Disaster Woman waits 20 hours in ER, learns she had a heart attack and needs surgery - In Canada. In a statement to CTV News, the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority (WRHA), says it recognizes the challenges patients and staff face in emergency rooms across the city.

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https://www.ctvnews.ca/health/artic...rns-she-had-a-heart-attack-and-needs-surgery/
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Lori Stetina says she spent nearly all day and night waiting to be admitted to hospital. Then, she was told she needed surgery.

By Alex Karpa
Updated: November 15, 2025 at 10:46AM EST
Published: November 15, 2025 at 5:00AM EST

July 3, 2025, was a day Lori Stetina will never forget.
She woke up not feeling well and decided she needed to go to the emergency room. An ambulance picked her up and took her to Winnipeg’s Grace Hospital.

“When I arrived by ambulance, I wasn’t on a bed. I was brought in sitting up inside the back of an ambulance,” said Stetina, who spoke with CTV News outside of the hospital. “When I walked in, there were people all lined up, and elderly people lined up against the wall.”

She says she waited for over 20 hours in the emergency room and didn’t get admitted until 5 a.m. on July 4.
“I was fearing for my life,” she said.
Once she was admitted, she was informed that she had been suffering from a mild heart attack.

“I was kind of shocked,” she said. “I couldn’t believe it. I never had anything like that happen before. I was surprised.”
Stetina was given blood tests, a couple of EKGs and was sent for a CT scan, where she found out more bad news.

“I had two doctors standing over me in O.R. gear and they told me I had to have emergency surgery right now,” she said. “I didn’t even know what I was having surgery for.”

What Stetina didn’t know was her bowel was perforated and leaked into her stomach.
“I woke up to having 19 staples on my stomach,” she said.

Stetina says it was an experience she wishes she never went through and couldn’t believe how long she had to wait.
“I didn’t know what was going on. I didn’t have a clue about anything. No doctors came to me before these tests were done.”

“I was terrified,” she said. “I phoned my husband, and they said the call had to end because they had to take me for emergency surgery,” she said.

‘Committed to improving access’​

In a statement to CTV News, the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority (WRHA), says it recognizes the challenges patients and staff face in emergency rooms across the city.

“The Winnipeg Regional Health Authority continues to work with system partners to improve patient flow and reduce wait times,” a statement from a WRHA spokesperson reads.

“This includes increasing staffing where possible, improving coordination between care teams, and supporting timely admissions and discharges so patients receive care in the most appropriate setting. Hospitals have also begun implementing measures to discharge patients on weekends to help people return home sooner and reduce bed block.”

The long wait times continued this week. On Wednesday afternoon, the WRHA’s website, which shows current wait times at emergency departments across the city, put wait times at St. Boniface Hospital at around 10 hours, and waits at Health Sciences Centre (HSC) at over 12 hours.

State of health care is ‘challenging’​

Dr. Noam Katz is a Winnipeg Emergency Physician, working for eight years at the city’s St. Boniface Hospital.

“There are a lot of very difficult things that are again becoming very challenging to overcome, and wait times are the outcome that we all see because of it,” he said.

Katz says wait times in hospitals, including the one he works at, have ‘ballooned significantly.’

He says there are many days where wait times are extremely long, and they are not able to provide the proper care patients deserve.
And when asked how frustrating that is, Katz simply said “very.”

“Long wait times definitely lead to poor patient outcomes in many cases, and we are seeing this locally, nationally and internationally,” he said. “There are many stories about this, which is really unfortunate, and I can assure you nobody in health care wants to see that happen.”

“We desperately want to get people into appropriate treatment spaces so that we can do the investigations to find the people that really do need that life-sustaining care.”

But Katz says there isn’t one magic answer to fix the state of health care in the province.

“If there was, we would’ve done it many times over at this point,” he said. “We just want to see at least incremental gains and improvements, which I think we are struggling to see in real time right now.”

“Ultimately, the most important thing is that we’re able to provide appropriate care to patients in their time of need, which is what an emergency department is supposed to do,” he said.

Preventative action needed​

Health advocates say disturbing emergency room stories are happening all too often at hospitals across Canada.
“These terrible stories continue to persist,” said Steven Staples, National Director of Policy and Advocacy with the Canadian Health Coalition.

“We can only hope that when these things come to light, they are kind of treated like a plane crash, where someone goes in, finds out what the situation is, determines the cause and then takes steps to ensure these things don’t happen again,” he said.

Staples said he hopes in the long run, the health care system in Canada can move towards a more preventative model, where people get earlier care and avoid the emergency room altogether.

“We know that people have trouble accessing family doctors who know the person’s case history, who can monitor and make sure their situation is being improved, and ultimately keep them out of a situation where they have to go to emergency,” he said.
 
Elbows up, Canadian boomers! So what if you can't get decent healthcare in a reasonable timeframe? You don't want Canada to be like those evil Americans do you? Remember, elbows up!
 
THE WONDERS OF SOCIALIZED MEDICINE EVERYONE!!! DON'T YOU JUST LOVE IT!??!?!

That is rhetorical, because who doesn't love leafs bringing the rake upon themselves?
 
At least you are not in MAGAmerica racist. We love our healthcare, so I don't know why you would whine about a normal 20-hour wait
 
When she called for an ambulance, what did she tell the EMTs and then when she got to the ER what did she tell the staff? "I just feel off" or "I'm having shortness of breath and my heart rate is off and I'm sweaty"? Because there is a huge difference between saying you just don't feel well and you have specific symptoms.
 
When she called for an ambulance, what did she tell the EMTs and then when she got to the ER what did she tell the staff? "I just feel off" or "I'm having shortness of breath and my heart rate is off and I'm sweaty"? Because there is a huge difference between saying you just don't feel well and you have specific symptoms.
unfortunately women are more likely to present with non-typical symptoms of ACS/MI (heart attack) such as Fatigue, Shortness of breath, Nausea or vomiting, Dizziness or light-headedness, Pain in the neck, jaw, or back which healthcare providers commonly dismiss as anxiety or gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD).

The issue is that most presentations to ED are non-acute which is not what the ED is designed for but we do the best we can with what we have and refer to ambulatory care units when we can and triage, assess, investigate, treat and discharge as quickly as we can the rest, but the resources are not there to treat everyone rapidly as much as i wish we had them.

Amongst the many "non-acute presentation" are actual acute presentations that may be missed if sufficient assessments/investigations are not performed and if we just kick out everyone that seems like their doing just fine, hundreds, thousands would die from a lack of treatment and missed diagnoses.

Someone appearing to be healthy with no symptoms other than just being thirsty, might actually be in early-stage diabetic ketoacidosis, I've seen it before, dismissing concerns leads to death.

The only solution is more funding for hospitals and staff, more training, education and resources to assist, and services to assist patients in the community so their not presenting to hospital for care that can be done at home or in a clinic, a dime of prevention prevents a dollar of inpatient treatment costs.

Here is an amazing substack that reviews legal cases of malpractice in america, and give an incredible insight into the workings of the medical system with a legal fine comb over every detail, mistake and what the doctors were thinking and documented.

 
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unfortunately women are more likely to present with non-typical symptoms of ACS/MI (heart attack) such as Fatigue, Shortness of breath, Nausea or vomiting, Dizziness or light-headedness, Pain in the neck, jaw, or back which healthcare providers commonly dismiss as anxiety or gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD).

The issue is that most presentations to ED are non-acute which is not what the ED is designed for but we do the best we can with what we have and refer to ambulatory care units when we can and triage, assess, investigate, treat and discharge as quickly as we can the rest, but the resources are not there to treat everyone rapidly as much as i wish we had them.

Amongst the many "non-acute presentation" are actual acute presentations that may be missed if sufficient assessments/investigations are not performed and if we just kick out everyone that seems like their doing just fine, hundreds, thousands would die from a lack of treatment and missed diagnoses.

Someone appearing to be healthy with no symptoms other than just being thirsty, might actually be in early-stage diabetic ketoacidosis, I've seen it before, dismissing concerns leads to death.

The only solution is more funding for hospitals and staff, more training, education and resources to assist, and services to assist patients in the community so their not presenting to hospital for care that can be done at home or in a clinic, a dime of prevention prevents a dollar of inpatient treatment costs.
I see.

Today I learned...
 
“I had two doctors standing over me in O.R. gear and they told me I had to have emergency surgery right now,” she said. “I didn’t even know what I was having surgery for.”

What Stetina didn’t know was her bowel was perforated and leaked into her stomach.
“I woke up to having 19 staples on my stomach,” she said.

Stetina says it was an experience she wishes she never went through and couldn’t believe how long she had to wait.
“I didn’t know what was going on. I didn’t have a clue about anything. No doctors came to me before these tests were done.”

“I was terrified,” she said. “I phoned my husband, and they said the call had to end because they had to take me for emergency surgery,” she said.
I just had a coworker go through this, you get a distended gut and a fever so intense steam rolls off your shoulders. The fact she was in the ER room for 20 hours likely in this condition is straight up fucking lunacy.
 
There were a lot of steps to solve it, but those would force Canadians to get away with socialized healthcare, not import infinite jeets and have their own children.

Which that woman probably voted against her entire life.
 
So wait, I'm confused, did she show up in the emergency room with two different sever medical issues (heart attack, perforated colon) that just happened to be happening at the same time? Did the perforated colon cause the heart attack? Had she had the perforated colon for some time, somehow, and then had a later heart attack? This story spends a lot of time talking about the emergency room wait but I just want to know about the hook.
 
As a perhaps-interesting side note, it's actually not unusual to have a heart attack and not find out for days or even weeks after. I know someone who was sleepy for like a week and a half, finally went in, turns out he'd had a heart attack.
 
This is a normal wait now. You have the jeets and the natives go for literally every little thing. No one has a family doctor anymore, so regular people have to use the Emerg. Anyone with money belongs to a 'healthclub' which just so happens to employ a doctor for all your healthcare needs and anything serious is dealt with out of the country.

Canadian healthcare is awful.
 
wait she went in for a mild heart attack and then she found out her bowel was perforated?

That sounds....really sus. Like major sus. Oh hey by the way we just by accident noticed you have a condition that will kill you in a few hours, should we maybe try to fix that for you? Even though you didn't make any complaints about it and we only gave you some EKG's and a quick CT?

Wow...Canadian health care, not even once.
 
The issue is that most presentations to ED are non-acute which is not what the ED is designed for
I have only ever been to the ER with acute symptoms and it still takes forever.

Most white people understand the hospital is not a walk-in clinic; the problem is pajeeta and mohammed take themselves and their 15 kids to the ER at the first sign of a runny nose.

I expect this is also true of family doctors; I need regular blood work and every time I'm at a LifeLabs, it looks like the non-citizen line at the airport. I don't know why elderly foreigners seem to need 10X more tests than elderly white people, but they do.
 
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