'What century are we in?' Man waited 4 days in Ontario hospital hallway for surgery to fix shattered leg - Action News
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'What century are we in?' Man waited 4 days in Ontario hospital hallway for surgery to fix shattered leg

Ron Prickett had to wait four days in excruciating pain on a stretcher in a small-town hospital's hallway for a bed to open in London, Ont., so surgeons could repair his shattered leg. 'What century are we in? It's insane,' the 76-year-old says of his ordeal.

Ron Prickett, 76, broke a leg in cycling accident Sunday, was in Wiarton Hospital while waiting for London bed

Ron Prickett of Sault Ste Marie, Ont., is shown in better days. The 76-year-old broke a femur in a cycling accident, and was on a stretcher in the hallway of Wiarton Hospital for four days, awaiting surgery in London, Ont. (Submitted by Liselle Prickett)

A 76-year-old man with a shattered leg bone who had been languishing on a stretcher in the hallway of a small-town hospital since Sunday is now getting his badly needed surgery in London.

Ron Prickett of Sault Ste. Marie was ina cycling accident in Sauble Beach. He fell after swerving on a gravel road to avoid a motorcycleand his tire slipped on loose stones.

Prickett was taken by ambulance to Wiarton Hospital, part of Grey Bruce Health Services. He wasin excruciating pain in a tiny makeshift room in one of the facility's hallways, with nothing to distract him and no ability to turn the lights on or off.

"I have a fluorescent light over my head that is operated externally down the hall," he told CBC News on Wednesday before learning he's finally been accepted in London."It's got plastic sheeting on the walls. It's not a proper bed. There's no TV or anything, just bare bones."

On Thursday, Liselle Prickett, Ron's daughter, told CBC Newsher father was scheduled for surgery in the morning at London Health Sciences Centre.

"I hear that he might be sent back to Wiarton to recover. Let's hope he won't be in the hallway again," she said via text message.

Bed shortageleftpatient stranded in Wiarton

Prickettfeelshe should have beentransferred on the day of his accident to London Health Sciences Centre, the largest hospital in southwestern Ontario. It hasthe facilities and surgical expertisehe needs to repair his legexcept, hesaid, a bed shortage in London hadprevented him from leaving Wiarton.

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Prickett waited several days to get into London Health Sciences Centre, pictured here in a file photo. The largest hospital in southwestern Ontariohas the facilities and surgical expertisehe needs, but he was told earlier this week that there's a staff shortage. (Colin Butler/CBC)

"It blows my mind that in Ontario, we have these facilities and I can't get a broken bone fixed. I have to lie around with a broken bone in my body for four days," he said Wednesday. "It's so frustrating. I have no control.

"My family is doing as much as they can for me, but there's nothing for them to do. It's all happeningin some board room down in London."

A spokesperson for London Health Sciences Centre said the hospital has "been challenged with close to 100 per cent occupancy for months," but did not specifywhy Prickettwas being forced to stay in Wiarton for four days.

Mary Margaret Crapper, chief of communications and public affairs for Grey Bruce Health Services, told CBC News by email on Wednesday that the hospital could not discuss Pricket's case due to "privacy reasons."

She said Wiarton Hospital is "at capacity" and "experiencing staffing shortages," and finding a bed can "take time."

"Those who are waiting in our care for transfer to another facility are closely monitored. We recognize this wait can be stressful for patients and for their families."

Prickett's experience is the latest example of a provincial health systemstraining under staff shortagesandcapacity issues, as fed up andunderpaid hospital workersquit from theexhaustionof battling the COVID-19 pandemic in an underfunded health systemfor more than two years.

'Get it done,' says patient to Ford government

Earlier this month, Premier Doug Ford calledon the federal government to open its wallet and deliver more health-care spending to the provinces. But Ontario's opposition puts the blame squarely on the premier, arguinghis penny-pinching policies caused the problem in the first place.

A Toronto hospital worker transports a patient to dialysis at Humber River Hospital. Stories of overcrowding, burnout among staff and turmoil have emerged recently from Ontario hospitals. (Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press)

Prickett, who wasstill lying on the same stretcher paramedicsbrought him on to the hospital on Sunday when interviewed this week, borrowed a well-worn phrasefromFord's recent election campaignto urge politicians to put politics aside and fix the problem.

"Get it done. Support the nurses, support the doctors and monitor it, make it accountable so these things don't happen. What century are we in? It's insane," he said in a recorded telephone message he asked CBC News to deliver to Ontario Health Minister Sylvia Jones.

CBC News sent the audio message by email to communications staff at the Ontario Ministry of Health on Wednesday.

Anna Miller, a senior communications adviser with the ministry, wrote in an email that the message was passed on to the health minister'soffice, but it was not made clear if Jones listened to it.

Miller said in the emailthat the province is making "historic investments," including an additional $3.3 billion to hospitals in 2022-23, to end hallway health care.