Pubdate: Fri, 30 Nov 2001 Source: Duncan News Leader (CN BC) Copyright: 2001 Duncan News Leader Contact: http://www.duncannewsleader.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1314 Author: Paul Rudan MOTHER MAINTAINS SON FELL THROUGH CRACKS After hearing 28 witnesses describe the events leading to the death of former Duncan resident Adam Wayne Beadle, his family broke down and cried at the conclusion of the coroner's inquest. "Everything has been so unfair," sobbed Jeanette Beadle, Adam's mother. "No one wants to take the blame." As the jury retired from the inquest to deliberate their recommendations, Beadle wept along with her mother, daughter and sister who all attended the five-day inquest held last week at the Ramada Inn in Campbell River. Throughout the inquest Jeanette Beadle maintained that her son "fell through the cracks" when he died last March 2 of a drug overdose while locked up in an Campbell River RCMP jail cell. The 27-year-old Duncan man had come to Campbell River a week earlier to seek treatment for drug addiction. During that time he saw several health care workers and was put on a methadone program to ease his heroin addiction. However, he also fell in with the wrong crowd and began taking other street drugs on top of his daily methadone dosage. On the afternoon of March 2, Beadle was found acting erratically in the downtown area. He was arrested by police, locked up - he was reportedly calling for help and frothing at the mouth while incarcerated - and died at approximately 11:30 p.m. due to respiratory depression caused by a methadone overdose. From the beginning of the inquest examining his death, his mother expressed skepticism with the proceedings. However, she took some comfort in the fact the jury came back with 12 recommendations. "I was fairly happy with that," said Jeanette Beadle on Monday from her Chemainus home. "I think we were really lucky with the jury. My lawyer said he expected a couple of recommendations but we got 12." Jeanette is caring for Adam's one-year-old son Elmer. She is considering selling some assets to continue legal action and she is filing complaints with the RCMP complaints commissioner as well as with the B.C. chief coroner. "I'm happy with the recommendations but I don't know how we can make them policy. That's my concern," she said. "I'm going to stay on top of them and I'm going to carry on. I want this stopped. People shouldn't die in police cells. They really failed my child." Among the five-person jury's recommendations: - - To B.C. Medical Association and the office in charge of contract policing: Improve communication between services. In this case, emergency room visits, methadone clinics, the RCMP and substance abuse programs. The inquest heard that Beadle made several visits to Campbell River Hospital, but some information regarding his street-drug use was not passed along to other health care workers. - - To B.C. Ambulance Service and the Ministry of Health: Review procedures regarding ambulance attendants entering the RCMP building during an emergency. The jury suggested ambulance attendants be given a garage door opener. When jail guards found Beadle unconscious, and perhaps dead, they called an ambulance, but no one was at the door to admit the attendants when they arrived at the detachment. - - To College of Physicians and Surgeons, Registered Nurses of B.C., and the B.C. Medical Association regarding the methadone program: Create more accessibility by keeping clinics open Monday to Friday and have on-site urine testing. Also, to consider combining alcohol and drug services to better serve the community. - - To B.C. Drug and Poison Information Centre and to drug and alcohol programs regarding detoxification and recovery programs: Make more facilities and programs available, and that the length of stays in these programs be extended in relation to programs in other communities. - - To College of Physicians: a) That patients on the methadone program who are considered high-risk for using other drugs be "red-flagged" on pharmacy records; b) that pharmacists keep separate files for methadone users; c) provide pharmacists with improved access to patient information. The inquest heard that if health care professionals knew Beadle was taking street drugs, they would have held back his methadone (the combination of street drugs and methadone led to Beadle's death). - - To jail guards hired by the District of Campbell River and to the Police Academy Justice Institute of B.C. regarding RCMP members: a) They should be trained in a level of first aid that deals with drug and alcohol symptoms; b) review policies and procedures regarding the resuscitation of a prisoner who is unconscious and who does not respond; c) review policy descriptions of persons who are impaired by alcohol and/or drugs. The inquest heard that Beadle was not taken to hospital after being picked up by police for a second time on March 2. Beadle had been picked up and taken to hospital earlier in the day by police but he was not under arrest and left without seeing a doctor. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake