A family is grieving after a 44-year-old father of three died in an Edmonton hospital emergency room waiting area.
On Dec. 22, Prashant Sreekumar began experiencing severe chest pains while at work.
A client drove him to the Grey Nuns Hospital in southeast Edmonton, where Sreekumar was checked in at triage and then took a seat in the waiting room. His father, Kumar Sreekumar, soon arrived.
“He told me, ‘Papa, I cannot bear the pain,’” Kumar said.
“I am in so much pain.”
Kumar said his son told him and hospital staff the pain was a 15 out of 10. They did an electrocardiogram (ECG) on him to check his heart’s function, but the family said Prashant was told there was nothing of significance and to keep waiting.
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Staff also offered Prashant some Tylenol for his pain.
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Kumar said as time passed, nurses would check Prashant’s blood pressure.
“It went up, up, and up. To me, it was through the roof.”
Prashant waited more than eight hours before finally being called into the treatment area.
“After sitting maybe 10 seconds, he looked at me, he got up and put his hand on his chest and just crashed,” Kumar said.
“At that moment he died.”
Nurses called for help but it was too late. Prashant died of an apparent cardiac arrest.
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Prashant leaves behind his wife and three children, ages three, 10 and 14. The family loved to travel together and said Prashant was a “goofball” with his kids.
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“He was for his family, for his kids, he was so nice,” Kumar said.
Family and friends want answers as to how a man with severe chest pain could fall through the cracks in such a shocking way.
Family friend Varinder Bhullar, who used Prashant’s accounting services, said he is devastated over Prashant’s death and that it is a huge loss for the community.
“We expect better from the hospital and health-care system,” Bhullar said.
“This shouldn’t happen to anyone else in the community.”
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The Grey Nuns Hospital is run by Covenant Health.
The organization told Global News in an email that it wouldn’t comment on the specifics surrounding patient care due to privacy, but did say the case is before the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner.
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“We offer our sympathy to the patient’s family and friends. There is nothing more important than the safety and care of our patients and staff,” the statement said.
As Prashant’s family tries to remember all the good he brought to their lives, they say they will always be haunted by how he died in pain — in a hospital — without ever seeing a doctor.”They took my baby for nothing. For nothing,” Kumar said.
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