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“My son has not cried since that morning he said goodbye, the only emotion out of him is that he’s mad. He’s mad at why it his dad, why is this happening to our family?”
The night before his death Reid Hance had contacted 811, B.C.’s public health hotline, but decided not to go to hospital.
The next morning his family found him unresponsive and paramedic confirmed he had died in his sleep.
Autopsy sought
On top of unimaginable grief, the family was offered little medical explanation on why their otherwise healthy husband and dad had succumbed so quickly to COVID.
Hance demanded a further investigation, but an autopsy was never done.
“The reason why I was fighting so hard for this autopsy is my husband was only child,” she said.
“Both his parents were deceased. I have two sons now, if there is something genetic I have the right, my children have the right to know.”
On Monday, provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry said coroner investigations into sudden and unexpected death take weeks or months.
“Should it be determined that COVID-19 is direct or underlying cause the coroner has a process that families are notified,” she said.
The BC Coroners Service also said in an email that when someone dies at home with COVID-19 the coroner investigation considers that diagnoses, but an autopsy may or may not be undertaken.
Hance, feeling the need to have an answer for her husband’s sudden death, worked with her family doctor to have her husband’s body examined with a post mortem X-ray.
She said results showed bilateral pneumonia had damaged his lunges.
“Yes he contracted COVID, but it was bilateral pneumonia that killed him,” she said.
“This is how tragic, how fast, how indiscriminating this is.”
She’s begging others to take the virus seriously and hoping her story shows it can affect anyone.
She wants other to also know that families shaken by COVID’s deaths are likely all looking for the same kind of medical closure.