Regina Leader-Post

Dedicated unit to support patients with seizures

- ANDRÉA LEDDING

SASKATOON Shannon Loutitt is “so over the moon.”

Loutitt, who began having seizures after a car crash, had a bad experience at Royal University Hospital last year. The hospital had one telemetry bed in the neurologic­al unit, which is often full of trauma victims and people recovering from brain surgeries.

Telemetry monitors the electrical activity in a patient’s brain over an extended period of time, which can help determine where the seizures are coming from, and if surgery is beneficial.

Loutitt had to be kept awake to try to induce seizures. She was sharing close quarters with people on the worst days of their lives.

“It was so traumatizi­ng,” Loutitt said. “My last time in there, I was staring into the eyes of a man that was passing away. It wasn’t just the fact that we’re feet away from each other, but the fact I knew everything about him as his family was coming and going, it felt so inappropri­ate.”

Soon, patients like Loutitt will be treated in a new dedicated fourbed telemetry monitoring unit.

The provincial government and Royal University Hospital Foundation (RUHF) announced funding for the project at a joint news conference on Monday.

“That is exactly what we were hoping for,” Loutitt said. “I am so over the moon. We’re the only province that didn’t have one in the entire country.”

The new setup will offer privacy and allow timelier assessment in a more dignified way.

The Saskatchew­an Health Authority will contribute $1.35 million and the RUHF will raise $1.2 million for capital and equipment. The unit is expected to open in the 2020-21 fiscal year.

Arla Gustafson, the foundation’s CEO, said the news is exciting for patients and families, and also for donors who have already been supporting the Saskatchew­an Epilepsy Program. She said the foundation is committed to raising $500,000 this year and $700,000 next year to make the unit a reality.

Becky Findlay of Regina, who started having seizures after her first son was born five years ago, waited about three years to get into the telemetry bed at RUH. She had surgery in April and has been seizure-free ever since.

She said she’s glad others may not have to wait as long as she did.

“It’s so exciting that people aren’t going to have the years and years of waits and just getting what can be their miracle, sooner,” Findlay said.

Two pediatric epilepsy telemetry beds will be available in the fall when the Jim Pattison Children’s Hospital opens.

 ?? MATT SMITH ?? Shannon Loutitt is “over the moon” after advocating for a telemetry unit at RUH.
MATT SMITH Shannon Loutitt is “over the moon” after advocating for a telemetry unit at RUH.

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