Lvis woman dies of cardiac arrest after ambulance gets turned around to respond to another call - Action News
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Lvis woman dies of cardiac arrest after ambulance gets turned around to respond to another call

The family of a Lvis woman who died of cardiac arrest, after waiting for an ambulance for nearly an hour, wants to see changes in the region's first response delays.

First responders say ambulance shortage is dangerous for entire region

Marcel Aubin had to call 911 twice and wait almost an hour before an ambulance was available to tend to his wife, Monique Labrecque. She died of cardiac arrest. (Submitted by Amlie Aubin)

Marcel Aubin said his wife of 50 years, Monique Labrecque, had been feeling unwell for several days before the night of her death on May 24.

At 7:25 p.m., seeing her condition was getting worse, Aubin called 911.

An ambulance arrived at their Lvis residence 20 minutes later. But before paramedics could evaluate her condition or even unpack their equipment, they were dispatched to another call.

It was deemed a higher priority by their call centre, whichoperates on a medical priority dispatch system, withcategories commonly called Clawson codes, after the U.S. doctor who devised them in the 1970s.

Paramedic Sylviane Provenal said she felt helpless when she was ordered to leaveand had to tell Aubin they couldn't even check on his wife.

Later that night, Provenal heard over the radio waves that Labrecque haddied ofcardiac arrest.

"Would she have diedor would she have had a chance if we had stayed?" Provenal still asks herself.

Close-up of a woman's face
Monique Labrecque suffered a cardiac arrest shortly after the arrival of the second ambulance. (Submitted by Amlie Aubin)

Aubinsaid once the first team left, his wifestarted complaining of stomach cramps, and asked: "Why is the ambulance taking so long?"

At 8:09 p.m., he called 911 a second time. By then, her symptoms classified as a priority 3, instead of a priority 7.

Paramedic Pier-Luc Croteau and his colleague walked in at 8:21 p.m, nearly an hour after the initial call for help.

"As soon as I saw her I knew she wasn't doing well," said Croteau. "She was pale. We could see she was suffering."

Labrecque died shortly after.

Croteau said the Clawson dispatch system failed Labrecque.

But he said the lack of ambulances in the area is the main problem he has dealt with over the past ten years.

"If I have to call an ambulance from my home, I know it's like playing the lottery," said Croteau, who lives in the same neighbourhood as Labrecque, roughly eightkilometres from the Dessercom ambulance dispatch centre.

Loss of a colleague

The ambulance shortage in Lvis had already been flagged. In July, coroner Julie Langlois recommended local officials address the issue.

She was commenting on the death of Hugo St-Onge, who died in 2017 after waiting 20 minutes for an ambulance.

St-Onge, 24, was a paramedic himself. He had been dealing with heart issues and had even signed an open letter, one month before his death, callingattention to the ambulance shortage.

Hugo St-Onge died on Dec. 27, 2017. A coroners report found it took 21 minutes for paramedics to arrive, when the standard in North America to respond to cardiac arrest calls is 8 to 10 minutes. ( Radio-Canada)

The regional health board for Chaudires-Appalaches (CISSSCA) said one ambulance was added in March 2018.

But no extra staff-hours have been attributed to the region since the coroner's recommendations came out.

Only the provincial Ministry of Health with the approval of Treasury Board can authorize extra hours for a specific region.

The CISSSCAsaysambulance coverage is adequate in Lvis, and operates at "75.5 per centof the targeted clinical utilization ratio." Adding extra resources is only required once that numberjumps to 90 per cent, according to the Ministry of Health.

Dessercom and the Quebec Federation of First Responders would like to see an extra 200 staffing hours added for the Lvis region.

Jean-Franois Gagn, the director of work relations, said in the meantime, the pressure and stress of dealing with these ratios falls on the paramedics who are on the ground.

"When there are 10calls that come in and I only have eight ambulances, two people will have to wait so you just cross your fingers to hope it's not an emergency."

With files from Radio-Canada's Marie-Pier Bouchard