The painful, impersonal reality of Saskatchewan's COVID-19 transfers to Ontario - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 07:46 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Saskatchewan

The painful, impersonal reality of Saskatchewan's COVID-19 transfers to Ontario

Ken Roth says the indifferent methods used during his transfer were a harsh reminder of his time attending a residential school.

Ken Roth, 66, didn't even get to call his family before he was put on a plane to Ottawa

Ken Roth speaks with CBC News from his hospital bed in Ottawa on Oct. 29, 2021. He's one of 22 Saskatchewan ICU patients transferred to Ontario in an attempt to alleviate COVID-19 in the province. (Bonnie Allen/CBC News)

For one ofat least 22intensive care patients movedto Ontario from Saskatchewan to alleviate COVID-19 pressure, the abrupt transfer wasa brutal reminder of his traumatic past.

Ken Roth, 66, is a retired fire chief from La Loche, Sask.,more than 500 kilometres northwest of Saskatoon.

The unvaccinated man contracted COVID-19 in early July. He wasintubated on July 28 and spent weeks in a coma.

Until recently, he was receivingcare in the ICU at St. Paul'sHospital in Saskatoon.

The Metis man says his wife and daughter had been visiting him at the hospital every day.

But in a flash that changed.

"The way they treated me in Saskatoon..." he said in an interviewbetween bouts of coughing.

"They just came there and said 'you're leaving for Ottawa!'"

He attempted to protest, he said, but was moved so quickly that he didn't even have time to make a phone call to say good-bye. He cried on the plane ride to Ontario.

Ken Roth poses for a photo with his wife Lorraine Roth. (Submitted by Ken Roth)

Roth said the experience was a atraumatic reminder of how he was ripped away from his mother at the age of six.

He was then sent to aresidential school.

"Just like when I was a kid, they did the same thing. They just hurt me so much," he told CBC News.

Roth isn't upset that he was sent to Ontario to receive carehe's unhappy with how they moved him.

Roth is one of 22 people who, as of Friday morning, had been transferred to Ontario to ease the burden in Saskatchewan hospitals and protect standards of care.

Hospitals in the province remain pushed to the limit and another six ICU patients are expected to be moved by Sunday, making for a total of 28 by the end of the week.

Saskatchewan Health AuthorityCEO Scott Livingstone was unaware of Roth's concerns, but when questioned Friday, heissued an apology.

"[We] certainly would apologize for any pain or suffering of that patient," he said

There is supposed to be a process to inform families andpatients if they are conscious who are being moved out of province.

"That would not coincide with our current process of having people sent out of province," explained Livingstone.

Roth's family did meet with a social worker at St. Paul's hospital after he had been transferred.

There's no option to say 'no' to being moved, the province said.

If officialsdeterminea patient is stable enough to travel and they need to make space, they will be transferred.

However, health officials in the province aren't sure if that will be necessary beyond the moves already planned up to Sunday.

"We are seeing a reduction in our COVID patients, we are seeing a reduction in the use of ICU beds," saidMarlo Pritchard, the president of theSaskatchewan Public Safety Agency in the same news conference on Friday.

If the province does continue moving patients, Roth says it needs to do better and be more aware.

Sensitivity is key, he said, especially to residential school survivors.

"Let them at least talk to their families. You don't just grab people," he said.

"Those people, like me, really brought trauma back to me."

The 66-year-old hasno complaints about his treatment so far in Ottawa.

"The care is 100 per cent here. They really look after me," he said.

But that hasn't made it any easier.

"There is no words for lonely. I'm more than lonely," he said.

That may soon change. His family is driving to Ontario. However, most are not fully vaccinated and won't be able to visit him in hospital.

That's also a policy that is being adopted by the SHA.

LISTEN| Patients now being transferred to Ontario from Saskatchewan