Elder whose late-stage cancer went undetected has been medevaced to Yellowknife - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, December 3, 2024, 11:02 AM | Calgary | 6.9°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
North

Elder whose late-stage cancer went undetected has been medevaced to Yellowknife

An elder from Dln who had a pop can-sized tumour removed from his stomach last month after paying his own way to Yellowknife to see a doctorhas been medevaced back to Yellowknife a week after he arrived home.

Morris Neyelle was home in Dln for a week before taking a turn for the worse

Morris Neyelle pictured here in 2021 at Treaty 11 celebrations in Tulita. (Anna Desmarais/CBC)

An elder from Dln who had a pop can-sized tumour removed from his stomach after payinghis own way to Yellowknife to see a doctorhas been medevaced back to Yellowknife a week after he arrived home.

On Feb. 25, Morris Neyelle an artist, photographer and former band councillor ended uparranging his own flight from Dln to Yellowknife for treatment after weeks of stomach pain.He said health centre staff inDln declined to medevac him in time.

A month after having the tumour removed, Neyelle was back in Dln last week after he'd opted not to go to Edmonton for radiation.

His daughter Gloria Gaudet told CBC he tooka turn for the worse and on Wednesday, after nurses in the community treated him for dehydration, his doctor wanted him back in Yellowknife.

"They want them to send him out right away because he was going down too fast and so he agreed to get medevaced toYellowknife."

Neyelle has used his situation to draw awareness to the lack of health services in smaller N.W.T. communities. Blood work and stool tests done at the health centre in Dln had come back without detecting his cancer, and there were no specialists there to diagnose his pain.

Gaudet said she also wants to raise awareness about the need for patients to advocate for themselves and family members in the health-care system.

"This is the part where me and my siblings can spread the word like, try to push yourself to go towards the medical help if you need it, and push it to get help."

Support from community near and far

Gaudet, who lives in Yellowknife, said the community helped get her home toDln the week Neyellewas home.

"We've been doing a lot of cooking at my parent's house while my dad was here.And the community did fundraising, and stuff for the family to come here, from Yellowknife to Dln to see my dad," she said.

Now that he's back in Yellowknife, their time together has been cut short.

A family friend has set up a GoFundMe page to help the family with expenses.

Maggie Mills now lives in British Columbia, but she stayed with Neyelle and his wife Bernice four years ago while working on a graduate degree.

"The fact that a round-trip flight from Yellowknife to Dln[is] you know,almost $2,000.It's just prohibitive," Mills said, "in terms of people accessing what they need ... mental health support... physical health care."

As of Thursday afternoon, more than $5,000 in donations had been made to the campaign.

Corrections

  • An earlier version of this article contained misspellings of Morris Neyelle's name.
    Apr 08, 2022 8:15 AM CT

With files from Karli Zschogner