Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

SORRY, NOW PAY

Qld Health apology after it robs man of time with dying dad – but then sends $3200 Covid quarantine hotel bill

- EXCLUSIVE NAVARONE FARRELL

A FAMILY who had time with their dying dad cut short in a heart-breaking Covid quarantine bungle had an official apology – followed by a $3200 Covid hotel bill. Stuart Mcphie, who raced to the Gold Coast to see his terminal father, said: “It’s so undignifie­d the way they’ve treated me.”

TWO hours was all Stuart Mcphie got with his father before he died of an aggressive cancer, due to a Queensland Health Covid-19 end-oflife visit bungle.

Now, seven months on, despite an apology for the stuffup – which robbed the pair of precious time together – Stuart has been issued a “heartless” $3220 hotel quarantine bill for his stay in what he calls a “jail”.

It’s brought all the pain back.

Stuart said the last moments he spent with father Geoff, of Pacific Pines, who died aged 81, were the most treasured in his life.

But having more time was torn away from him.

Geoff was hospitalis­ed for treatment in August 2021, after suffering prostate cancer for almost 11 years.

He went downhill quickly, radiation causing a tumour on his lower back to grow, leaving him a paraplegic. He didn’t have long to live.

Stuart, who owns mobile repair businesses in Sydney rushed up, ticking all the boxes with Queensland Health, to spend two hours with his father.

“I was told I could stay as long as I liked, visit him by working with the health team at hotel quarantine.”

He arrived on a Friday, seeing him at 9pm that night.

“He was so happy,” Stuart wrote in correspond­ence with Queensland Health.

Of the night, he said: “We just sat there, chatted, it was really good. It’s one of the most treasured moments of my life. It was the last time he was lucid, it was the last time he was good.

“I didn’t get there until 9pm, and the hospital kicked me out at 11pm.

“He was definitely looking forward to me coming back the next day. ”

But the next morning Queensland Health didn’t allow Stuart back.

“At 7am, I emailed the health team at the Crowne (Plaza quarantine hotel, Surfers) to organise a visit,” he said.

“They said, ‘your dad’s classifica­tion has changed, he’s not end of life anymore, he’s not dying quickly enough, you can’t go see him anymore’,” Stuart claimed.

“My father cried like I’ve never heard when I told him.”

Stuart suspects his father’s reports weren’t updated, making it appear as if he was

ready to go home, rather than pass away in palliative care.

“I knew it was going to be the last time I ever saw him. Then I had to ring dad and tell him, ‘Sorry, you’re not dying quickly enough, I can’t come and see you anymore’.”

“He started crying, he understood, he was balling his eyes out.

Stuart Mcphie emailed everyone he could, including Queensland Health and Health Minister Yvette D’ath. His dad died less than two weeks later.

Eight weeks after he said he was booted from the state he received an apology, signed by Gold Coast Hospital and Health Service CEO Ron Calvert.

The letter provided to the Bulletin reads:

Upon receiving your letter, I can confirm that a thorough investigat­ion has been undertaken into the exemption, hotel quarantine and visitation process.

The investigat­ion was conducted in considerat­ion of the Queensland Border Restrictio­n Directions at the time. In my view you should have been allowed access to visit your father therefore please accept my apologies that the decision making at the time resulted in your inability to spend precious time with your father.

Despite the apology, Stuart has now been issued a quarantine bill from Queensland Health, with no acknowledg­ment of the department’s mistake.

“The biggest thing is Queensland Health and the

Queensland Government have spruiked this line: ‘We’re keeping Queensland­ers safe’, well I’m sorry, but you haven’t,” Stuart said.

“What you’ve done is you’ve just destroyed people. It’s so undignifie­d the way they’ve treated me, treated my dad.

“Fancy making an 81-yearold, nearly at his last breath, making him cry because his son can’t come visit.

“It’s just so heartless.

“I can tell you now the hardest thing I’ve ever done in my life is watch my dad die via Zoom.

“I’ve got this apology, which is completely hollow because they turn around and charge me $3200 – $1600 a night to stay in this jail.

“You get to a point where you start to forget about it and they send you that (the bill) and it brings it all back again.”

A spokesman for Queensland Health said: “The loss of a life is tragic, and our thoughts go out to those who have lost loved ones.

“We understand the restrictio­ns at the time were challengin­g, which is why there was a provision to act on compassion­ate grounds, particular­ly for end of life visits.”

The department is “working to investigat­e (the) matter and amend the invoice accordingl­y”, the spokesman said.

As of April 8, a total of 71,777 hotel quarantine invoices have been issued. A debt collection agency is handling 3366 “significan­tly overdue” invoices valued at $9.6m.

Almost 19,000 people have applied for a waiver and 4287 have been approved in part or in full.

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Sonya Holloway, brother Stuart Mcphie and their late father Geoffrey Mcphie.
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