With their father on life support, a Labrador family calls for review of air ambulance system - Action News
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With their father on life support, a Labrador family calls for review of air ambulance system

A family in Labrador is calling for better access to health care and a systemic review of air ambulance service for people living along the coast, following an ordeal that put their father on life support.

'If you're sick on the coast, they just don't care,' says Clifford Russell, after father's weekend ordeal

Howard Russell's son, Clifford Russell, says his father waited for a medevac for almost 36 hours. (Submitted by Mallory Harrigan)

ALabrador familyis calling for systemic change to the province's air ambulance system following an ordealthatleft their father on life support, after he waited almost 36 hours for medical transportation.

Clifford Russell says his 73-year-old father, Howard Russell of Port Hope Simpson, went to a nursing station in that community at 9 a.m. Friday because he had an infection in his leg.

"This is all just crazy. This is what we got to go through to get someone out. If you get sick on the coast, they just don't care," said Clifford Russell on Saturday.

Russell says the lone nursecalled for a medevac right away, but it never arrived, and his fatherspent nearly 30 hours lying on an exam table because the clinic does not have a bed.

Russell says he feared his father wouldn't survive. His father has complex health issues:diabetes,kidney function of just 12 per cent, and congestive heart failure.

We need to speak out. Something needs to be done.- Cliff Russell

"He's not a healthy man," said Russell, who lives in Happy Valley-Goose Bay.

Around 6p.m. on Friday, when the air ambulance hadn't shownup, Russell said,the nurse called to inquire about it.He says she was told the team wasn't coming because they'd exhausted their flying hours.

Russell said the situation has left him and their family "very frustrated."

Turbulent, complicated process

The family says their father wasbounced around multiple communities over the weekend while waiting to be airlifted to the Health Sciences Centre.

Russell said his father was driven in an ambulance to a clinic in Forteau, about a three-hour drive from Port Hope Simpson, on Saturday afternoon. A Twin Otter air ambulance arrivedto take him to Labrador City to start dialysis, Russell said,but his father wasn't prepared for the procedure and there isn't a nephrologist in Labrador West to prepare new patients.

Howard Russell is pictured with his wife, Dorothy Russell. (Submitted by Mallory Harrigan)

After that, the family says their father was put back in an ambulance and driven to Blanc-Sablon, Que.,where he was finally airlifted to St. John's around 7 p.m. Saturday.

By Sunday afternoon, Howard Russell was at the Health Sciences Centre on life supportand septic due to the infection,a situation the family says could have been avoided if there had been swifter action.

'Shouldn't have to fight so hard'

Clifford Russell says the familyasked if a search-and-rescue teamor the coast guard could helpbut they were denied because of impending bad weather. However, Joint Rescue Coordination CentreHalifax, which deploys search-and-rescue aircraft,says it never received a request, while the coast guard says it doesn't operate medevac-capable aircraft.

"It don't give me much confidence in the coast guard," said Russell, who fishes along the Labrador coast.

The familycontacted their MHA, Lisa Dempster alsotheminister of Labrador affairs and MPYvonne Jones, seeking help and clarity on the situation.

"We shouldn't haveto fight so hard for him to be picked up by medevac," said Russell's partner,Mallory Harrigan.

"Why there was no night shift? Or why isn't the medevaca24-hour service all of a sudden?" she said.

The family says their frustrations are compounded becauseit would have been quicker to have an ambulance drive HowardRussell to Happy Valley-Goose Bay's hospital, rather than wait for one of the province's two air ambulances, stationed in Happy Valley-Goose Bay and St. John's butthey were told there were no beds available at hospitals in Happy Valley-Goose Bay or in St. Anthony, so the medevac couldn't take their father to those hospitals.

Clifford Russell and Mallory Harrigan say something needs to be done about the air ambulance system. People have to wait too long for it to come, they say, while their health deteriorates. (Heather Gillis/CBC)

"None of it makes sense," said Russell.

Harrigan noted a medevac is an air ambulance, and asked whether someone who showed up at the St. Anthony hospital in a ground ambulance would have been turned away.

"There's been so many community members lost on the coast not getting the care that they need at the hospital and then dying before they make it to St. Johns," said Harrigan.

Russell said he's already had an uncle and an aunt dieas a result of delays in gettingairliftedto get medical care.

"It's just too late, just way too late," Russell said. "We need to speak out. Something needs to be done."

Clifford Russell says his father resettled from his home in William's Harbour to Port Hope Simpson for better access to health care. But Russell says he believes his father would have been airlifted quicker if he still lived in William's Harbour. (Submitted by Mallory Harrigan)

Russell says his father was resettled from William's Harbour in 2017 so he could have better access to health care.

"But in Port Hope, where he thought he would get better care, they put him in the clinic and they just left him there. They did nothing," he said of the medevac system.

In an email on Saturday, Dempstersaid she can't speak about individual circumstances.

"But I can say unequivocally a review of existing health-care Delivery in Labrador is atthe top of my priority list. We can do better and we must do better," she wrote.

In an interview on Tuesday, Health Minster John Haggie called it a sad situation, but said several factors were at play, including weather that grounded a plane.

"These things happen. We have to adapt and deal with it. Labrador-Grenfell Health have a history of doing that, and doing it reasonably well. It's not perfect and I'm sure we'll find things we can do better as a result of this," Haggie said.

"There will be a quality assurance review of this particular case and the findings of that review are public and they will be out there for people to see."

A statement from Labrador-Grenfell Health says the health authority takes concerns seriously and investigates concerns about care.

"When a patient's needs exceed the clinical resources within the Labrador-Grenfell Health region, they are then transferred to a facility which can provide higher levels of care within another health authority in the province," reads the statement.

"Transfers of patients are co-ordinated by the patient's care team and the facility which they are being transferred to, in consultation with the provincial medical transportation team."

In a statement, Eastern Health, which runs the provincial air ambulance service,says medevac wait times can be affected by weatherand"rest periods for the air team which are mandatory by Transport Canada." The health authority saysmedevacs are arranged once a bed is a available and the receiving facility advises it is ready for the transfer.

Russell says Labradorians need to be treated fairly and have better access to medical care when they need it, adding his father knew his health was declining.

"He figured if he was closer to a clinic he would have a better chance if he ever got sick. And he got sick and this is his better chance."

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador