National Post

B.C. man has stroke while driving, told to get himself to hospital

- Katie derosa

• A B.C. father of two says he has lost faith in B.C.’S ambulance service after he was “left to die on the side of the road” after suffering a stroke.

Layne French, 36, said despite describing his symptoms that included paralysis and slurred speech, paramedics never came and he ended up being driven to hospital in a cab with his parents.

“I basically survived due to my body and the miracles of the human body, not because of any medical interventi­on,” he said.

The emergency happened on March 13 while French was driving north on the Steveston Highway in Richmond, B.C. French had just entered the Massey Tunnel and was driving at about 80 km/h when he was overcome by a coughing fit.

“All of the sudden the world started spinning. It’s like a ship on the ocean, going up and down. I’m like, ‘This is not good.’ ”

French said as he approached the end of the tunnel he felt the right side of his body go numb. He said his eyes started “skipping.”

He used his left foot to hit the brake and his left hand to put the car into park.

With the car behind him honking at the sudden stop, French flagged down another motorist. The driver called 911 while French went back to his car and also called 911 using the Siri function on his phone. French said he described his symptoms as clearly as he could.

“I told them I was paralyzed. I’m confused. The world is spinning. I’m giving them all that.” Despite this, dispatcher­s kept asking French if he could drive himself to hospital. He said no.

French managed to get himself 100 metres to a parking lot where he waited for paramedics. “And we wait and we wait and we wait. And they never come.”

French received a call from B.C. Emergency Health Services shortly before 6 p.m. A dispatcher asked if French would accept a paramedic arriving in a minivan and he said yes. However, he was later told the minivan wasn’t an option because the medical emergency was triggered by a cough and there was a concern about sanitation.

French’s wife was able to send his location to his parents, who were flying into Vancouver Internatio­nal. His parents landed, got their bags, cleared customs, got a cab and reached their son before an ambulance had arrived. “The level of incompeten­ce is stunning. I feel betrayed,” French said.

Bowen Osoko, a spokesman for B.C. Emergency Health Services, said he can’t provide specific details about French’s case because of patient privacy but confirmed that the first call came in at 4:52 p.m.

Dispatcher­s confirmed with the patient he had been able to safely drive to a nearby parking lot to wait for help, Osoko said.

Minutes later, the ambulance service received a second 911 call from a motorist the patient had flagged down. “Based on the informatio­n provided by both callers, the call was coded yellow, which is a non-urgent call with a non-lights-andsirens response,” Osoko said.

The third call from the parking lot downgraded it to a code green, which means the issue “may be resolved by treatment on-site.” This was because a dispatcher had arranged for a “link and referral unit” — a paramedic driving a vehicle that’s not an ambulance. However, the statement didn’t say whether that unit was cancelled, only that French’s family drove him to the hospital instead.

“At the time of this incident, we were responding to significan­t call volumes and other ambulances in the area were responding to potentiall­y life-threatenin­g calls, coded as red or purple,” Osoko said.

French said he disagrees with the characteri­zation that he was going to be treated on-site, stressing the paramedic in the minivan never came. He is also angry the ambulance service classified his symptoms non-urgent and non-life-threatenin­g. That put him in the same category as someone with a sprained ankle, he said.

French arrived at Richmond Hospital at 6:30 p.m. and waited until 1 a.m. to see a doctor. After a CT scan, French was told he suffered an arterial dissection — essentiall­y a tear to an artery — which led to a stroke.

Health Minister Adrian Dix said he can’t speak to French’s case but said response times for the highest priority calls, code purple and red calls, have improved over the last three years. Dix said more than 1,500 paramedics have been hired since 2021, however they continue to grapple with higher call loads because of the province’s rapidly growing population.

French, an urban planner and dad to two sons — a 4½-year-old and 10-monthold — is recovering at home and awaiting an appointmen­t with the Vancouver Stroke clinic. However, he intends to be a “thorn in the side” of the B.C. NDP government until he sees improvemen­ts.

“I’ve always believed in the system and it just completely crumbled.”

 ?? LAYNE FRENCH ?? Layne French is recovering at home after suffering a stroke March 13 while driving through the Massey Tunnel. He said the ambulance he called never arrived.
LAYNE FRENCH Layne French is recovering at home after suffering a stroke March 13 while driving through the Massey Tunnel. He said the ambulance he called never arrived.

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