Indigenous families struggled for health care before Jordan’s Principle: summit
WINNIPEG — First Nation families say they struggled to get wheelchairs, beds and other health-care services for their children before Ottawa adopted Jordan’s Principle.
The principle, which requires that kids get access to services without delays caused by jurisdictional issues, is named after Jordan River Anderson.
The five-year-old boy from Norway House Cree Nation in Manitoba died without ever being able to go home because of a dispute over who would pay for his health care.
Bernadette Sumner said her son Keanu, 17, was falling through the cracks for most of his life because the family lives on the Waywayseecappo First Nation in Manitoba. Keanu was born with achondroplasia — a bone growth disorder that means he has short limbs and a small torso — and lumbar stenosis, which left him paralyzed.


