N.S. woman dies after waiting 7 hours in hospital ER, family demands answers | 24CA News

Health
Published 09.01.2023
N.S. woman dies after waiting 7 hours in hospital ER, family demands answers  | 24CA News

The husband of a Nova Scotia girl who died after a seven-hour wait on the emergency division in Cumberland County stated he felt they have been “neglected” till “it was just too late.”

Allison Holthoff, 37, of Tidnish, N.S., was a beloved mom of three, avid group volunteer, animal lover and deputy chief of the native fireplace division.

“She was always happy to help people,” her husband, Gunter Holthoff, stated throughout a news convention Monday.

“She was just a caring person for everybody. I wish somebody would have been there for her.”

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Holthoff detailed how his spouse had collapsed on the morning of Dec. 31, 2022, complaining of an upset abdomen.

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He selected to drive her as a substitute of calling 911, as a result of he didn’t need to await an ambulance, and headed for the Cumberland Regional Health Care Centre in Amherst, N.S.

She arrived on the ER at round 11 a.m. in a lot ache her husband needed to carry her.

“I think that she actually started saying that she thought she was dying in the waiting room outside. But she kept saying it more and more. She said, ‘I think I’m dying. Don’t let me die here.’ And I said, ‘No, that’s why I’ve got you in the hospital.”

While she was triaged comparatively shortly, Allison was despatched again to the ready room to attend — barely capable of sit in her wheelchair due to her ache.

“I did tell the triage nurse and the lady behind the desk at least a couple times that it was getting worse. She wasn’t doing good. She was in pain. And there was not much. The response was, ‘We’re doing what we can and we don’t have any beds,’” he stated.

He recalled how safety guards provided them blankets, and at one level, Allison stated she needed to lie on the ground.

“So I picked her up and slowly laid her down on the floor next to the wheelchair on this thin hospital blanket and she curled up in the fetal position.”

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He stated they waited greater than six hours within the emergency division earlier than Allison was taken to a room contained in the unit, which had no medical gear.

It can be one other hour earlier than she truly noticed a physician and acquired ache remedy.

While having an X-ray taken, Allison’s situation worsened.

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Holthoff recounted how Allison screamed in ache whereas they tried to reposition her, and he tried to consolation her. Her eyes rolled again, he stated, and the machines began beeping.

“The next thing I hear was, ‘code blue, code blue in the X-ray’ in the PA system and from then on pretty quick that room was full of people,” he stated.

He was requested to go away the room, and was later advised medical employees needed to resuscitate Allison thrice.

She was in the end positioned on machines, and Holthoff stated he made the tough resolution to take away them.

“After a few hours, one of the nurses did approach me and said there’s not much there now. I’d seen the blood pressure. I didn’t think there was a chance she’d make it off the ICU,” he stated.

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He and his youngsters have been capable of say their goodbyes, and Allison died at round 11:30 p.m.

“It didn’t matter at that point what I was saying, I knew it was over (but) the kids got a chance to say goodbye,” he stated.

“Unfortunately, I feel like we were neglected until it was to a point they couldn’t ignore us anymore. At that point, it was just too late.”

Holthoff identified he nonetheless doesn’t know his spouse’s official explanation for dying. He doesn’t have criticism for the health-care employees and medical employees, however relatively the federal government’s dealing with of the system.

The Nova Scotia Health Authority has confirmed a top quality overview is being performed, however says the method is confidential.

Michelle Thompson, the province’s minister of well being and wellness, stated Allison’s dying is “a very, very heartbreaking situation.”

She advised Global News she’s ready to see the outcomes of the overview, and couldn’t converse to the specifics of the case. She added that any findings and suggestions can be shared with the Holthoff household.

“We want people to have safe and timely access to care across this province,” stated Thompson.

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“I don’t know the circumstances currently of the situation, but I want to assure Nova Scotians that our government is committed to improving health care, and we will continue to work across every level, across every community in order to ensure that that happens.”

When requested whether or not Nova Scotians ought to really feel assured that they might obtain satisfactory care when arriving at an ER, Thompson stated they need to.

“I would like to reassure Nova Scotians that they should present to the emergency room if they need care, that we have wonderful health-care providers here and we need to understand how best to support them, and the quality review will support us in doing that.”


Click to play video: 'Nova Scotia releases annual accountability report on ERs'


Nova Scotia releases annual accountability report on ERs


Cumberland North MLA Elizabeth Smith-McCrossin has been working with the Holthoff household and was at Monday’s news convention.

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On Sunday, she advised Global News her constituents are rising extra involved with the state of well being care within the area.

She stated health-care employees have difficult situations throughout the province, however particularly on the Cumberland Regional given a flood in May 2022 that compelled a short lived ER to be arrange.

“People are screaming for help and it’s not being brought,” she stated.

“Whether it’s people waiting for hours on end for an ambulance that never comes, or it’s a situation like this where we have a young mother of three who has died waiting for care in our emergency department. So it’s time that people’s voices here in northern Nova Scotia are heard and listened to.”

Smith-McCrossin launched a public letter to Premier Tim Houston on Monday, outlining some actions she’d prefer to see taken to enhance entry to care. The options embrace having a devoted health-care skilled within the short-term ER ready room and urgently finishing renovations on the hospital’s primary ER.

— with a file from Skye Bryden-Blom