Full investigation into baby's death should have happened years ago: Nunavut health director
Coroner's inquest into 3-month-old continues in Cape Dorset
A full investigation into what happened the night Makibi Timilak died should have taken place years ago, a Nunavut health director testified Wednesday at the coroner's inquest in Cape Dorset.
A panel of six jurors listened to the testimony of former nurses, the RCMP, an infectious disease specialist as well as a government official on the second day of the inquest that's trying to determine how three-month-old Timilak died back in April 2012.
Barbara Harvey, the director of professional practice at the Government of Nunavut's health department, testified Wednesday that about five months after Timilak's death she was asked to review a chart written by Debbie McKeown following the baby's death.
Looking back, Harvey said a fuller review was needed.
"It should have been an investigation," Harvey said, adding she thinks any critical incidents involving death should trigger an investigation by the territory.
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Harvey also said the territory is currently revising its telephone triage policy which currently says acutely ill infants under the age of one should be assessed in person.
McKeown was the nurse who took the call the night before Timilak died. Timilak's parents both testified earlier in the inquest they communicated to McKeown their baby was having trouble breathing, something that was not indicated in her charting notes. According to her chart his mother was complaining of a fussy baby when she called.
McKeown will not be testifying at the inquest.
Lawyer Amy Groothuis, who is representing the presiding coroner, testified that a doctor at the Homewood Health Centre, a mental health facility in Ontario, contacted her by email letting her know McKeown is medically unfit to testify.
Second review
In the fall of 2013, following her chart review, Harvey was asked to speak with some of the nurses involved the morning Timilak passed away, including McKeown.
She said McKeown told her she remembered the case and she was not aware of any health issues of the baby prior to April.
Disease specialist testifies
Timilak was a full-term baby and otherwise healthy prior to April 2012.
The jury is trying to have a conclusive answer by the end of the week and will make recommendations to prevent similar deaths from happening in the future.