attack on July 21, he needed far more complex treatment than the family could find in Labrador City.

He was "in a bad way," Greenham recalled.

"He was critical.We didn't know if he was going to make it or not. His heart had stopped twice. So we were really, really counting on the air ambulance to come in and get him out to St. John's."

Greenham said the attending doctor ordered the ambulance that evening, hoping for a rapid medical evacuation to save his life.

It would be nearly 24 hours before an aircraft arrived.

"They didn't show up that night," Greenham said. "We learned that there were two flights on the ground, and no pilot for either flight."

Other Labrador residents echo Greenham's experience with the province's air ambulance service, which they say has left them dissatisfied, shaken and, in some cases, grieving.

CBC News has spoken to several patients who say long airlift delays have negatively affected their well-being. Their stories paint a picture of a complex system that sometimes strikes its patients as troubled or ineffective.

Dawn Volpatti says her trust in the service can't be repaired after a traumatizing wait in 2008.

That year, Volpatti went to hospital in Labrador City while pregnant, with vomiting and seizures. As her condition worsened, she was told the province had no aircraft at its disposal that could fly through the wintry weather that day.

Instead, an aircraft in Quebec, which she understands could withstand thoseconditions,transported her to hospital in that province, where she delivered the baby. Her daughter did not survive.

Dawn Volpatti, left, is still deeply mistrustful of an air ambulance system that wasn't able to help her in 2008. (Submitted by Dawn Volpatti)

During two subsequent pregnancies, Volpatti uprooted her life and family to Ontario until after her daughters were born to avoid relying on medevac services in Labrador.

Since then, the province has upgraded its fleet and moved one base to Happy Valley-Goose Bay.

Volpatti remains shaken, however, by recent stories outlining continueddelays.

"I know that an air ambulance is not a guarantee of life," Volpatti said.

"But we deserve a fighting chance. And I don't think that the air ambulance situation that we have now is really giving us a fighting chance."

Staffing gaps

Greenham, a cancer survivor who in 2018also experienced a delay that caused her to miss an operation in St. John's, won't accept the reason her brother nearly didn't make it.

"It's not that there was a medical or mechanical problem with the flight. It wasn't a weather issue. It wasn't the fact that there was an emergent case, a more emergent case," she said.

"It was staffing. And that should never be."

She's now collecting stories from other Labrador patients, hoping to jump-start a conversation about improvement to the system. Greenhamnoted she's heard from people still wondering why they had been left in limbo.In one case, she said, a man waited 11 days for a medical evacuation in 2019 after going to the doctor with chest pain.

Dr. Brian Metcalfe, the provincial medical director under Eastern Health, said staffing gaps have sometimes led to delays, as well as weather, geographyand maintenance.

"We've managed to solve some of the staffing issues that we have faced over time. But staffing can be a challenge for us," he said.

A total of857 flights to and from Labrador were conducted in 2019,according to data provided by Eastern Health,the overseeing authority for the province's air ambulance agency,MedFlight NL.

Eastern Healthcould not immediately say how many of those flights were classified as delayed.

Specialized work

Although Metcalfe noted staffing gaps have recently improved, he said the behind-the-scenes work is sometimes hampered by conditions outside the agency's control, such as weather, resources and geography.

"There is a very busy, very dedicated team whose entire job is to ensure that we have this service available to the province," Metcalfe said."It's a very complex system, but we're a very dedicated group of people who areconstantly doing our best."

That includes bringing a small hospital directly to the patient. To combat long flight times, the medical staff on air ambulance flights "don't just move patients," Metcalfe said.

"Instead of a patient coming to a critical-care team, we bring it to them, so that we can get the specialized care to them quicker, stabilize the patients in a more timely fashion. We have better outcomes because of that."

For Greenham, who's still collecting information volunteered by other patients,that reassurance can't help her brother.

"There needs to be a contingency plan if people call in sick," Greenham said. "Any improvements that can be made should be made.

"If you stop talking about it, you can rest assured that nothing's going to be done. So we need to keep this fresh and talked about and advocated for."

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador