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Woman critical of treatment at Russell hospital

When Erin Lang attended the Russell Health Centre on January 17, she expected help. What the Oakburn resident received instead, she told The Brandon Sun, was the assumption she was a methamphetamine addict seeking drugs.
Russell
Erin Lang, a mother of three who lives at Oakburn, exposes the marks of two surgeries she received at the Brandon Regional Health Centre after she was allegedly treated like a methamphetamine addict seeking drugs at the Russell Health Centre.

When Erin Lang attended the Russell Health Centre on January 17, she expected help.

What the Oakburn resident received instead, she told The Brandon Sun, was the assumption she was a methamphetamine addict seeking drugs.

Now, she is at the end of her rope 鈥 she is feeling hopeless and scared.

Lang said, since moving to the Rural Municipality of Yellowhead eight years ago, the health-care system there has created issue after issue for herself and her family of five, including her eldest child Ethan, her twins Damon and Cameron, and her husband.

Prior treatment in Winnipeg was excellent, as was treatment in New Brunswick, where she lived before moving to Manitoba.

鈥淓ver since I鈥檝e moved out here it鈥檚 been one thing after the other with the medical system and it just gets progressively worse,鈥 she said, adding she thinks it鈥檚 because they aren鈥檛 rich and seem different from the locals.

Yet, when she was rushed to Brandon the next day for two surgeries over two days, she said the treatment was fantastic.

Lang has life-long illnesses 鈥 specifically, Crohn鈥檚 disease and colitis. To access life-saving medication, she has a port in her chest area. Ports are used for long-term delivery of IV medications. Lang doesn鈥檛 have vein access due to many years of illness.

The skin and muscle around her port was darkening and hurting, which is why she presented at the Russell facility.

鈥淢y port had a failure. My body was rejecting it,鈥 said Lang.

鈥淭he nurses started poking at my tattoos and poking at weird things. I鈥檝e got cats, and had a few cat scratches on my hands. And they鈥檙e going, 鈥榃here did these come from? Where did these come from?鈥 Then they said they鈥檙e suspecting me of doing meth, a drug I have never done in my life. I鈥檓 a mother of three children, with disabilities. They basically kicked me out of the hospital,鈥 said Lang.

Additionally, the hospital ran a toxicology test without her consent, she said. That came back clean. Yet, hospital staff continued to treat her in the same way, as a drug addict. They sent her away, she said.

鈥淭hen I had to run back to that same hospital,鈥 said Lang.

鈥淭hey had a drug specialist come in and see me. A doctor that specializes in seeking out people with addictive behaviors. And he comes in and he said, 鈥業t鈥檚 very odd, in your report, there鈥檚 nothing in your system.鈥欌

Allegedly, Lang鈥檚 report stated she was drug-seeking, coming off of methamphetamine 鈥 even as her toxicology report indicated no such drug use.

That鈥檚 when, at 5 a.m., she was rushed to Brandon to receive the care she required because her port had completely failed by that point. She had two surgeries over two days at the Brandon Regional Health Centre, which then sent Lang back to the Russell facility to recuperate for a week. She was told she鈥檇 be able to go home after that week of rest.

鈥淲hich wasn鈥檛 the case,鈥 said Lang.

鈥淚 got sent back to Russell, and they threw a few Tylenol at me and basically kicked me out the next morning without discharge papers or information about stitch removal.鈥

Lang came to the Sun because she鈥檚 scared. She isn鈥檛 receiving the care she requires.

She is also worried about her husband and children, who receive similar negative treatment. Another of several health-care-related incidents in the area involved her son. Lang鈥檚 husband, Jason, brought him to a doctor at Shoal Lake because his ears were bothering him. They called Child and Family Services.

鈥淭hey made it out like our son was so disgusting,鈥 Lang said, adding that Child and Family Services found nothing of concern.

鈥淚t鈥檚 sickening. It鈥檚 horrible. I can鈥檛 trust taking my kids to the doctor because I don鈥檛 know what doctor I can trust out here. I feel like I can鈥檛 trust anybody,鈥 she said.

鈥淚 feel kind of hopeless. I鈥檝e had to deal with a few health-care systems. Never have I experienced what I鈥檝e experienced out here.鈥

The Sun asked Prairie Mountain Health a series of questions related specifically to Lang鈥檚 experience, including: Under what circumstances would health centre staff consider it necessary to test someone presenting at hospital; what is the protocol for running toxicology tests on patients and does a patient鈥檚 consent need to be secured; and under what conditions would a PMH health centre call CFS.

鈥淧rairie Mountain Health will not discuss any specific personal health information specific to any individual,鈥 stated chief executive officer Penny Gilson by email.

鈥淚n regards to your general questions, the clinical presentation of any client/patient will determine what the plan of care will be. This plan of care may involve diagnostic testing and a treatment plan. The plan of care is discussed with the client prior to diagnostic testing or treatment.鈥

Gilson additionally stated Prairie Mountain Health works with health-care centres, clinics and partners across the region to ensure the provision of safe, quality care.

She suggested Lang should contact Prairie Mountain Health directly to discuss concerns.

Lang鈥檚 husband, Jason, said he did file a complaint related to their son鈥檚 treatment. It was disregarded, he said, adding he still doesn鈥檛 understand what happened in that situation with his son.

The Sun learned from Jason late Friday afternoon that Lang is back in hospital in Brandon. Her new port is failing, he said.

As he tells it, theirs is a story of two people who complement each other, who built a life together, after years of difficulty.

鈥淲e kind of created our little family from there,鈥 said Jason.

Watching his wife suffer over the past few weeks has left him worried and distressed.

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