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Ailing Ontario man stuck in U.S. hospital because insurance company can't find bed back home

Toronto man 'rotting' in Florida hospital because there are no beds for him back home, wife says

An elderly Toronto man is stuck in a Florida hospital, according to his wife, because their insurance company says that there are no beds available back home — a claim refuted by the provincial health minister.

"He's rotting in this hospital," said Lillian Hrabchak of her 83-year-old husband, Todd Hrabchak.

"I keep getting the same message from them — when we have a bed, when we have a bed," she told CBC Toronto.

Last Monday, Todd was admitted to the Englewood Community Hospital, close to the couple's winter home in Rotonda West on Florida's west coast. He had an infected cut on his shin that made it impossible for him to stand or walk.

He arrived with a high fever and was "shaking, shivering and losing his mind," Lillian said. He was given antibiotics and soon recovered, but is still weak. Doctors say he may need a pacemaker due to some complications, she said.

Todd remains in a "seriously vulnerable state," Lillian said.

She has been in daily contact with her insurance provider, Allianz Global Assistance — a third-party administrator for Sun Life — in a desperate attempt to get him home and, preferably, into a Toronto hospital bed.

But Allianz says it can't.

"A bed must be available prior to arranging transportation home," Sun Life said in an emailed statement to CBC. "From time-to-time patients may need to wait for a hospital bed to become available."

The company added it "sympathizes with Mr. Hrabchak's situation and is doing everything we can to ensure he receives the quality care required."

Beds available

Several weeks ago, CBC London reported about two local men who were stuck in hospitals outside of Canada under similar circumstances.

Asked about the situation in the provincial legislature, Health Minister Helena Jaczek said last month it was the insurer's job to find a space for their clients in the province.

But on Tuesday, Jaczek said there "appears to be a gap in the way that travel insurance companies locate hospital beds in Ontario."

"We know that there are beds available for critical care patients in Ontario," she said in a statement to CBC Toronto.

"Travel insurers must work with our healthcare system, as patients abroad rely on their due diligence to engage our robust network of hospitals here at home."

Jaczek added she has written to the Canadian Life and Health Insurance Association asking for a meeting to discuss the recent delays.

Sole caretaker

Meanwhile, Lillian says her husband's mood has fallen during his hospital stay, and he "seems uncharacteristically sad, as if he has lost hope."

Todd lives with dementia and suffered a stroke during heart surgery in 2013. Lillian, who is in her 60s, has been his sole caretaker for the last five years.

She wants him back in Toronto so he can be seen by his own doctors, and get physiotherapy.

"Physically he's going downhill because he's not getting any movement," she said.

"If he doesn't get into rehab I'm going to end up with somebody who I can't take care of."