Winnipeg senior dying of cancer in minority living well in hospice - Action News
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Manitoba

Winnipeg senior dying of cancer in minority living well in hospice

Less than 30 per cent of Canadians have access to quality end of life care. Between 400 and 500 people in Winnipeg are registered in the palliative care program. The majority of them are choosing to die at home with help from palliative care specialists.

More palliative care needed for aging population in Manitoba, some say

Dying, but living well in hospice. CBC's Marianne Klowak reports.

9 years ago
Duration 2:04
Jane Durocher is spending the last days of her life at Jocelyn House, a hospice in south Winnipeg.

Jane Durocher is spending the last days of her life at Jocelyn House, a hospice in south Winnipeg.

The 75-year-old has cancer spreading throughout her body.

Before coming toJocelyn House, she was at Lyons Place and Riverview. She said while the care was good, she felt alone and afraid.

"Scared to death because there are so many patients in there. Everybody you don't know,"Durochersaid.

"There is nobodythere at night time. It's all quiet. They don't hear nothing because the door is fireproof."

Durocher saidher life changed for the better when she arrived atJocelyn House fourmonths ago.

"Next thing I know,I am here. It's like they dropped me from heaven," she said.

"This is a great place. I love the doctor that comes in here. He is absolutely amazing. I always say thank you because not every doctor wants to come here."

Palliative care specialists would sayDurocheris dying well.While her life can't be saved, she is saving living.

Jane Durocher, 75, who has cancer, is spending the last days of her life at Jocelyn House in south Winnipeg. (CBC)
That's the philosophy of the program.Her pain and symptoms are being managed. There is 24-hour-a-day care and emotionaland spiritualsupport in a home setting. Family and friends visit.

But she is in the minority since this is oneof only 16 hospice beds in the city. Themajority of the400 to 500 Winnipeggers registered in the palliative care program want to dieto at home withthe help of specialized doctors andnurseswho make house calls. In the end, though some end up dying in a hospital bed.

If you go outside of the city, the story is stark. There isn't a palliative care specialist outside of the southern region, according to Dr. Mike Harlos, the director of adult and pediatric palliative care for the WinnipegRegional Health Authority.

"It's a huge gap and the more remote you get, the harder it is to access that," he said."Paradoxically, the more remote you are the more you want to die at home. It's a tight community and for First Nations populations, there is a strong cultural connection."

Harlosis alsohead ofpalliative medicine at the University of Manitoba. He was asked if patientsin remote areas would be more likely to opt forassisted suicide because of the lack of services.

Paul Henteleff was the head of palliative care at St. Boniface Hospital for 15 years. The retired doctor is now a medical adviser to the Manitoba chapter of Dying with Dignity, a group that supports physician-assisted suicide. (CBC)
"Basically every physician would be in a position to end the life of a patient with consent to reduce suffering when that physician has quite likely had minimal training in relieving that suffering," he said.

"If the patient doesn't know there are options, if the physician doesn't know there are options, then the only option that seems available then is to end that person's life. There needs to be more equity."

But there are those who think assisted suicide should be an option to avoiddying badly.

Paul Henteleff is a retired Winnipeg doctor who was the head ofpalliative careat St. Boniface Hospital for 15 years.He is now a medical adviser to the Manitoba chapter of Dying with Dignity, a group that supports physician-assisted suicide.

"I see palliative care as the most valuable support that can be offered for people who are dying," he said. "Because it isn't a perfect answer for everybody, that's for me where assisted dying comes in."

Henteleffwelcomes the Supreme Court's recent ruling on assisted suicide, saying ithas a place in alleviating suffering.

But forJane Durocher, it's something she would never consider. It makes her think of her father, who killed himself when she was young.

"I was 10 years old. It is really hard on the family. When you are that young, you don't realize how precious life is," she said."I just thought to myself, I couldn't do it. I couldn't."