“They told her she needed surgery within three weeks… she waited over two months and died.”
Debbie Fuster was a Manitoba mother of three and grandmother to 10 who was in the “prime of her retirement” when she was diagnosed with multiple heart blockages. Despite a medical recommendation for surgery within 21 days, the system failed to deliver, and Debbie passed away while still waiting for an appointment. This mini-documentary follows her family’s search for answers and their call for a new standard of honesty in Canadian health care.
Inside this mini-documentary:
- The Fatal Delay: How a life-saving procedure was delayed for months, allegedly to “catch up” on staff summer vacations, leading to a fatal heart attack.
- A Nationwide Epidemic: Data uncovered by SecondStreet.org reveals that over 15,000 Canadians died on waitlists in a single year—a number that likely nears 28,000 when accounting for incomplete provincial tracking.
- The Lack of Accountability: The disturbing reality that first responders frequently attend calls where patients have died waiting for care, yet no one in the hospital bureaucracy has reached out to the family to explain the delay.
- The “Debbie’s Law” Solution: A proposal that would require the government to be “upfront and honest” when they cannot meet a recommended treatment window, allowing families the chance to seek life-saving care elsewhere.
- The High Cost of Silence: Debbie’s family explains that they would have remortgaged their homes to pay for private care in the U.S. or Mexico if they had been told the truth about the wait.
“It was just a failure.” Debbie’s story proves that the lack of transparency in our health care system isn’t just bureaucratic—it’s lethal.