First Nations elder alleges she was questioned about alcohol use at Winnipeg hospital

A First Nations elder says her symptoms were initially ignored and she was questioned about alcohol use during a stay at a Winnipeg hospital.

Sadie North, who is 72, was brought to Grace Hospital on Sept. 6 by her daughter because she was very ill from a bacterial skin infection.

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North says the original clerk who checked her in was dismissive of her illness and she didn’t receive help until she began vomiting on herself.

North also alleges a doctor who treated her a few days into her hospitalization was accusatory when he asked about alcohol use, even though the elder does not drink.






The Winnipeg Regional Health Authority has not yet responded to a request for comment.

Federal ministers are holding an emergency meeting with Indigenous leaders and health professionals Friday to discuss racism in health care.

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Last month, an Indigenous woman used her phone to livestream hospital staff using racist slurs against her as she lay dying in a Quebec hospital.

Indigenous advocates have pointed to the fact the Quebec incident is not the first time an Indigenous person has died after receiving poor treatment by staff at a hospital, with some pointing back to the death of Winnipeg man Brian Sinclair more than a decade ago.






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