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Patient lawsuits say fake nurse caused 'excruciating' pain, loss of trust in health-care system

Patient lawsuits say fake nurse caused 'excruciating' pain, loss of trust in health-care system

CBC
Wednesday, June 14, 2023 11:41:29 AM UTC

Seven women who say a serial imposter posing as a nurse left them in "excruciating" pain, exposed them to infection, injured them or personally insulted them have all filed lawsuits, alleging negligence by the operators of the Vancouver hospital where Brigitte Cleroux worked for a year.

The seven new claims, filed in B.C. Supreme Court last week, also raise concerns that Cleroux, who has never completed nursing school or held a valid licence, was allowed access to the patients' personal information and medical records. They say this left them vulnerable to fraud and identity theft by someone with a long history of similar crimes.

The lawsuits each name 52-year-old Cleroux, the Provincial Health Services Authority (PHSA) and the B.C. College of Nurses and Midwives (BCCNM) as defendants, alleging both the health authority and the college are vicariously liable for physical pain and psychological suffering caused by Cleroux's actions during gynecological surgeries at B.C. Women's Hospital.

None of the allegations in the claims have been proven in court, and no responses to the lawsuits have been filed.

Spokespeople for the PHSA, which runs the hospital, and BCCNM, which regulates nursing in B.C., both said they were unable to comment while the matter is before the courts. 

Cleroux's criminal defence lawyer, Chris Johnson, told CBC that he and his client were unaware of the new lawsuits and therefore unable to comment.

Cleroux is currently in prison in Ontario, serving a seven-year sentence for crimes including impersonation, assault with a weapon and assault related to her time posing as a nurse at a fertility clinic and a dental clinic in Ottawa in 2021.

She is awaiting trial in Vancouver for 17 criminal charges related to her time at B.C. Women's Hospital between June 2020 and June 2021, including allegations of assaulting 10 patients.

She has also been charged with impersonation and fraud in Surrey, B.C., where she is accused of defrauding a local dental surgeon in 2020. 

CBC has confirmed that Cleroux impersonated a nurse at a private surgery clinic in Victoria and at a long-term care home in Vancouver during her time in B.C. as well, although she has not been charged with any crimes in connection with those positions.

In all, Cleroux has amassed at least 67 criminal convictions as an adult. She has been accused or convicted of pretending to be a nurse in Colorado, Ontario, Alberta and B.C., and has posed as a teacher in Alberta and Quebec.

The new lawsuits outline a range of alleged misconduct by Cleroux that the seven women say left them with lasting psychological damage including post-traumatic stress disorder, depression, anxiety and distrust of the health-care system. 

They include claims of Cleroux improperly administering pain medication during surgery, leaving three patients in such "excruciating pain" that their doctors allegedly had to pause or even cancel their procedures. Four patients allege Cleroux sent them home with inadequate medication that caused them to have serious pain for days after surgery.

One woman's claim describes Cleroux making "numerous damaging and disparaging comments" about her fertility problems and ability to care for a child. Those insults, the lawsuit alleges, caused the patient to delay her plans for an embryo transfer.

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