Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Two Reviews Launched Into Death Of Nunavut Infant

Darpan News Desk IANS, 13 Jul, 2016 01:34 PM
    IQALUIT, Nunavut — Two separate investigations are underway into the death of an infant who was in the care of staff at a nursing station in a remote Nunavut hamlet.
     
    Almost no details are available, including the age and gender of the infant or when the baby died.
     
    A Nunavut Health spokesman confirmed the department has launched an internal investigation.
     
    "The baby's death was duly reported as a critical incident," Ron Wassink said Tuesday in a release.
     
    "An investigation was begun immediately following the incident."
     
    The Health Department defines a "critical incident" as an unexpected event causing death or serious harm when a patient is under care or receiving treatment in a health centre or hospital. The death or harm must not have resulted primarily from the patient's medical condition or from a known risk in the treatment.  
     
    The Nunavut coroner's office is conducting its own review.
     
    "We are investigating this death," said Khen Sagadraca, assistant to Nunavut's chief coroner.
     
    The infant died in Gjoa Haven on King William Island off the central Nunavut coast.
     
    The territory is in the midst of an inquest into the murky circumstances surrounding the 2012 death of another infant, three-month-old Makibi Timilak from Cape Dorset. 
     
    An internal review into the boy's death heavily criticized Nunavut's health system.  
     
    Although it was ultimately determined Makibi died of sudden infant death syndrome, the review found that nurses and health officials failed to follow procedures the night the baby died. It concluded the death was hushed up and found a climate of fear within the Health Department that prevented problems from being addressed.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Call Before You Give Money To 'CRA', Warns Police

    Call Before You Give Money To 'CRA', Warns Police
    Call someone for a second opinion before you give your money away to a fraud scam, say police. North Vancouver RCMP is again warning the public of phone and e-mail scams where a fraudster purports to be a Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) representative. 

    Call Before You Give Money To 'CRA', Warns Police

    Local Cab Companies Partner With VPD

    Local Cab Companies Partner With VPD
    The Vancouver Police Department is partnering with local cab companies in a new initiative aimed at preventing and reducing crime.

    Local Cab Companies Partner With VPD

    Delta Police Seek Witnesses To Fatal Collision Between Dump Truck And Vehicle

    Delta Police Seek Witnesses To Fatal Collision Between Dump Truck And Vehicle
    As a result of the collision, the dump truck and the vehicle, a black Pontiac Sunfire, ended up in the ditch.

    Delta Police Seek Witnesses To Fatal Collision Between Dump Truck And Vehicle

    Blankets, Not Hoses, Help Some B.C. Firefighters Make Unusual Rescue

    Blankets, Not Hoses, Help Some B.C. Firefighters Make Unusual Rescue
    VERNON, B.C. — A bald eagle is recovering in B.C.'s North Okanagan region after four firefighters stepped up to save it.

    Blankets, Not Hoses, Help Some B.C. Firefighters Make Unusual Rescue

    Unveiling Of Dinosaur Tracks Marches B.C. Back To Its Cretaceous Past

    Unveiling Of Dinosaur Tracks Marches B.C. Back To Its Cretaceous Past
    The large site, called a dinosaur trackway, was scheduled to be unveiled Friday afternoon near Hudson's Hope, about 80 kilometres west of Fort. St. John.

    Unveiling Of Dinosaur Tracks Marches B.C. Back To Its Cretaceous Past

    Life Not A Bowl Of Cherries For Okanagan Residents Or Rain-Soaked Farmers

    Life Not A Bowl Of Cherries For Okanagan Residents Or Rain-Soaked Farmers
    Once ripe, cherries can't tolerate any extra water or their outer skins will split, destroying their valu

    Life Not A Bowl Of Cherries For Okanagan Residents Or Rain-Soaked Farmers