Echaquan inquiry: reform needed to reduce Indigenous patients’ fear of health system
MONTREAL — Indigenous patients are afraid of seeking care due to systemic racism and the poor treatment they encounter in Quebec’s health network, a witness said Monday at the coroner’s inquiry into the death of Joyce Echaquan.
Dr. Stanley Vollant, an Innu surgeon, testified Monday that Echaquan’s death last September only cemented those fears.
Echaquan, a 37-year-old Atikamekw mother of seven, filmed herself on Facebook Live as a nurse and an orderly were heard making derogatory comments shortly before her death last September at the hospital in Joliette, Que., northeast of Montreal.
Vollant said Echaquan’s death reinforced the feelings of insecurity among Indigenous patients. He said he believes systemic racism is entrenched in the health system and worries Echaquan’s case will not be the last of its kind.


