Ontario family demands answers after patriarch spent 4 days in pain while awaiting surgery
CBC
The family of a Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., man who shattered his leg and then spent four days in the hallway of a small-town hospital demand to know why paramedics took the 76-year-old to a facility without an operating room.
Ron Prickett broke a femur during a cycling accident in Sauble Beach on Sunday. Paramedics rushed him to Wiarton Hospital, where he was in agony on a stretcher before surgeons in London, Ont., could repair his leg Thursday.
Now, his daughter, Liselle Prickett, is questioning why her father was brought to the small-town hospital in the first place, instead of Owen Sound, a nearby hospital with five orthopedic surgeons.
"It's a 10-minute drive distance. We need to find out why he went to Wiarton instead of Owen Sound. It doesn't make any sense to me."
Bruce County paramedics said it sent Prickett to hospital as directed by the Central Ambulance Communication Centre in London.
"Our paramedics followed [provincial] protocol and transported this patient to the closest hospital based on his condition at the time of transport," Steve Schaus, director of paramedic services for Bruce County, told CBC News in an email.
A spokesperson with the Central Ambulance Communication Centre was unavailable Thursday. But provincial protocol says paramedics must take a patient to the nearest health-care facility, where a doctor can decide whether the individual needs a higher level of care at a different facility.
Mary Margaret Crapper, chief of communications and public affairs for Grey Bruce Health Services, which encompasses both Wiarton and Owen Sound hospitals, said neither facility has the capability to provide the surgery Prickett required.
"Patients requiring this level of surgery would be waiting (at any of our sites) for a transfer to another facility outside our region," she wrote in an email Thursday.
"We use a central, provincially run system called Criticall, and they work to find a hospital who can receive the patient as quickly as possible."
Isabel Hayward, executive director of Criticall, said she could not discuss specifics of the case due to privacy reasons.
"Whoever is caring for the patient, we connect them with the service specialist they need," she said Thursday. "We do not share information on cases."
CBC News also reached out to officials with Ontario's Ministry of Health to understand why the decision was made, but officials did not respond by publication time Thursday.
Prickett underwent surgery on Thursday morning at London Health Sciences Centre, according to his daughter.