Tuesday, February 3, 2026
ADVT 
National

Former Alberta Medical Officer Disagrees With Official Cause Of Toddler's Death

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Apr, 2016 11:59 AM
    LETHBRIDGE, Alta. — A medical witness for the defence says she disagrees with what killed a toddler whose parents are on trial for failing to provide the necessaries of life.
     
    Dr. Anny Sauvageau was cross-examined by the Crown on Wednesday in the trial of David and Collet Stephan, whose nearly 19-month-old son, Ezekiel, died in March 2012 after being sick for more than two weeks.
     
    Court has heard how his parents gave him natural remedies, including smoothies with hot peppers and horseradish because they thought he had croup and the flu.
     
    The medical examiner has testified the boy died of bacterial meningitis but Sauvageau said the boy likely had viral meningitis and she's never seen a child die of that form of the disease.
     
     
    Sauvageau said Ezekiel died because paramedics couldn't establish an airway quickly and he probably would have been fine if the ambulance had the proper equipment.
     
    Sauvageau, a former chief medical officer of health for Alberta, noted it is possible for viral meningitis to cause someone to stop breathing, but that could have been treated with proper intubation.
     
    "My opinion is that his death is directly related to the paramedic interventions. If not for that, on balance of probabilities, he would have survived."
     
    A paramedic testified early on in the trial that the ambulance that was rushing Ezekiel to a hospital in Cardston had a bag valve mask for supplying oxygen that was too big for a small child.
     
    He also told the jury that an endotracheal tube managed to provide the child with some oxygen, but it was only partially effective because tube was also the wrong size. He said by that time the toddler had been without oxygen for more than eight minutes.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    RCMP Inestigating After Body Found In Northern B.C., Cause Of Death Unknown

    RCMP Inestigating After Body Found In Northern B.C., Cause Of Death Unknown
    The North District Major Crime Unit has identified the body as possibly belonging to a 51-year-old resident of Fort St. James.

    RCMP Inestigating After Body Found In Northern B.C., Cause Of Death Unknown

    Does It Pay To Leave The Country For Tax Reasons? Experts Weigh In

    Does It Pay To Leave The Country For Tax Reasons? Experts Weigh In
    CALGARY — So you're a wealthy Canadian whose tax bill is going up. Does it pay to leave the country?

    Does It Pay To Leave The Country For Tax Reasons? Experts Weigh In

    Canadians Like The Queen, But Her Heir? Not So Much, A Survey Says

    Canadians Like The Queen, But Her Heir? Not So Much, A Survey Says
    A recent survey suggests that while the majority of Canadians are supportive of the Queen as the country's monarch, the same cannot be said for her heir, Prince Charles.

    Canadians Like The Queen, But Her Heir? Not So Much, A Survey Says

    Man Accused Of Murdering And Dismembering Friend Testifies He Killed His 'Best Friend'

    Man Accused Of Murdering And Dismembering Friend Testifies He Killed His 'Best Friend'
    James McCullough, 22, has pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder and offering an indignity to a dead body in 20-year-old Alex Fraser's death.

    Man Accused Of Murdering And Dismembering Friend Testifies He Killed His 'Best Friend'

    Entrapment Hearing Resumes In Case Of Pair Accused In Victoria Terrorism Plot

    A jury found John Nuttall and Amanda Korody guilty of planting what the pair believed were deadly pressure-cooker bombs on the legislature lawn in Victoria on Canada Day nearly three years ago.

    Entrapment Hearing Resumes In Case Of Pair Accused In Victoria Terrorism Plot

    Indigenous Affairs Minister Carolyn Bennett To Visit First Nation Dealing With Suicide Crisis

    Indigenous Affairs Minister Carolyn Bennett To Visit First Nation Dealing With Suicide Crisis
    The chief of a remote First Nation says he hopes a planned meeting with Indigenous and Northern Affairs Minister Carolyn Bennett will be the beginning of real change for Attawapiskat.

    Indigenous Affairs Minister Carolyn Bennett To Visit First Nation Dealing With Suicide Crisis