Doctors who treated N.S. teen who died of meningitis deny negligence - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 07:49 PM | Calgary | -7.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Nova Scotia

Doctors who treated N.S. teen who died of meningitis deny negligence

The two emergency room physicians who treated Kai Matthews are defending themselves against a lawsuit filed by the family of the 19-year-old who died of meningitis last year.

ER docs say they treated Kai Matthews 'prudently, skillfully and in a competent manner'

Emergency entrance to the Halifax Infirmary is shown.
The two emergency room physicians who treated Kai Matthews are defending themselves against a lawsuit filed by the family of the 19-year-old who died of meningitis a year ago. (Robert Short/CBC)

Two emergency room physiciansbeing sued by the family of 19-year-old Kai Matthewsare defending their actions in the hours after he sought care at the emergency department of the QEII Health Sciences Centre in Halifax.

Matthews died June 1, 2021 as a result of a bacterial infectionjust days after seeking medical help first at home, then at the hospital for a high fever and severe pain.

In May, his parents,Norrie and Kari Matthews,filed a lawsuit against the twoemergency room doctorsas well as Nova Scotia's health authority, accusing them of having failed "to provide timely and appropriate care" to their son.

In a statement of defencefiled on behalf of doctors Nicholas Sowers and Ryan Henneberry, the emergency medicine specialists "deny that there was any negligent act or omission, or any breach of duty, breach of contract, negligence or malpractice" in their treatment of Matthews.

Four people stand together in a living room holding a graduation photo of a young man.
From left: Vera Matthews, Norrie Matthews, Kari Matthews and Paige Meagher. The family filed a lawsuit against the hospital and doctors in May. (Paul Palmeter/CBC)

"The defendant physicians say that at all times they treated the patient prudently, skillfully, and in a competent manner consistentwith the standards of medical practitioners in their respective areas of expertise,"state the documents.

According to the court papers, the doctors say they "provided appropriate examinations ... as well, all necessary and appropriate examinations, tests, investigations, medications and procedures."

"The defendant physicians deny responsibility for the patient's medical conditions and subsequent death," the documents state. "The patient's medical conditions and death arose from pre-existing medical conditions or other unrelatedcauses."

In an amended notice of action filed after the June 15defence statement by the doctors, the parents of Kai Matthews have added Emergency Health Services to their lawsuit.

Paramedics were called to the family's home early on the morning of May 31, 2021.

But, according to Kai's parents, EHS staff could not carry their son to hospital because he had not received the results of a COVID test.Norrie and Kari Matthews took their son to the QEII emergency department themselves.

According to the amended lawsuit, the family is accusing EHSofhaving provided "improper or inadequate medical care and attention,"of having "improperly and/or inadequately assessed and managed symptoms" and for failing to recognize the symptoms of meningitis.

The claims have not been tested in court.