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Saskatchewan Patient's Plea for Life-Saving Surgery

Summary

  • Woman with rare disease faces MAID due to lack of surgery.
  • Eight years of severe pain and nausea plague the patient.
  • Referral hurdles prevent access to out-of-province treatment.

A woman in Saskatchewan is contemplating medical assistance in dying (MAID) as a last resort due to the ongoing denial of essential surgery.

Jolene Van Alstine has lived with normocalcemic primary hyperparathyroidism for eight years, experiencing debilitating bone pain, nausea, and vomiting daily. She has been approved for MAID, stating her unbearable suffering has led to isolation and a profound desire for the day to end.

Her journey to access treatment has been fraught with obstacles. There are no surgeons in Saskatchewan capable of performing the required operation. To get an out-of-province referral, she needs to see an endocrinologist, but none are accepting new patients, creating a critical barrier to care.

Her partner and advocates are urging the Health Minister to intervene, emphasizing the urgent need to find both an endocrinologist and a surgeon experienced with complex cases. This situation underscores the devastating consequences when patients cannot access timely and appropriate medical interventions.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
Jolene Van Alstine is considering MAID because she cannot access the surgery she desperately needs for a rare parathyroid disease.
Jolene Van Alstine suffers from normocalcemic primary hyperparathyroidism, a rare parathyroid disease causing severe bone pain and nausea.
Barriers include a lack of local surgeons, the inability to get an endocrinologist referral, and endocrinologists not accepting new patients.

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