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South Okanagan woman continues quest against preventable medical errors

Teri McGrath is hoping the provincial government in B.C. will act
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Retired nurse Teri McGrath and Liz Hansen from the Penticton Seniors鈥 Centre hold up the petition they will be sending out to seniors鈥 centre across B.C. this week. (Robin Grant-Western News Staff)

A Penticton woman is taking her fight against life-threatening medical errors and how the Canadian health care system deals with medical malpractice to seniors鈥 centres across the province.

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Teri McGrath, who is a retired nurse and experienced a medical error herself while in the hospital years ago, is hoping a new paper petition she created will make the provincial government take notice of the 30,000 plus people who die because of preventable medical errors each year.

In June, McGrath鈥檚 online petition on the collected 844 signatures, 540 of which were from British Columbia. South Okanagan-West Kootenay MP Richard Cannings presented it to the House of Commons in Ottawa. But because of the upcoming federal election, that petition is now, 鈥渄ead in the water,鈥 McGrath explained.

In the to the petition, it states the quality and safety of health service delivery is the responsibility of provinces and territories but that the federal government can play a role. It points to a 1990 report that contains 鈥渟everal recommendations for consideration focused on no-fault compensation for medical malpractice.鈥 But, to date, 鈥渘o province or territory has introduced the system and provincial governments have not raised this issue.鈥

McGrath said taxpayer dollars are being used against taxpaying patients and families to pay lawyers to defend preventable medical errors causing injuries and deaths, and something needs to be done.

She wants the provincial government to take the lead in implementing no-fault healthcare compensation for medical malpractice in the country.

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鈥淭here鈥檚 no-fault compensation with ICBC if you are in a car accident,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 matter who caused it. But if you are banged up, you get help. That鈥檚 what we are looking for in the Canadian medical system.鈥

This week, with support from Liz Hansen at the Penticton Seniors鈥 Centre, McGrath is sending out the paper petition to roughly 38 senior centres across the province.

While she only needs 25 signatures, McGrath is hoping an amount in the hundreds will have a greater impact.

In early November, she plans to hand the signed petitions over to Liberal MLA Dan Ashton so he can bring the cause to the provincial legislature.

鈥淲e鈥檙e going to have a patient who has experienced a medical error and we鈥檙e going to hand it directly to Ashton,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his is non-partisan. This is not a specific Liberal or NDP issue. We鈥檙e hoping others will do the same thing with their petitions. The more MLAs who have this in their hand, I think the greater the impact.鈥

To report a typo, email: editor@pentictonwesternnews.com.

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Robin Grant

About the Author: Robin Grant

I am deeply passionate about climate and environmental journalism, and I want to use my research skills to explore stories more thoroughly through public documents and access-to-information records.
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