B.C. criticized at inquest about lack of support for families needing Down syndrome care

The president of a Down syndrome advocacy group in British Columbia says more funding support is needed for parents and caretakers to avoid tragedies such as the starvation death of a woman in 2018.

Tamara Taggart told an inquest into Florence Girard’s death that parents and caretakers are under heavy financial pressure to provide services such as speech therapy, which can be life-altering for people with Down syndrome.

Taggart, whose organization was launched in 2021 in direct response to Girard’s death, says her family had to pay $12,000 a year for therapy to help her son learn how to eat solid food, and the province provides no support in her case or other similar situations. 

She says her family is in a position of privilege to be able to pay and live in Vancouver to access that care, but other families are shut out from similar care for their loved ones because of the high cost and access. 

The coroner’s inquest is looking into the death of Girard, who died while being cared for under a program for people with developmental disabilities.

Sister hopes for systemic change as inquest into death of Florence Girard begins

17 hours ago

Duration 14:50

A coroners inquest into the death of a woman with Down syndrome in government-funded care began Monday. We’ll hear from her sister, and an advocate about what they hope to see come out of the inquest.

Caretaker Astrid Dahl, who is due to testify later Tuesday, was convicted in 2022 for failing to provide the necessities of life, and Girard’s sister told the inquest on Monday that she would have looked after her sister had she received some sort of funding support.

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Posted in CBC