Critics are calling for more transparency into infection outbreaks at clinics as more patients come forward with stories about developing meningitis and other serious infections at a Toronto pain centre.
    Vince Talotta
    / Toronto Star
                
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    Saundra Kacho learned Saturday that she was one of nine patients  
infected with bacteria while getting an epdidural sterioid injection at 
the Rothbart pain clinc in 2012. 
Critics are calling 
for more transparency into infection outbreaks at clinics as more 
patients come forward with stories about developing meningitis and other
 serious infections at a Toronto pain centre.
“It boggles the mind,”
 said NDP health critic France Gelinas, adding that the health ministry 
is ultimately responsible for making such information public.
“There is no excuse for secrecy. We are putting the health of Ontarians at risk,” she charged.
Since the Star ran a story
 Saturday about a 2012 outbreak at the Rothbart Centre for Pain Care, 
the paper has heard from more patients who say they developed serious 
bacterial infections after getting epidural steroid injections there.
They include Saundra 
Kacho, 69, of Fonthill, in the Niagara area, who said she was rushed to 
hospital on Oct. 25, 2012, two days after visiting the clinic for 
treatment of back pain.
“The whole thing was 
awful,” she said, weeping during a telephone interview. “I remember not 
knowing what was going on in the hospital because I was so out of it. 
And I remember seeing the fear in my family’s faces. I feel angry that 
everybody was put through that.”
Kacho’s son twigged to
 the fact something was wrong with her when he kept getting calls at 
work from his father, who suffered from a stroke and has cognitive 
impairments, recounted her daughter, Alexis Kacho-Sinke. During the 
first calls, the father said his wife was still sleeping in bed.
But during a call later in the day, the father said, “I’m lonely, I need you to come over and talk to me.”
“Then my brother 
realized, she wasn’t just lying in bed, she wasn’t even talking to him. 
So my brother rushed over there and found her incoherent,” Kacho-Sinke 
said.
At St. Catharines 
General Hospital, Kacho was diagnosed with meningitis, she said. At 
first, health-care workers didn’t know whether she had fungal, viral or 
bacterial meningitis, so they were forced to try a number of different 
drugs on her, she recounted.
Kacho said her health 
was placed at even greater risk because she had a kidney transplant four
 years earlier and all of the drugs were tough on her new organ. The 
drug to treat fungal meningitis was like “a knife to my kidney,” she 
said a doctor later told her.
Kacho has polycystic 
kidney disease and the donated kidney came from her daughter. She said 
she has always been cautious about taking any medication and putting 
strain on the organ.
The retired university
 instructor said she has more back pain today than when she went to the 
Rothbart clinic and now uses a cane.
Nine patients of the 
clinic developed serious bacterial infections, including meningitis and 
epidural abscesses, between August and November 2012. Some were left 
with permanent nerve damage, causing bladder and bowel incontinence and 
an inability to walk without canes.
Two patients profiled 
by the Star said they became sick shortly after getting epidural steroid
 injections from anesthesiologist Dr. Stephen James. TPH said all nine 
patients were injected by the same individual working at the clinic.
James said he was unknowingly “colonized” by Staphylococcus aureus
 bacteria. The bacteria was on his skin but had not made him sick. About
 25 per cent of people have the bacteria on their skin and in their 
noses. It can make people sick if it enters a wound.
Patients profiled by 
the Star said no one volunteered to them that they were infected at the 
clinic — not the Rothbart clinic, not James, not Toronto Public Health 
(TPH), which investigated the outbreak, and not the College of 
Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario (CPSO), which has regulatory 
oversight of such clinics, known as “out-of-hospital” premises.
The TPH investigation 
included an infection-control audit, done in conjunction with Public 
Health Ontario. It found 170 deficiencies, including improperly 
sterilized equipment. TPH has never made the results of its 
investigation public. 
The CPSO inspected the clinic a number of times after the outbreak. Its online
 register shows that it gave the clinic “conditional” passes for three 
inspections, with conditions related to improving infection control.
But there is no 
mention on the CPSO website that there was an outbreak, that there were 
infection-control breaches or that people were made ill.
Gelinas said she is 
“really, really worried” that the province is moving services out of 
hospitals and into clinics that do not have the same level of oversight 
and accountability.
Health Minister Eric 
Hoskins said in a written statement that improving transparency in the 
health system is a top priority. He noted that the CPSO last year 
amended a bylaw allowing details of inspection outcomes to be posted on 
its website.
“With this bylaw, the 
CPSO has the tools to ensure that the public is well informed about the 
results of CPSO inspections,” he said.
“Ontarians have my 
commitment that we will work with our partners, including the CPSO, 
Public Health Ontario and our local public health units, to identify new
 ways that we can make information available to patients and improve the
 transparency of our system,” Hoskins added.
Kacho only learned on 
Saturday evening that her meningitis was linked to her treatment at the 
clinic. That’s when she said she got a “shocking” phone call from a TPH 
official.
TPH has been trying to
 reach the nine patients infected during the outbreak since Friday, the 
day before the Star article appeared.
“We are in the process
 of contacting these individuals as a courtesy and to ensure 
transparency. Our goal is to ensure that patients were aware that an 
investigation that they were part of was likely going to be profiled by a
 media outlet,” TPH spokesperson Lenore Bromley said.
TPH earlier this month
 told the Star that the infected patients had been contacted during the 
outbreak, at which time they were informed of the investigation into the
 clinic and told there had been breaches in infection control. But 
Bromley last week corrected that information, saying a review of how the
 outbreak was handled revealed not all patients had been given that 
information.
Source: http://www.thestar.com/life/health_wellness/2014/09/23/infection_outbreak_at_pain_clinic_sparks_calls_for_greater_transparency.html#
 
Source: http://www.thestar.com/life/health_wellness/2014/09/23/infection_outbreak_at_pain_clinic_sparks_calls_for_greater_transparency.html#
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