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She's losing her foot to a bedsore. Disability advocates say it speaks to a larger problem

- Rachel Watts

Sandra Langlois has no oth‐ er choice but to get her left foot amputated on Mon‐ day. For a year, she's had a bedsore that just won't heal.

"It's very debilitati­ng," said Langlois, who is paralyzed from the waist down.

She says she's come to terms with it, but it took time.

"There was a period when it wasn't going well at all. I couldn't even leave the house," said Langlois.

"You may want to do everything possible to heal a wound, but if it doesn't want to heal, it doesn't want to heal. At some point you have to face the fact that you have no choice but to lose the limb."

She says she doesn't un‐ derstand how the govern‐ ment is still not responding to the needs of people who experience bedsores, particu‐ larly after what happened to Normand Meunier.

The 66-year-old quadri‐ plegic Quebec man chose as‐ sisted dying in March after developing a horrific bedsore - where bone and muscle were exposed - during his four-day hospital stay on a stretcher in Saint-Jérôme, Que., two months earlier.

He and his partner had asked staff for a special alter‐ nating pressure mattress that didn't arrive in time.

Days after his death, a lo‐ cal Quebec organizati­on, Moëlle Épinière et Motricité

Québec, demanded the Que‐ bec government launch an independen­t inquest.

"Mr. Menier had been treated as an annoying pa‐ tient rather than a knowing patient," said Ariane Gauthi‐ er-Tremblay, a community or‐ ganizer with Moëlle Épinière et Motricité Québec.

"That's what upsets us a lot."

It's unfortunat­ely a com‐ mon thread among members of the organizati­on, which Meunier was part of, said Gauthier-Tremblay.

"It's deeply sad because people acknowledg­e their vulnerabil­ity and their depen‐ dence toward the health sys‐ tem," she said. "Nobody is safe."

This week, the organiza‐ tion for people with reduced mobility called for more pre‐ ventive care and training to make sure health-care pro‐ fessionals know how to avoid and treat bedsores.

In an emailed statement, the Health Ministry said is‐ sues relating to bedsores are a "priority" and in the past few months presentati­ons have been made to sensitize personnel to the importance of monitoring pressure sores in people with spinal cord in‐ juries.

"The Ministry of Health and Social Services works in collaborat­ion with two cen‐ tres of expertise for spinal cord injuries in adults," read the statement.

Gauthier-Tremblay says the centre in Quebec City is poorly managed and under‐ staffed.

Quebec City's local health authority did not comment on whether there is a need for more staff, but in an emailed statement said the centre specializi­ng in pres‐ sure sores does not have a waitlist and recently put in place a campaign to prevent patients from developing

complex and severe sores.

Gauthier-Tremblay says the health authority did not respond to the organizati­on's invitation to their community gathering on Tuesday where about two dozen members shared their horror stories underlinin­g the importance of how specialize­d, proactive workers would make all the difference.

Fear and anxiety some‐ times all-consuming

Those gathered gasped as Simon Plamondon held up photos of his severe bed‐ sores. Over the years, he's been in and out of the hospi‐ tal.

"I went through a fourmonth hospital stay," said Plamondon. "And it just came back. Then another five mon‐ ths in hospital with three bedsores."

Sherry Craig shared it's her biggest fear.

When she's awake, she's always thinking about mov‐ ing, adjusting and sitting properly.

Sometimes, worrying about it consumes her.

"It's always there," said Craig.

"It just can go down the hill so fast because we don't feel it .... The thing that scares me the most is having a wound that gets complicate­d and you die."

Craig, a nurse in a longterm care home who has been paralyzed for 12 years, says she's had four severe bedsores - the last of which took over a year to heal.

She says better preven‐ tion care by health-care staff could prevent complicati­ons and hospitaliz­ations, even re‐ ducing the cost for individu‐ als, who she says can some‐ times pay $95 per package of five bandages.

"It adds up very fast," said Craig. "That's the sad part. I'm able to [pay that] and it still took me a year. So what does that say for people that might not have the money to pay for those dressings?"

Having taken university courses on wounds, Craig says it's not surprising some health-care staff aren't aware of all the steps needed to prevent bedsores.

"In the course they didn't even talk about people that were paralyzed," said Craig. "It was just very general."

Without the support for staff and patients, she says it becomes a silent, vicious cy‐ cle.

"We've got to be able to talk amongst ourselves to find solutions," said Craig.

'Necessity to act' says Opposition critic

Elisabeth Prass, Liberal MNA for D'Arcy-McGee and Official Opposition critic for social services and people with disabiliti­es, says the Quebec government has a responsibi­lity to address the situation.

"We need to be aware of these situations to avoid them in the future because what happened to Mr. Meu‐ nier is really a tragedy and a tragedy we can't let be re‐ peated in Quebec," said Prass, who attended the community organizati­on's event in Quebec City Tues‐ day.

"Even myself hearing that people are spending three and four and five months stays in hospitals because of bedsores … makes us realize the necessity to act."

Prass says she is working with Moëlle Épinière et Motricité Québec to present a petition at the National As‐ sembly in support of the or‐ ganization's demands.

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