MUHC superhospital shuffle begins with Montreal Chest Institute - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 27, 2024, 03:39 AM | Calgary | -9.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

MUHC superhospital shuffle begins with Montreal Chest Institute

The McGill superhospital shuffling has begun with the moving of 18 patients from the Montreal Chest Institute to the Lachine Hospital.

Move from downtown Montreal to Lachine makes trek to visit loved ones even harder for some

The Montreal Chest Institute, which is affiliated with the Royal Victoria hospital, will close in June. Its patients are being moved to a clinic in Lachine. (CBC)

The McGill superhospitalshufflinghas begun with the moving of 18 patients from the Montreal Chest Institute to the Lachine Hospital.

With a closure date slated for June, the Montreal Chest Institutes patients are being moved to a new clinic. But some say patients are being moved there against their wishes.

Luciana DAmores husband Gianni Casale is one of the 18 patients being moved this weekend.

Like the other patients being moved to Lachine, he has a severe degenerative illness and cant breathe on his own.

I understand their concerns, and were listening to them, but theres no alternative for them.- Jocelyne Faille, director of the Lachine Hospital

Casale has locked-in syndrome, meaning he is completely paralyzed but conscious. He can only communicate by blinking.

DAmore said she doesnt understand why vulnerable patients with respiratory problems are being moved in the middle of winter.

On top of that, she said the Lachine clinic is much farther for her to travel to than the Chest Institute, which is near the Royal Victoria Hospital in downtown Montreal.

"You dont have a say in it. They just put you in an ambulance and bring you wherever they want, and you have nothing to say,"DAmore said.

She said her husband has been crying since learning he would be moving to Lachine, because he doesnt want to be even further away from her.

Jocelyne Faille, the director of the Lachine Hospital, is sympathetic.

"I understand their concerns, and were listening to them, but theres no alternative for them,"Faille said.

She said there are simply no other beds available in the city to accommodate the patients of the Montreal Chest Institute.