Son of Sask. cancer survivor urges province to reopen oxygen therapy clinic shuttered by pandemic

Tamara Heppner, middle, has suffered from radiation-induced necrosis, bleeding and blood clots for nearly three years. But her son Brayden Dutchak, right, says she hasn't been able to access hyperbaric oxygen therapy because the province's only clinic in Moose Jaw was temporarily closed in 2021.  They are pictured here with Heppner's daughter, Shawntae Sharpe. (Submitted by Brayden Dutchak - image credit)

The son of a Regina cancer survivor who he says is "fighting for her life" is urging the Saskatchewan government to immediately reopen a temporarily shuttered oxygen therapy program he believes could help keep his mother alive.

Tamara Heppner, 52, underwent three rounds of radiation after being diagnosed with cervical cancer in October 2020 and has been in remission since February 2021.

In the nearly three years since, she has been in and out of hospital with severe bleeding and blood clots caused by necrosis — the death of body tissues — as a result of the cancer treatment, according to Heppner's son, Brayden Dutchak.

"Due to the treatment, her body is really inflamed, which has caused issues with infection, and the healing has been slim to none," Dutchak told CBC's The Morning Edition on Dec. 5.

On Dec. 21, Dutchak launched a petition to call for the Saskatchewan Health Authority to "immediately" prioritize hiring and recruiting the staff needed to reopen its only hyperbaric oxygen therapy, or HBOT, chamber in Moose Jaw.

That therapy uses high concentrations of oxygen to prevent tissue death, promote healing and fight infections for patients with a number of injuries including carbon monoxide poisoning, burns and necrosis from radiation, according to the Saskatchewan Health Authority's website.

Brayden Dutchak says the temporary closure of Moose Jaw's hyperbaric oxygen therapy has been "detrimental" for his mother Tamara Heppner, who suffers from severe bleeding and blood clots after radiation cancer treatment caused some of her body's tissues to die. He says the SHA needs to "immediately" prioritize hiring and re-opening the facility.
Brayden Dutchak says the temporary closure of Moose Jaw's hyperbaric oxygen therapy has been "detrimental" for his mother Tamara Heppner, who suffers from severe bleeding and blood clots after radiation cancer treatment caused some of her body's tissues to die. He says the SHA needs to "immediately" prioritize hiring and re-opening the facility.

Brayden Dutchak is calling for the Saskatchewan Health Authority to prioritize hiring and recruiting the staff needed to reopen its only hyperbaric oxygen therapy chamber, which is in Moose Jaw. He says that therapy, which uses high concentrations of oxygen to prevent tissue death, would help his mother, Tamara Heppner, who suffers from severe bleeding and blood clots after radiation cancer treatment. (Submitted by Brayden Dutchak)

The HBOT chamber at Dr. F.H. Wigmore Regional Hospital closed temporarily in July 2021 in order to reassign respiratory therapists to emergency, intensive and acute care in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a Dec. 4 statement from the provincial health authority.

In 2015, a health official told The Canadian Press as many as 24 patients use the facility each year.

Dutchak says much of his mother's suffering could have been prevented or healed if it was operating.

"She's in the hospital really fighting for her life due to the damage that's been sustained by the standard of care [and] treatment," Dutchak said in the early December interview. He has since told CBC News Heppner is home from the hospital.

Gail Sack underwent treatment in a hyperbaric chamber in Moose Jaw to recover from carbon monoxide poisoning.
Gail Sack underwent treatment in a hyperbaric chamber in Moose Jaw to recover from carbon monoxide poisoning.

Saskatchewan's only hyperbaric oxygen therapy chamber, used by a patient in this 2015 image, has been closed since July 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic and staffing shortages. (Submitted by Gail Sack)

There are currently two full-time respiratory therapists in Moose Jaw, with a third hired and starting this year, a health authority spokesperson said in an email to CBC News.

But the health authority says it has struggled to hire a fourth respiratory therapist needed to reopen the clinic amid critical health-care staffing shortages.

The health authority plans to "fully resume" hyperbaric oxygen therapy services when a fourth respiratory therapist "is hired with the necessary qualifications," the spokesperson's email said.

Wait for care 'detrimental'

Dutchak says his mother has deteriorated significantly during the long wait for hyperbaric oxygen therapy, and he wants to see respiratory therapists from elsewhere "immediately" reassigned to get Moose Jaw's facility running again.

"I know everyone is trying their best, but she is in the hospital and she is suffering," he said in December. "Every single moment we wait is detrimental."

The health authority says it is working to recruit and hire more than 1,000 health-care workers in the coming years, including respiratory therapists "who are in high demand across the country."

The health authority currently has more than 40 job postings for respiratory therapists across Saskatchewan, including one in Moose Jaw.

Dutchak said in January that Heppner is now home from the hospital and is second on the waitlist at the next-closest HBOT chamber, which is in Calgary. She has previously been too ill to make the more than 700-kilometre journey there by car.

That will cost about $4,500 for hotels alone for a six-week stay for Heppner and her daughter, said Dutchak. There will also be expenses for gas, food and parking, some of which the province has said it will reimburse.

Heppner is expecting to go to Calgary by mid-February for treatment, Dutchak says, assuming she is not rehospitalized,

"She's definitely the strongest person I know," said Dutchak. "But that's one of my biggest concerns … because if she's got to get rushed back to the hospital, we're back to Square 1, except now we've even lost even more time."