“I went in expecting a surgery date and came out with a timeline for my death.”
Allison Ducluzeau was a healthy mother in Victoria, BC, until a persistent abdominal pain led to a stage 4 cancer diagnosis. Instead of life-saving treatment, the Canadian health care system offered her a death sentence and assisted suicide. This mini-documentary follows her harrowing journey to find care and her fight for accountability after the system left her for dead.
Inside this mini-documentary:
- The “Offer” of Death: How a BC surgeon told Allison she was inoperable with only months to live, suggesting Medical Assistance in Dying (MAiD) as her primary “option”.
- Systemic Neglect: The reality of waiting weeks for a CT scan in excruciating pain and being told it could be months just to see an oncologist.
- The $200,000 Escape: Why Allison had to turn to “GoFundMe health care” to pay for surgery at Mercy Medical Center in Baltimore—a procedure that put her into complete remission.
- Gaslighting the Survivor: The shocking response from BC health officials who, upon seeing her healthy and thriving, claimed there was “no evidence” the surgery helped and refused to reimburse her.
- A Refusal to Learn: How the BC health care system declined an offer from Allison’s American surgeon to fly to Canada and share the knowledge used to save her life.
“Universal health care? It doesn’t exist.” Allison’s story is a call to action for three vital reforms: shorter wait times through activity-based funding, increased system accountability, and a focus on constant improvement rather than bureaucratic protectionism.