Georgian Bay General Hospital Foundation’s Spring Appeal

Nancy Moreau thought she had the flu. She hadn’t been feeling well for two months. She could hardly eat or drink. She was sleeping all night and large parts of the day. And she was so weak and tired she could hardly walk across the room.“On the night of March 29, 2019, I went to bed and I was just freezing. I had blankets piled all over me and I couldn’t get warm, but when my husband came to check on me, I was burning up with a fever. I started throwing up and was incoherent. My husband called the ambulance, and I was rushed to Georgian Bay General Hospital (GBGH),” recalls Nancy.
Once arriving at GBGH, it was determined that Nancy had a very serious blood infection that was attacking her heart, lungs and other organs, and that she was going into septic shock.“I don’t like to think about it,” says Nancy. “Everything is a bit of a blur, but I know they gave me antibiotics to fight the infection and then later that night I was nodding off and I started to choke, and I couldn’t breathe at all. I saw a white tunnel of light and all of the doctors and nurses were over me and then I finally was able to get air. I later found out that I stopped breathing three times that night and Dr. Tahir and the team in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) fought all night long to save my life multiple times.”

Georgian Bay General Hospital is asking for your support today to help fund urgently needed equipment and expand programs at your hospital. With your support, GBGH needs to purchase defibrillators and crash carts, implement a new electronic patient records system, and plan for the replacement of the ICU central monitoring system. This will ensure their skilled doctors and nurses have the essential equipment and information they need to provide the very best care for the more than 32,000 patients like Nancy who will come through the doors of GBGH this year.And now, thanks to a special matching gift opportunity from Tom Smith Chevrolet Buick GMC, your donation today will go twice as far, being matched dollar-for-dollar up to $25,000 to help make more life-saving stories like Nancy’s possible.