Health authority fires Quebec nurses accused of mocking Indigenous patient
MONTREAL — Two Quebec nurses accused of mocking an Indigenous patient at a public clinic northeast of Montreal have been fired, the regional health authority said Tuesday.
The nurses allegedly referred to an Indigenous patient as “Joyce” in reference to Joyce Echaquan — an Atikamekw woman who filmed herself being mocked by health-care workers as she lay dying in a Joliette, Que., hospital in September. That video was shared around the world.
The nurses allegedly made the comments last week in the same city, located about 60 kilometres northeast of Montreal. The health authority had initially suspended the two employees, and late Tuesday it said they had been fired.
“The comments made by the two dismissed employees represented a breach of the code of ethics of the nursing profession and the code of ethics and the values of the (health authority),” said Caroline Barbir, the interim head of the health authority in Quebec’s Lanaudiere region.

