Letter to 'Treaty Indian' a data-entry error, Alberta Health Services says - Action News
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Edmonton

Letter to 'Treaty Indian' a data-entry error, Alberta Health Services says

A letter from Alberta Health Services to an Edmonton teen, but addressed to "Treaty Indian," was a data entry error, not indicative of language used by staff, AHS says.

'We are confident that this is a one-off incident,' AHS says

The letter from Alberta Health Services was addressed to an Edmonton teen but used the term 'Treaty Indian' instead of the child's name. (Dawn Marchand/Twitter)

Aletter from Alberta Health Servicesto an Edmonton teen that was addressedto "Treaty Indian" was a data entry error, and not indicative of language used by staff, AHS says.

"This was an inexcusable errorand should never have happened,"AHS said in a statement on Twitter Thursday afternoon.

A photograph of the letter, sent from the finance department of the provincial health authority earlier this week, was postedon Twitter Wednesdaynight by Dawn Marie Marchand, an Indigenous artist.

In the tweet, Marchand described the letter, whichnames the girl further down,as dehumanizing.

Marchandsaid that the 15-year-old girl's mother, a friend, was very upset by the letter. Marchand asked the mother if she couldshare iton social media.

The mother does not want tomake any public statements, as she feels the post"speaks for itself," Marchand said in an email to CBC News.

"How the mistake was made is irrelevant," Marchand said. "It shows a fairly distinct problem that needs to be identified."

Investigation underway

AHSsaid itsinitial investigation showsanerror occurred "when historical wording related to treaty status was entered into the wrong field on a patient record, at the time of a hospital visit more than a decade ago.

"Following a more recent hospital visit, our computer system inadvertently copied that incorrect wording, and included it on an invoice which was then sent out to the person," AHS said in statement posted on Twitter.

"We are confident that this is a one-off incident, and that it is not indicative of language used by AHS staff."

AHSsaid it will review all wording in billing system databasesto ensure the incident isn't repeated.

It has alsowaived the invoice sent to the teen.

AHS apologized for the "inexcusable error" earlier Thursday

"This in no way reflects the beliefs or values of AHS, and is no way indicative of our relationship with First Nations and Indigenous people," the Twitter statement reads."All of our employees are expected to treat all people with dignity and respect."

AHSsaidofficialsmet with themother and daughter on Wednesday night to apologize and that it is consulting with Indigenous leaders about the incident.

Premier apologizes

Premier Rachel Notleyalso apologizedto the teenage girl Thursday.

"The language is completely inappropriate, it is culturally insensitive, and should never have been used," Notley said in the legislature.

Health Minister Sarah Hoffman assured the legislature the province'sinvestigation wouldbe thorough.

"Our goal is to makes sure that we address what happened in this situation so that it never happens again," Hoffman said.