Deaths, bad outcomes elude scrutiny at Canada's indigenous clinics
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[October 24, 2019]
By Allison Martell
TORONTO (Reuters) - Ina Matawapit was
barely conscious - intoxicated and suffering from a blow to the head -
when police drove her to the North Caribou Lake clinic in Ontario,
Canada, one summer evening in 2012.
The nurse at the federal government-run clinic, the only source of
emergency care in this remote indigenous community, told the officers
the 37-year-old could sober up in jail, according to testimony at a 2018
inquest. Minutes after leaving the clinic, the police sped back.
Matawapit had no pulse and could not be revived.
At the inquest, the nurse testified that in sending Matawapit on to
jail, she had been following a standard protocol for intoxicated
patients in the northern reserves. Government officials testified there
was no such thing.
The coroner found that in the nearly six years between the death and the
inquest, there was no evidence of any formal review of the case “or any
learning from the events of that evening” akin to typical procedures in
hospitals or emergency rooms. Matawapit’s death, attributed to heart
disease, likely would have passed under the radar but for the fact that
she died in police custody, which made the inquest mandatory.
Over at least nine years, the Canadian federal government has not
consistently tracked, let alone investigated, poor outcomes at clinics
on indigenous reserves, according to a Reuters analysis of documents,
including internal reports and meeting notes obtained through public
records requests.
Record-keeping on deaths and other critical incidents at the clinics,
which provide basic and emergency care to about 115,000 people, has been
erratic and fragmented, Reuters found. The incidents often are detailed
in separate provincial computer systems, when they are tracked or
reported at all.
As a result, there is no way for the federal government to know how
often patients die or suffer injury at the clinics or how that compares
to the rest of the Canadian health system.
The federal government’s First Nations and Inuit Health Branch (FNIHB),
which funds 79 clinics and manages 50 of them, is hampered in
identifying potentially harmful patterns and preventing future mistakes,
documents and interviews with medical experts indicate.
Whether turning away apparently intoxicated patients in the northern
reserves – described in the coroner’s verdict as the “northern
protocol”- has been a widespread practice is difficult to say. Reuters
was able to find one other similar death, detailed in Manitoba police
records, that occurred five months after Matawapit’s. The federal
government enacted a policy saying it was “not appropriate” to hold
intoxicated patients in - but only after last year’s inquest brought the
issue to light.
Reuters' findings come as the country is in the midst of a public
reckoning with the legacy of settler colonization, a hotter issue today
than in nations such as the United States and Australia where European
settlers also displaced local peoples.
With an indigenous population that is growing and gaining political
clout, Prime Minster Justin Trudeau came to power in 2015 promising
"reconciliation" with aboriginal people. Reduced to a minority
government in this week's election, he needs the support of other
parties to govern and will face pressure from the left to address
poverty, poor housing and health problems that are especially acute on
remote reserves.
It will not be an easy task. Even reviewing critical health care
incidents could be a challenge because of the multiple jurisdictions and
providers involved, said Michael Green, a professor at Queen’s
University who was once chief of staff at a small northern hospital that
often received patients from clinics in indigenous communities.
But “without review, there's no opportunity to learn and make the system
safer for everybody," he said.
Staff at FNIHB, part of Indigenous Services Canada, say they strive to
provide the best possible care and have been working on a replacement
reporting system, slated to roll out next year.
The effort, which documents show began in 2014, has been planned behind
closed doors and has not previously been reported, although pilot
programs are running in Manitoba and Alberta.
Documents reviewed by Reuters indicate the system is designed to provide
national case tracking and a consistent process for investigating and
following up on cases.
Robin Buckland, executive director of primary healthcare at FNIHB, said
the current system is “not a bad policy” but the agency is working to
build an environment in which staff members can learn.
“It’s taken a long time,” she said. “But we want it to be right, and we
want to implement it well.”
Reuters was not able to reach the nurses involved in treatment described
in this story.
“We truly believe that nurses are working hard to deliver the best
health care possible, under difficult work conditions,” said Debi Daviau,
president of the Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada,
which represents permanent staff nurses and other civil servants.
‘SECOND-CLASS CITIZENS’
For years, indigenous communities have complained about poor treatment
on remote reserves, which are often hundreds of miles from top-tier or
specialized medical services in major cities. Matawapit died in a
community more than 300 km (186 miles) from the nearest major highway.
These federally funded clinics, usually called nursing stations,
struggle to retain nurses, often filling gaps with the help of private
staffing agencies.
Services there need more government scrutiny, not less, some critics
say.
“We are treating members of the First Nations communities as
second-class citizens,” said Emily Hill, a senior staff lawyer with
Aboriginal Legal Services, which represented the Matawapit family at the
inquest. “This is a large government health service. You would expect
there to be layers of oversight and accountability.”
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Tyson McKay, of the northern Manitoba indigenous community of Cross
Lake, poses with his nieces and nephews in the fall of 2014. Kelvin
McKay via REUTERS.
Documents reviewed by Reuters show FNIHB staffers have repeatedly
called for a modern reporting system for poor or unexpected
outcomes.
The FNIHB started to track critical incidents in 2006. By 2010,
however, a federal audit found that “monitoring and analysis at both
the national and regional level is not occurring.”
Four years later, a FNIHB working group said that a common national
policy was needed with “clear processes for reporting and tracking"
incidents, according to meeting notes reviewed by Reuters.
In 2016, an internal report by a member of the working group looked
at how other public organizations, including federal prisons,
reviewed outcomes. Every policy was found to be more "robust" than
the one at FNIHB.
The report, reviewed by Reuters, said that while some patient safety
incidents had been recorded in a national database between 2006 and
2014, regions had stopped using it because of the difficulty in
collecting data.
Federal policy focused mainly on nurses’ well-being, not patients’,
the report said.
The nurse at the Matawapit inquest illustrated that point,
testifying that a debriefing after the patient's death was geared
“more to how we were feeling as opposed to what we did."
A SIMILAR DEATH
On November 28, 2012, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police in God’s
Lake Narrows, Manitoba, responded to a report that Tracy Okemow, 31,
was drinking and threatening suicide. Police found her next to two
empty pill bottles labeled “metformin," a diabetes drug, according
to a police review of the incident seen by Reuters. She agreed to go
to the local nursing station.
The nurses told officers they had consulted with a doctor off the
reserve who felt her “consumption of medication was not of concern
and she could be incarcerated until sober,” according to the police
report.
Okemow spent the night in jail. A witness later told police that she
seemed to be in agony. In the morning, she was flown to a Winnipeg
hospital, where she died the next day of metformin toxicity, the
report said.
There was no inquest or federal inquiry. “In the case of Ms. Okemow,
the death occurred outside of a federally operated facility –
therefore FNIHB did not undertake a formal review,” Indigenous
Services Canada said in a statement.
Off reserve, healthcare is under provincial jurisdiction.
‘THEY BRUSH US OFF’
The federal government has reviewed some patient deaths, often after
they draw media attention. Documents reviewed by Reuters show
officials have found serious systemic problems, including nurses who
are stretched thin and do not always appreciate the seriousness of
patients’ symptoms.
After two children died from complications of strep infections in
2014, an internal review looked at a “sampling” of young people who
had died, and called for better recruitment and retention of nurses,
as well as more physician services.
A 2018 review looked at a 15-month-old toddler seen on a Saturday
night for a seizure and infections. The nurse on duty did not
consult a doctor, and the child died the next day. The report called
for better oversight of nurses, as well as changes to shifts and
staffing to address fatigue.
FNIHB’s Buckland said the agency is working to improve hiring and
retention amid a global shortage of healthcare workers.
In Manitoba, the family of Tyson McKay is suing the federal
government, alleging that the 32-year-old man died of a heart attack
31 hours after visiting a clinic complaining of chest pain in 2015.
The suit alleges the nurse did not perform the appropriate tests
that could have diagnosed his condition.
In a court filing, the government said a staffing agency was
responsible for ensuring the nurse was qualified. The staffing
agency defended its care and referred questions to the government.
Kelvin McKay, Tyson’s 41-year-old brother, has been going to the
clinics since childhood. He said he sees a pattern.
“Nurses come in and out of our community, and they fail to take the
time to get to know our people, and they think we come in with fake
illnesses. They brush us off. And that’s not how it’s supposed to
be.”
(Additional reporting by Rod Nickel in Winnipeg; Editing by Denny
Thomas and Julie Marquis)
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