The Prince George Citizen

DISTANT DOCTORS

Big challenges for northern kids needing specialize­d care

- Colin SLARK

Kristy and Wes Fuller are sitting in a clinic in Prince George They’re with their son Karver. A nurse comes in to administer Karver his latest scheduled vaccinatio­n. The nurse takes a look at Karver’s file and turns to look at the Fullers.

“Are you guys the double-whammy family?” she asks.

The Fullers never thought their son’s story would become gossip but a nurse they’d never met before has apparently heard all about the most difficult month of their lives.

“Didn’t you guys find out that your son needed open-heart surgery and had Down syndrome in, like, the same day?”

The nurse isn’t far off track.

On Dec. 8, 2016, Kristy and Wes found out that their then-11-month-old boy had Down syndrome. On Dec. 12, they found out that Karver needed open-heart surgery. On Dec. 14, Karver spent six-and-a-half hours getting a congenital heart defect repaired.

Since Prince George lacks specialize­d pediatric care, the Fullers had to drive their son nine hours to receive treatment in British Columbia’s only pediatric hospital: Vancouver’s B.C. Children’s Hospital. Like all parents in B.C. that don’t live in Metro Vancouver, they had to take time off from work and pay for lodging, transporta­tion and many other costs, while not receiving income.

Kristy and Wes spent more than $10,000 to be with Karver during his time in hospital.

This is the reality for parents of critically­ill children in Northern B.C.

Karver’s story

Kristy is a gregarious alpha mom who runs a massage therapy business out of their house. Wes is a quiet, reserved helicopter mechanic who is frequently away for weeks at a time for work, sometimes working on other continents.

They needed help to get pregnant. Kristy’s ovaries were fine, but her Fallopian tubes were twisted and unhealthy. The Fullers travelled to Calgary to receive an in-vitro fertilizat­ion treatment. As part of the treatment, the viable embryos received genetic testing for various conditions. However, Karver’s Down syndrome was not detected by the clinic.

This is because Karver has a rare form called Mosaic Down syndrome, where not every cell has the extra 21st chromosome that causes the condition. The sampled material simply may not have contained Down syndrome markers.

Pre-natal ultrasound­s back in Prince George also missed signs of Down syndrome, including Karver’s heart. Children with Down syndrome are more prone to congenital heart defects. Karver’s went undetected until he was 11 months old.

Karver was a sickly child. His parents covered his carrier to prevent him from catching any illnesses. Kristy took him to the swimming pool, but his skin turned blue unless he was in the hot tub.

“He always sounded pug-like. He always had really loud breathing, kind of wet sounding,” Kristy recalled.

In late November 2016, Kristy took a sick Karver to a walk-in clinic. The doctor looked at him and said, “Well, you know, kids with Down syndrome tend to get sick more often.”

This was news to Kristy. This was the first time she or Wes had considered that Karver might have the condition, but it made a certain sense. There were times where at the right angle she thought she recognized something in Karver’s face, but she couldn’t quite place it. This might have been because Mosaic Down syndrome doesn’t always present itself quite as obviously in a person’s facial features.

On Dec. 8, 2016, a pediatrici­an confirmed to the parents that Karver has Down syndrome. Kristy recalls that at that doctor’s appointmen­t, the pediatrici­an listened to Karver’s heart and tried to suppress a look of concern.

The Fullers were asked to take Karver for an electrocar­diogram (ECG) at a laboratory in the same medical building before they left. Wes remembered taking the test results back up to the doctor’s office and the doctor snatched the paper right out of his hands.

At 5 p.m. that night, the family received a phone call from the pediatrici­an. He asked if they could make an appointmen­t at B.C. Children’s Hospital in Vancouver on Monday. The Fullers weren’t given specifics, so they assumed that the doctors at the hospital just wanted to make sure that Karver would be well enough to fly to Mexico on a two-week post-Christmas vacation they’d booked.

Not realizing the severity of the situation, they packed lightly and thought they’d be away from home only briefly. Kristy put her massage therapy business on hold and Wes took leave from his mechanic work.

The first obstacle came on the trip south. The winter weather was so rough that it took them 14-and-a-half hours to make what is usually a nine-hour trip. The Fraser Canyon was so bad that officials closed the highway just as the family made it out of the south end.

They were able to stay at Ronald McDonald House and Easter Seals House for parts of their stay in Vancouver. Both organizati­ons provide subsidized housing in Vancouver for families of children coming from out of the Lower Mainland area to receive medical treatment.

However, while they were staying at Ronald McDonald House, Wes had to rent a hotel room elsewhere because he had a cold, and the institutio­n doesn’t allow guests with communicab­le illnesses.

The next day, the Fullers went to B.C. Children’s Hospital and found out just how bad Karver’s situation was. Karver had a complete atrioventr­icular septal defect (AVSD). Normally a heart has four chambers. Karver’s heart hadn’t developed properly and only had two chambers.

Two days later, Karver went in for surgery. The surgeons had to essentiall­y redesign his heart. Complicati­ng things was that Karver was much older than most children that get surgery for AVSD because the defect was discovered so late. Doctors told his parents the surgery would take four hours. It took six-and-a-half hours.

He always sounded pug-like. He always had really loud breathing, kind of wet sounding.

— Kristy Fuller

While Karver was in surgery, Kristy occupied herself by going to a Service Canada outlet and applying for Employment Insurance Family Caregiver benefits so that the family could receive some income while they were off work. Their initial applicatio­n was denied until the surgeon that performed Karver’s surgery intervened and wrote a letter on Kristy’s behalf. They were approved afterwards.

Kristy said that the first time they tried to remove Karver from the bypass machine after the surgery, “it was like a sprinkler. The patches went and it just, like... blood went everywhere.” Doctors had to redo the patches on Karver’s heart.

Medical staff told the Fullers that Karver would only need to spend 24 hours in the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU). That was on Dec. 14. Karver was moved out of the PICU 11 days later – on Christmas Day. Unfortunat­ely, Karver’s stay was extended because he contracted Human Metapneumo­virus and needed treatment for that. He was in the hospital for 10 more days after leaving the PICU.

What the Fullers had thought would be a quick trip ended up lasting more than three weeks.

The costs

Costs add up quickly when travelling out of town to get medical treatment for a sick child.

The Fullers had to travel around 800 km to get to B.C. Children’s Hospital. The distances only go up for residents of more remote northern communitie­s.

There are some services available to help people without vehicles travel for medical appointmen­ts, but the situation has been complicate­d by Greyhound ending services in Western Canada in 2018. The provincial government has created a new service called BC Bus North to replace some of Greyhound’s routes, but it only connects communitie­s in Northern B.C.

Northern Health, runs a bus service called NH Connection­s from Prince George to Vancouver three times a week in both directions. One-way trips cost between $20 and $40 depending on where you board the bus. Upon request, NH Connection­s will give out letters confirming medical care in the Vancouver area for hotels that offer medical rates.

The B.C. Ministry of Health maintains a list of hotels in various communitie­s that offer medical rates.

A Canadian charity called Hope Air helps some patients afford air travel for medical care. Families that demonstrat­e financial need and can provide proof of an out-oftown health care appointmen­t can apply to the charity for assistance. If accepted, Hope Air will pay for round-trip tickets on a commercial airline for a patient and an escort if the patient is 18 or younger. However, Hope Air does not pay extra fees for such things as checked luggage or in-flight meals.

Otherwise, a one-way ticket from Prince George to Vancouver can cost around $500 per person before fees and taxes, if booked on short notice. If patients have the luxury of booking months in advance, tickets can still cost hundreds of dollars before fees and taxes.

The provincial government does run a Travel Assistance Program (TAP B.C.). Patients receiving non-emergency specialist services at the closest location outside of their home community and patients receiving specialist care are eligible for benefits under this program, so long as they have a referral and their travel expenses are not covered by third-party insurance. An escort is allowed for patients who are either 18 years old or younger or incapable of travelling alone.

Claims for assistance, however, cannot be filed retroactiv­ely for TAP B.C.

Housing is expensive too. NH Connection­s maintains a list of hotels with medical rates. A Sandman Hotel in Vancouver charges $129 for a room with two doubles from May to September and $89 the rest of the year. On Expedia.ca, booking the same kind of room at that hotel costs $169 a night without the medical rate.

Lucky families who get a room at Ronald McDonald House only have to pay $12 a night and the facility is on the grounds of B.C. Children’s Hospital. Ronald McDonald House has 73 rooms of different sizes with private bathrooms and access to communal kitchens and dining areas, as well as entertainm­ent facilities.

To apply to stay at Ronald McDonald House, families must prove that they have a medical appointmen­t at B.C. Children’s Hospital and have travelled farther than 50 km to receive medical care. There is usually a waitlist to get in.

“Our priority system is essentiall­y the sickest children from the farthest away,” says Shannon Kidd, vice-president of external relations for Ronald McDonald House of B.C. and Yukon. Kidd says if families cannot afford the $12 a day fee, the facility does not pressure them to pay.

A similar facility is Easter Seals House. They’re located a few blocks away from B.C. Children’s Hospital and have 49 suites with access to laundry facilities, lounges and in-suite kitchenett­es. Easter Seals House charges $40 a night for a single guest and $25 a night for a second guest.

Residents of B.C. can apply for the provincial government’s B.C. Family Residence Program, which is run by the charity Variety.

Families that have a child receiving medical care at B.C. Children’s Hospital or the Sunny Hill Health Centre for Children and live outside Metro Vancouver (excluding Bowen Island and other island communitie­s) are eligible to have accommodat­ion costs paid directly to the facility they’re staying at for up to 30 days per medical visit. This program does not cover transporta­tion costs, meals or other personal expenses.

Variety also offers assistance to parents and caregivers away from their home community to seek medical attention for a child through their Variety Cares Fund.

The Fullers were lucky in that they had a friend offer to pay for their hotel stay when they weren’t able to be at Ronald McDonald House. Some of their friends in Prince George also ran a fundraiser to help them cover the cost of being away from home.

The EI Family Caregiver Benefit grants up to 55 per cent of a parent’s average weekly insurable earnings (to a maximum of $562 a week) if accepted. The parent needs to have accumulate­d 600 hours of insurable employment in the 52 weeks preceding the claim or since the beginning of the last claim, whichever is shorter.

While the provincial government offers these programs to help parents who have travelled to Vancouver to get their kids health care, nobody told the Fullers.

Kristy and Wes were able to apply for the B.C. Family Residency Program but only after they were made aware of its existence when a staff member at Easter Seals House asked them if they had signed up.

The care

University Hospital of Northern British Columbia in Prince George is the largest hospital in Northern B.C. With specialize­d services including a cancer clinic and a teaching partnershi­p with UNBC, patients from around the region come to Prince George for care when their local facilities can’t handle their needs.

However, UHNBC does not have a large pediatric department. In Northern B.C., there are six pediatrici­ans in Prince George, three in Terrace, one in Prince Rupert, and one in Fort St. John. While UHNBC can handle generalize­d care and some emergency situations, anything else needs to be handled at B.C. Children’s Hospital.

“Anything that requires a specialize­d pediatrici­an like cardiology, gastroente­rology, you name it, immunology, rheumatolo­gy, it’s all in Vancouver,” says Dr. Kirsten Miller, the medical lead for Northern Health’s Child and Youth Health Program.

“It would be hard to answer (the question) of what services kids go to Vancouver for. It might be easier to say what services they don’t go for.”

According to Miller, geography is the biggest challenge in providing pediatric health care in Northern B.C.

“We see kids that live hours and hours from a pediatrici­an,” she says. “I just got a phone call about a kid that’s having trouble breathing in Takla, which is by land going to take five or six hours to get here.”

Some families in northeaste­rn B.C. choose to take their children to Grande Prairie or Edmonton in Alberta for non-urgent medical appointmen­ts because the distances involved make those locations easier to access. A patient in Fort Nelson would only need to drive 11 hours to Edmonton versus 18-and-a-half hours to Vancouver.

Miller says a couple of things would make her job easier as a pediatrici­an in the north. One would be a provincial-based approach to pediatric care that includes telemedici­ne appointmen­ts for hard-to-reach communitie­s. Another would be the improvemen­t of transporta­tion services for critically ill children.

“I had two children come in this (February) long weekend from smaller communitie­s in our region and they both had to come by land ambulance in the black of night, on icy roads, with basic ambulance crews that in my opinion probably couldn’t have managed any complicati­ons that would’ve arisen on the way,” Miller says.

“There needs to be more money for flying kids with a specialize­d infant transport team than there currently is.”

While the bulk of patients treated at B.C. Children’s Hospital are from the Metro Vancouver area, patients from other regions of B.C. make up a substantia­l amount of their caseload. In the 2016/17 fiscal year, 458 cases treated at B.C. Children’s Hospital were patients from Northern B.C. and 279 of those cases were patients from Prince George.

In 2017/18, 386 cases were from Northern B.C., with 237 of those being from Prince George.

Other regions in B.C. are closer to Metro Vancouver and they make up thousands of other cases every year. Care at B.C. Children’s Hospital still means driving hours away from home, taking ferries or flights, and hundreds if not thousands of dollars in expenses.

Next up for Karver

After his heart surgery, Karver has thrived. While his speech lags behind children without Down syndrome, he gives confident one-word answers to questions.

The speech therapist at Prince George’s Child Developmen­t Centre is only able to see Karver once a month or less, so Kristy supplement­s his learning with a computer program that helps him learn new words.

Karver loves to play. He has a wooden train track built in his play area at home. He surrounds it with plastic skyscraper­s topped with Lego figures.

When Wes is home from work, Karver plays outside with him and the family dogs. One of the dogs’ names, Memphis, is one of Karver’s favourite words.

Initially, the family had a hard time finding Karver a daycare that would allow him to have a staff member dedicated to helping him. In the beginning, they hired a nanny to take care of Karver while Kristy was working. Now Karver has gotten into a facility that allows him to have a personal aide and he’s loving the chance to socialize with other kids.

Recently, Karver became a big brother. Kristy and Wes welcomed daughter Farryn to the world in early 2019. While Karver is sometimes jealous that his sister is getting lots of attention, he clearly loves her.

Karver shows affection by giving out fist bumps and is already trying to teach his infant sister how to do them.

Karver’s medical team has been hesitant to do any more work on his heart for fear that any surgeries might make matters worse. But Karver’s heart has been prone to mitral valve regurgitat­ion, where the heart’s mitral valve doesn’t close tightly enough. This allows blood to travel backwards in the heart, impeding circulatio­n.

The problem has progressed to the point where Karver will need to have another open heart surgery this August. It won’t be as complex as the surgery that redhaped his heart but it will require Kristy and Wes to take more time off work. However, family friends have recently put on a fundraiser to help the family with the costs of being away from home.

Karver is expected to only be in hospital five days but will need to stay in the Vancouver area for monitoring for another week. Kristy always knew that Karver would need more work done but had hoped for more time between procedures.

“We really thought we had years before they were going to do a surgery, not a couple of months,” Kristy said.

While the thought of another open heart surgery is scary, Kristy and Wes know that they’ve survived worse.

Both parents have tattoos of the ECG of Karver’s heart after he went through his first surgery to remind themselves of what they’ve overcome.

Kristy and Wes have seen Karver’s potential in the years since his first health crisis and are doing everything they can to keep their son on that path.

— Colin Slark is a graduate of Duchess Park Secondary School. He got the journalism bug after spending two weeks jobshadowi­ng in the Citizen newsroom in 2012. He went on to UNBC, where he edited the Over The Edge student newspaper while completing his bachelor’s degree in English and history. He recently finished his master’s degree in journalism at King’s College in Halifax and this story was a project towards completing his degree. Colin is currently a staff reporter at the Brandon Sun newspaper.

I had two children come in... from smaller communitie­s in our region and they both had to come by land ambulance in the black of night, on icy roads, with basic ambulance crews that in my opinion probably couldn’t have managed any complicati­ons that would’ve arisen on the way.

— Dr. Kirsten Miller

 ?? CITIZEN PHOTO BY BRENT BRAATEN ?? Karver Fuller, 3, rides a bike at the Child Developmen­t Centre.
CITIZEN PHOTO BY BRENT BRAATEN Karver Fuller, 3, rides a bike at the Child Developmen­t Centre.
 ?? CITIZEN PHOTO BY BRENT BRAATEN ?? Karver Fuller, 3, with mom Kristy and his four-and-a-half-month old sister Farryn at Lheidli T’enneh Memorial Park.
CITIZEN PHOTO BY BRENT BRAATEN Karver Fuller, 3, with mom Kristy and his four-and-a-half-month old sister Farryn at Lheidli T’enneh Memorial Park.
 ?? CITIZEN PHOTO BY BRENT BRAATEN ?? Karver Fuller, 3, at the Child Developmen­t Centre. Karver’s medical issues has meant his family has had to travel multiple times to B.C. Children’s Hospital in Vancouver.
CITIZEN PHOTO BY BRENT BRAATEN Karver Fuller, 3, at the Child Developmen­t Centre. Karver’s medical issues has meant his family has had to travel multiple times to B.C. Children’s Hospital in Vancouver.

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