Hamilton
In late May and early June, two children died shortly after routine tonsil and adenoid surgery. The hospital has paused those types of pediatric surgeries while its program is reviewed, causing a backlog.
In late May and early June, the 2 died shortly after routine tonsil and adenoid surgery
Ethan Lang · CBC News
· Posted: Jun 21, 2024 3:12 PM EDT | Last Updated: 10 hours ago
2 children die after tonsil, adenoid surgeries at Hamilton hospital | Canada TonightTwo children have died after tonsil and/or adenoid surgery at McMaster Children’s Hospital, the Hamilton hospital said Wednesday. Dr. Sam Daniel, chief of surgery at Montreal Children’s Hospital, explains what those procedures entail — and says concerned parents should always ask questions and discuss the ‘surgery journey.’
McMaster Children’s Hospital has cancelled roughly 100 tonsil and adenoid surgeries since the death of two children.
The hospital paused all tonsil and adenoid surgeries for patients 17 and under on June 4, shortly after the death of a second child who had undergone the routine procedure. The children died, one in May and the other in June, after they were discharged from the hospital.
In an update this week, the hospital said pediatric tonsil and adenoid surgeries are still paused. That’s led to approximately 100 surgeries being postponed as of June 17.
The hospital is contacting affected families and has enlisted an independent third party to review its tonsil and adenoid program, hospital president Bill Squires said in a video attached to Tuesday’s update.
“We’re acting cautiously and swiftly,” he said.
The CBC reached out to Hamilton Health Sciences (HHS), which operates McMaster Children’s Hospital, to request an interview or comment. A spokesperson referred the CBC to its June 17 online update.
HHS has declined all interview requests since the surgeries were paused on June 4, communicating with the general public only through press releases and video messages.
All other surgeries at the hospital are continuing as scheduled, Squires said in the video.
Deaths in these cases are rareTonsils and adenoids are lymph nodes in the back of the throat and nose.
According to the Canadian Society of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, adenoidectomy is “a common procedure … almost always performed on pre-teenage children.”
Dr. Hamdy El-Hakim, an ear, nose and throat surgeon at the University of Alberta, told the CBC earlier this month the two deaths at McMaster are “incredibly sad and incredibly rare.”
Bleeding can become an issue in a minority of cases, the hospital said in its update.
McMaster Children’s Hospital performed 584 tonsil and adenoid surgeries in 2023-24, according to Tuesday’s update, with 5.8 per cent of cases warranting a trip to the emergency room.
The hospital said it has found no connection between the two recent deaths.
Hospital administrators are asking patients and families with questions to contact the HHS’s Patient Experience department at patientexperience@hhsc.ca or 905-521-2100 ext. 75240.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Ethan Lang is a reporter for CBC Toronto. Ethan has also worked in Whitehorse, where he covered the Yukon Legislative Assembly, and Halifax, where he wrote on housing and forestry for the Halifax Examiner.