Google Groups no longer supports new Usenet posts or subscriptions. Historical content remains viewable.
Dismiss

ObamaCare Stories. Winnipeg man sat dead for hours in ER waiting room

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Nancy Pelosi Honesty Foundation

unread,
Aug 31, 2013, 3:23:50 AM8/31/13
to
This is ObamaCare, bitches!

WINNIPEG — A man who died during a 34-hour wait in a hospital
emergency room had been dead for at least a few hours before he
was discovered, Manitoba’s medical examiner said Wednesday.

Thambirajah Balachandra told the inquest into Brian Sinclair’s
death that rigor mortis had begun to set in when the homeless
double-amputee was declared dead on Sept. 21, 2008.

It’s likely Sinclair had been dead “for a couple of hours,”
Balachandra said.

Rigor mortis, the stiffening of the body after death, usually
takes some 12 hours to fully set in, but Balachandra said fever
or seizure can hasten the onset.

Sinclair died after being referred by a clinic doctor to
Winnipeg’s Health Sciences Centre because he hadn’t urinated in
24 hours.

The 45-year-old died of an infection from a blocked catheter
that spread into the bloodstream and caused him to go into
shock, Balachandra said.

Sinclair vomited while waiting in the emergency room — a sign
Sinclair was likely going into shock, Balachandra said.

At that point, Balachandra said someone should have checked on
Sinclair and asked him if he was OK.

Had he been seen by a doctor, Balachandra said Sinclair would
have needed about 30 minutes of medical treatment, which likely
would have prevented his death.

He needed to have his pulse and blood pressure checked, his
catheter changed and antibiotics prescribed, Balachandra said.

Sinclair was seen on security video footage approaching a triage
aide and then sitting in his wheelchair in the waiting room.
Someone approached a security guard 34 hours later with concerns
about Sinclair’s condition and he was pronounced dead.

The medical examiner’s office heard from people who were in the
waiting room with Sinclair following his death, Balachandra
said. One woman suggested medical staff didn’t show much
interest in the well-being of patients waiting to be seen.

“She was concerned about the attitude of staff and the
unwillingness to recognize the need to respond to people in the
waiting room,” he said.

Balachandra said he called the inquest because Sinclair’s death
is a sign emergency room procedures and wait times need to be
examined.

“There is something wrong somewhere,” said Balachandra. “It’s
nobody’s fault, but the system has to be rejigged.”

The inquest continues this month and is to resume in October.

http://www.calgaryherald.com/news/canada/Winnipeg+dead+hours+wai
ting+room/8759227/story.html

  

Message has been deleted
0 new messages