Man pleads with province for help for sick wife

Published Saturday November 22nd, 2008
A6

HALIFAX - Unless he gets some financial help, Ken MacKay says his savings will soon dry up, forcing his wife Marilyn - awaiting a double-lung transplant in Toronto - to return home to Cape Breton to die.

MacKay made a tearful plea for help at the provincial legislature Friday, saying the province should cover the living expenses for anyone forced to leave the province for medical care for more than three months.

The opposition Liberals introduced a bill Friday that would make the proposal law, though they couldn't say how much it would cost the province.

When asked how his wife is doing after spending the past 16 months in Ontario, MacKay could barely contain his raw emotions.

"Depressed. Really, really..." he said, his words trailing off, tears welling up in his red eyes. "For (the government) to just turn their backs on a life-and-death situation ... I think it's just terrible."

Nova Scotia, like several other provinces, does not have the staff and facilities to handle lung transplants. Patients are forced to travel to Toronto, where they must stay within a two-hour drive of the hospital as they wait for a suitable donor.

The Nova Scotia government covers all medical costs, including support services such as medically necessary oxygen for home care. But the MacKays have to pay for their food, lodging and other expenses.

If MacKay's wife returns to Cape Breton, her prospects look bleak.

"She'll be taken off the transplant list and she'll just come home to spend what time she has left with her family," MacKay told a news conference.

MacKay said he's sold his car, his boat, his all-terrain vehicle and he expects to be broke by the end of January as the expenses keep piling up.

"The government should have some kind of funding in place because the costs are astronomical," he said afterwards.

"You go to bed and the last thing on your mind is finances. You get up in the morning and the (first) thing on your mind is finances. It's very stressful on Marilyn ... It's hard."

His 57-year-old wife is staying with a nephew, which has helped cut costs. Still, MacKay said the total bill so far is more than $35,000.

Friends and relatives in his hometown of Louisdale have held fundraisers and the Lung Association of Nova Scotia has also pitched in.

"It's been a hard struggle, but the communities have rallied together and supported us," said MacKay, an engineer who works at a lobster holding facility in Cape Breton.

"My hometown of Lewisdale has been fantastic ... I've had support from right across Canada, actually."

But the money is quickly running out.

Health Minister Chris d'Entremont said the province wants to ensure Marilyn MacKay gets the transplant, and he pledged to present some options before the end of January.

"We been trying to help out as best we can, trying to stay within the guidelines," he said outside the legislature. "We don't want Marilyn to come home. We want Marilyn to get her transplant."

However, the minister would not commit to offering support to other families facing similar challenges, and he pointed out that only a few other jurisdictions cover this type of cost, Newfoundland being one of them.

Still, he made it clear he wanted to find some kind of solution.

He mused about having the province buy a house in Toronto to provide patients with a place to stay, and he committed to looking at Newfoundland's program and reviewing proposals from the lung association.

"I don't want to see anyone face more hardship, he said. "It's bad enough that they have to wait for a double-lung transplant."

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