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Patient remembers 'so much pain' during surgery assisted by fake nurse at Vancouver hospital

Patient remembers 'so much pain' during surgery assisted by fake nurse at Vancouver hospital

CBC
Saturday, December 04, 2021 03:27:21 AM UTC

Alexandra Tymkiw encountered Brigitte Cleroux during one of her most vulnerable moments. It was Dec. 15, 2020, and Tymkiw was a patient at B.C. Women's Hospital, about to have surgery to remove a polyp from her uterus.

Cleroux was presented to her as a perioperative nurse who would be administering pain medication during the procedure, according to Tymkiw, a 40-year-old Burnaby resident who goes by the nickname Sasha.

Tymkiw said she was immediately struck by Cleroux's demeanour. She described her as loud, condescending and self-aggrandizing, which she found unusual for a health professional.

"I got on the table and I had my legs in stirrups and I was disrobed from the waist down, legs wide open, so they can operate on me. And I'm pretty nervous," Tymkiw recalled.

"I'm just saying to myself, 'OK, these are professionals … don't worry.'"

But as it turns out, they weren't all professionals.

On Thursday, Tymkiw received a letter from the hospital, informing her that Cleroux did not have any nursing credentials when she assisted with that surgery.

In fact, Cleroux, 49, has been arrested and charged with fraud over $5,000 and personation with the intent to gain advantage. Vancouver police say she used the name of a real nurse to gain employment at the hospital, where she provided care to patients from June 2020 to June 2021.

Tymkiw also learned that Cleroux is facing similar charges in Ottawa, and has a long history of impersonation.

Tymkiw was deeply disturbed by the news, but it also raised new questions about her frightening experience during what should have been a relatively routine procedure.

She said her surgery was performed under local anaesthetic while Cleroux administered pain medication.

"Right away, there's tons of pain. I have a line in at the time and I'm supposed to be getting painkillers, but there's pain," Tymkiw said.

She tried to hide her discomfort, assuming the pain was normal, and endeavoured to breathe her way through it.

"Nothing was helping, and it got to the point where I was kind of squirming away from the surgeon. I remember my legs were just shaking, so there was so much pain," Tymkiw said.

Read full story on CBC
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