Brandon widower waits nearly 2 years for answers amid backlog of care home investigations - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 06:01 PM | Calgary | -11.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
ManitobaCBC Investigates

Brandon widower waits nearly 2 years for answers amid backlog of care home investigations

A backlog of investigations into abuse at personal care homes has left a Manitoba widower waiting almost two years for answers after his wife died following a short stay at a care home in Brandon.

Government office has 170 ongoing, open investigations about alleged abuse at personal care homes

Hugh Davis holds a picture of his wife, Sharen, who died in 2017 after spending 25 days at a personal care home in Brandon. (Gary Solilak / CBC News)

A backlog of investigations into abuse at personal care homes has left a Manitoba widowerwaiting almost two years for answers after his wife died following a short stay at a care homein Brandon.

"I think it's ridiculous. I just think it's unconscionable," said Hugh Davis, whose wife Sharen died on Oct. 29, 2017.

"I want to hear that somebody is going to be held accountable for the lack of care that was given to my wife."

Sharen Davis was 66 and suffering from vascular dementia when she spent 25 days at a personal care home Brandon. Her husband says she died after getting an infection because she was not bathed or changed regularly. (Submitted by Hugh Davis)

Davis says his wife was healthy and in good spirits when he dropped her off at Fairview Personal Care Home for a 25-day stay.

By the time she returned home Oct. 3, she was noticeably uncomfortable and had sores on her body. She was eventually hospitalized and died after contracting Klebsiella pneumonia, an infection most often picked up in personal care homes or hospitals.

  • Do you have a story about a personal care homeyou want to tell the CBC?Contact us.

Davis believes it was the lack of care she received at the care homethat caused her infection.

The death of Sharen Lee Davis, 66, is just one of the 170 ongoing investigations sitting on the desk of the province's Protection of Persons in Care Office (PPCO).

"She was sent home sick. And nobody did a bloody thing about it," Davissaid.

A CBC investigation has revealed the office is still reviewing almost three-quarters of the investigations it has opened in the past three years.

Over 1,000 open files allegeabuse at care homes

Despite thebacklog and an uptick in abuse complaints, the office is working with fewerinvestigators than it was five years ago.

The PPCOis responsible for reporting, investigating and resolving allegations of abuse in personal care homes. When it believes there are reasonable grounds that abuse or neglect occurred, it will conduct an investigation. Only about two to threeper cent of reports are elevated to investigation status each year.

The office has over 1,000files that include a combination of intake reports that haven't yet been opened, reports in inquiry stage and open investigations. Six investigators are in charge of thoseinvestigations,down from seven in 2015-16.

Manitoba's Health Minister Cameron Friesen says the length it takes to complete an investigation has been increasing over the past decade. He cites the complexities of the investigations and a higher standard for the investigations.

'I just feel so guilty leaving her in there for those 25 days'

5 years ago
Duration 0:33
A backlog of investigations into abuse at personal care homes has left a Manitoba widow waiting almost two years for answers after his wife died following a short stay at a care home in Brandon.

He noted in a prepared statement that an intake officer was hired this year. That person's job is to decide whether an abuse allegation should be elevated to an investigation.

"For at least the past seven years, the PPCO has reported files have remained open for up to three years, although more serious cases will be expedited when appropriate," the minister said in the statement.

'She was a quiet patient'

Davis reported his wife'sdeath almost immediately to the PPCO. He doggedly detailedevery aspect from the time he dropped her off at the PCH to when she was hospitalized laterwith pneumonia.

As a type-two diabetic, Sharen had her share of health scares, including two strokes. She required round the clock care after being diagnosed with vascular dementia in 2015.

Davis diligently looked after her throughthe years. The two would hold hands as they watched television and he learned how to read Sharen's mood based on the look in her eyes.

Sharen Davis spent 25 days at the Fairview Personal Care Home in Brandon. Her husband says that when she came back, she developed an infection and died. (Gary Solilak/CBC)

"She was able to do absolutely nothing. She was totally dependent. She could not talk. She could not eat. She was tube fed and totally dependent on somebody to look after her," he said.

"And that's the problem,because she was quiet. She was a quiet patient. And the staff could get away with not looking after her because she couldn't say anything."

Luckily, Davis had home care workers to help out and the pair's twochildrenlived within blocks of their home.

Periodically, Daviswould place her in a care home if he had to leave town. In September of 2017, he took her to the home so he could take a tripdown the Pacific Coast Highway.

Investigators wait 1.5 years to interview staff

After Sharen's death, Davisgot statements from the two private We Care home care staff who took care of Sharen when she came home from Fairview. The documents were provided to CBC.

One worker saidshe appeared "tired and not herself" when they first saw her. She had a rash and her skin was covered in red marks. They reported she had skin breaks in her vaginal area.

Manitoba Health Minister Cameron Friesen says the time it takes for an investigation to be complete has been increasing over the past decade. (Ian Froese/CBC)

The information was corroborated by a second home care employee who said Sharen had dark blisters on her body that were not present before she went to the PCH.Davis believestheyonly bathed her once a week and didn't change her diapers regularly.

To Davis's dismay, the investigators didn'tbegin trying to contact the workersuntil April of this year.

"Which is in my opinion ridiculous. From my own personal experience working at [Manitoba Public Insurance],if you want to contact a witness you do it right away and get a witness statement while everything is fresh in their mind," he said.

"You don't wait a year and a half."

Sharen's health continued to decline and she was rushed to the emergency room on Oct. 12. She was diagnosed with a urinary tract infection, kidney failure and Klebsiella pneumonia and placed in palliative care. She died 17 days later.

Heath authority says several changes made to PCH

Davisdoesn't know the status of the investigation. The inspector told him over the phone that their office is "swamped" at the moment.

"I have no idea because they won't talk to me," he said.

Prairie Mountain Health, the health region that runs Fairview, said in a prepared statement that three issues were identified and addressed following Sharen's death.

"Prairie Mountain Health (PMH) is aware of the PPCO investigation and always fully cooperates. PMH deals directly with families on matters of this nature and we will not discuss details through the media," CEO Penny Gilson said in an email statement.

With no answers, Davis says heblames himself.

"Had I known then what I know now,I would never have put her in Fairview. I just feel so guilty leaving her in there for those 25 days." he said.

"If I had to do it all over again, I wouldn't have done that."

Manitoba Health no longer tracksinvestigation outcomes

CBC also learned the PPCOis no longer tracking or publicly releasing the outcomes of these investigations.

Until 2015-16, a comprehensive annual report was released detailing the type of abuse alleged, who reported it, and whether the allegation was founded or unfounded.

The government stopped publishing the reports in 2016-17, as the data is "no longer collected and collated in the same way," according to a spokesperson for Manitoba Health.

To get details from the past three years, the CBCfiled a freedom of information request. When the request came back, Manitoba Health could not provide several details, includingthe outcomes of investigations.

The department no longer tracks whether allegations of abuse are founded or unfounded.

Davis says he wants people to see his story as a warning, so they takeextra steps to make sure their loved ones arelooked after when they are in a care home.

"I just miss her a lot. I knew her for 49 years, we were married for 45. And it is really hard to be living alone now," he said.


Got a tip for the CBC News I-Team? Email iteam@cbc.ca or call the confidential tip line at 204-788-3744.