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N.S. government says no legal action over social media post on woman's hospital death

HALIFAX — Nova Scotia’s Justice Department said Tuesday it won’t pursue legal action against a politician who posted information about a woman who died in hospital after a seven-hour wait for a doctor.
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A Nova Scotia politician has been threatened with legal action after she publicly posted a letter with information about a woman who died in hospital after a seven hour wait for a doctor. Elizabeth Smith-McCrossin, the Independent member of the legislature for Cumberland North, told reporters Monday that she was advised to take down a letter written to Health Minister Michelle Thompson that was posted to her Facebook page on Friday. Smith-McCrossin is shown in an undated handout photo. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO - Elizabeth Smith-McCrossin leadership campaign MANDATORY CREDIT

HALIFAX — Nova Scotia’s Justice Department said Tuesday it won’t pursue legal action against a politician who posted information about a woman who died in hospital after a seven-hour wait for a doctor.

The department sent an email Friday to Elizabeth Smith-McCrossin, the Independent member for Cumberland North, advising her to take down a letter on her Facebook page that she had written to Health Minister Michelle Thompson.

“The email did threaten to take legal action against me if I did not remove the post,” Smith-McCrossin told reporters on Monday. 

As of Tuesday, the letter was still on her Facebook page. It names 37-year-old Allison Holthoff and describes her as a wife and mother of three who died at the Cumberland Regional Health Centre on Dec. 31.

In an emailed statement late Tuesday, the department expressed its sympathy to the Holthoff family and said it respects the right of members of the legislature to advocate on behalf of their constituents.

It said its message to Smith-McCrossin had been about the importance of respecting personal health information, adding that “it was not clear from the MLA's letter that they had the permission of their constituent to share this information.” There was no indication that the department attempted to find that out, and a spokeswoman in Smith-McCrossin’s office said the department did not inquire before sending its warning Friday.

“Given that the family has made the information public, no further action is being considered,” the department said Tuesday.

The Justice Department’s Friday email, obtained following a request to Smith-McCrossin’s office, advises her that health information is protected under the personal Health Information Act and Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act.

“I am drawing this to your attention so you can consider whether you would like to remove personal health information details from your posted correspondence and limit further disclosure of this personal information,” wrote Michelle Higgins, executive director of the department’s legal services division.

“If the personal health information continues to be disseminated on social media, we will consider all available legal options."

Smith-McCrossin has said she was just doing her job in advocating for a constituent. She said Holthoff’s husband, Gunter Holthoff, came to her looking for help on Jan. 3. The letter to the health minister was posted three days later.

Holthoff has since told his wife’s story to several media outlets and provided details of her final hours in hospital.

He said that he took his wife to the hospital when she collapsed in extreme pain after complaining of an upset stomach at their home near Amherst, N.S., around 11 a.m. on Dec. 31. After being triaged by hospital staff, she waited more than six hours in the emergency department before she was taken to a room inside the unit, he said. It was another hour before she saw a doctor and received pain treatment.

She later died after doctors determined her condition had deteriorated to the point where she couldn't be helped. Her cause of death has not been released.

Nova Scotia's health authority is conducting a review of what happened at the hospital.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Jan. 10, 2023.

Keith Doucette, The Canadian Press