Broadwaybabyto

The Canadian healthcare system seems to be getting heavily criticized today in the wake of news that a young man died of an aortic dissection after leaving a Montreal ER.

As someone with multiple conditions that increase my risk of these dissections - I have some thoughts and concerns around expectation setting for ER visits.

First - if you’re young and otherwise healthy and haven’t had many dealings with the ER system - the experience may come as a shock to you.

There’s a reason those of us with chronic illness say we won’t go unless literally dying.

Our system is on its knees. Too many patients are without a family doctor, wait times for specialists and punishingly long and many cities have shockingly few options for urgent care.

Some family doctors even prohibit using urgent care - leaving the ER as the ONLY option

As a result - ERs become a catch all for everything. They’re treating minor ailments that should be handled by GP. They’re treating chronic illness because patients can’t get in with specialists. They’re seeing a surge in respiratory viruses. Plus all the actual emergencies

This leads to punishingly long wait times. I don’t think I’ve ever been in & out of an ER in under 8 hours - and it’s often far longer than that.

A lot of that time is spent being bounced from one waiting area to another - and it’s easy to conclude this means you’re “fine”

Unfortunately that’s not necessarily the case. What it usually means is the staff need the bed you were in to assess another patient.

They’ve deemed you “relatively stable for the time being” and moved you to a waiting area.

Read that again. Stable for the time being.

I find people are quick to assume staff don’t care, aren’t concerned and/or believe their issue is minor - when in reality they’re incredibly busy and it’s going to take a long time to get to you if your vitals are stable.

That’s the goal of triage - treat the unstable first

As I said at the beginning of this thread - I have a number of conditions that make me high risk for a dissection.

I also have POTS which means I frequently present with chest pain, tachycardia and sweating.

Ruling out a dissection has never been a quick process

It always starts the same way. Standard vital check. Blood pressure, temperature, pulse and O2 plus EKG.

I assume this is what was done in Adam’s case. If his vitals were stable (which they could easily be in early stages of dissection) he would be triaged low priority

I wish it wasn’t like this. I wish patients could get the tests they need quicker. But the reality is that there are too many people and too few doctors so long waits become unavoidable.

I also understand the desire to leave. I hate being in the ER

🧵 1/2

nationalpost.com/news/canada/m

#healthcare #canada #aorticdissection #ER #chronicillness #disability #disabilityrights #keepmasksinhealthcare

Montreal man, 39, dies from aneurysm after giving up on six-hour wait at ER

'Had a bit of a health scare last night, but thankfully…

nationalpost
Dec 14, 2024, 03:36 · · · 13 · 0
Hao Yin

Thoracic #AorticDissection (type A+B) in Nova Scotia, Canada🇨🇦2005-2015

382 scheduled thoracic #AorticAneurysm repair
294♂️vs 88♀️

345 dissection events
212♂️vs 133♀️
4.4 vs 2.4 per 10,000 person-years🧐

Dr. Claudia Cote lab #CJCOpen 2022
cjcopen.ca/article/S2589-790X(

Fran Kostella

Reading about Grant Wahl's #AorticDissection took me back to the aortic #aneurysm I had nearly five years ago. I had a type B dissection, which is lower down and not as fatal as type A. It knocked me off my feet and I eventually had stent surgery to shore up my vascular system.

I'd always had very low blood pressure, but it just went nuts at one point and I was busy and didn't get it looked at soon enough to stop it. It is not something you want to experience, get your blood pressure checked!

Kathleen Burnard :BP_cuff:

Covid/family vent 8/8

I’ve basically been living with my partner (in large part due to this stuff), but I’m worried for my father. And come early January, I’m not sure how to easily get out of a family visit, especially in a way that doesn’t cause him further harm.
#CovidIsNotOver #Immunocompromised #RareDisease #WearAMask #MaskUp #COVIDisAirborne #ChronicIllness #Thread #Covid #MyastheniaGravis #AorticDissection

Kathleen Burnard :BP_cuff:

Anyway, today is extra emotional, clearly. We didn’t know we’d get to have this day. He’s one of the best, most compassionate, most brilliant people I know (he was a literal rocket scientist, you guys), and I’m just so happy he’s still here. Thanks for reading all of that ❤️ #MedMastodon #DisabilityAdvocacy #DisabilityMastodon #RareDisease #AorticDissection :Aorta: