Edmonton Journal

CHINTA PUXLEY Apology issued for letter addressed to ‘Treaty Indian’

Alberta Health Services calls mistake an ‘inexcusabl­e’ data-entry error

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Alberta Health Services says a mistake on a form a decade ago using outdated language is to blame after a teenage Indigenous girl was sent an invoice addressed to “Treaty Indian.”

The health service said Thursday it has finished a preliminar­y investigat­ion into how “unacceptab­le and culturally insensitiv­e language” was used.

“This was an inexcusabl­e error, and should never have happened,” it said in a statement.

The service said the error occurred when “historical wording ” was put in the wrong field on a patient’s record during a hospital visit over 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,” the statement said.

“The wording is absolutely not language that we would purposeful­ly use. It is inappropri­ate, insensitiv­e and should not be used in any circumstan­ce.”

The health service said this was a “one-off incident” and doesn’t reflect the language used by staff. The organizati­on apologized publicly and said it has reached out to the 15-year-old girl and her mother to apologize personally.

The case will continue to be reviewed and the invoice to the patient has been waived, it added.

The letter came to light when a picture of the address line was posted on Twitter Wednesday by Indigenous artist Dawn Marie Marchand.

She said the letter was addressed to the daughter of a friend who gave her permission to share it on social media.

“(It’s) hard to understand how it is even possible,” she wrote. “It basically means someone could not even be bothered to find out the name.”

Following the apology, Marchand said the girl’s mother did not wish to comment on the mistake.

“To her, this is just another example of how we are dehumanize­d in institutio­nal situations,” Marchand wrote on Twitter.

“Although she wanted to show her disappoint­ment, she does not want to make any statements in the media about this publicly. She is already dealing with enough.”

Health Minister Sarah Hoffman said the letter was completely unacceptab­le.

“If I was a mother receiving a letter like that for my child I would be incredibly insulted and offended that they didn’t even put the name on the letter,” she said.

The health service said all employees are expected to treat everyone with respect and it will make sure something similar never happens again.

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