The Telegram (St. John's)

‘I want to die’

Young man dealing with mental-health issues says he was turned away by Corner Brook hospital

- BY DIANE CROCKER

Being turned away from a place he expected to find help has left a young man in a mental-health limbo.

Zach Peckford-green wants to die.

The 20-year-old is originally from Corner Brook, but has moved around a lot in recent years. He’s been dealing with mental-health issues, including suicidal thoughts, since he was 18.

He has tried to kill himself twice, has had counsellin­g, has been medicated and has been diagnosed with anxiety and PTSD from time spent as a sex worker. He has also been trying, to no avail, to get a more comprehens­ive assessment of his mental health.

Peckford-green spent part of Tuesday outside Western Memorial Regional Hospital protesting his inability to get treatment at the hospital since first going there on Dec. 27.

He had an appointmen­t for 4 p.m., but that was pushed up to 3 p.m. He figures it was because of the media attention he’d drawn.

All he wanted was to be admitted, but he left the appointmen­t with mixed results. The hospital will admit him for a full evaluation, but not until Jan. 15.

Until then, he said, the hospital has sent a suicidal person home.

“I want to die,” he said.

In his mindset, he doesn’t see a point to life.

“I don’t think happiness and being suicidal have to be so opposite. I think you can still be super, super suicidal and still have a happy, positive attitude.

“In my head, the way I view death, it’s not such a negative thing. You really don’t know what’s past it.”

Peckford-green had been visiting his mother in Burgeo for Christmas. She noticed that things were not right with him and convinced him to travel to Corner Brook to go to the hospital.

They arrived on Dec. 27 after driving through a snowstorm.

With a goal to being admitted, Peckford-green told the triage nurse he was requesting physician-assisted suicide.

He wanted to die, but he also wanted help, to be treated for his mental-health issues.

After seeing a few health profession­als, he said, he was told hospitaliz­ation would make things worse for him, that he’d be agitated due to lack of patient care.

So he was sent on his way to await his appointmen­t.

Later, frustratio­n led to an altercatio­n with his mother and a trip back to the hospital in a police car. He still wasn’t admitted and has been staying at a hotel for the past week.

But he wasn’t willing to idly wait, and decided to protest the lack of treatment.

“What do you have to do to get admitted?” he asked as he stood in the parking lot of the hospital along with his mother on Tuesday afternoon.

“I just don’t know what else there is possible for me to do to get the help I need. There’s no other options.”

He said he wanted to bring awareness to what people in his position have to go through and how hard it is to get help, and that this sort of thing happens every day.

“As crappy as it is in there, it is my only hope.”

No one from Western Health spoke with Peckford-green while he was protesting outside the hospital.

In an emailed statement, the health authority said it has a legislated mandate to respect the privacy of all of its patients, clients and residents, and was unable to publicly discuss any specifics regarding the care of a patient, client or resident due to the Personal Health Informatio­n Act.

“Western Health takes all complaints seriously. Western Health is available to respond to any client, patient or their family members with respect to any concerns they have with their care. Our staff are always able to follow up with a client or family member on an individual basis about any specific concerns they may have,” the health authority said in the statement.

 ?? DIANE CROCKER/THE WESTERN STAR ?? Zach Peckford-green protested outside Western Memorial Regional Hospital in Corner Brook on Tuesday. Peckford-green said he was not admitted to the hospital last week despite telling health profession­als he was suicidal.
DIANE CROCKER/THE WESTERN STAR Zach Peckford-green protested outside Western Memorial Regional Hospital in Corner Brook on Tuesday. Peckford-green said he was not admitted to the hospital last week despite telling health profession­als he was suicidal.

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