It has been over a year since a Calgary woman died in a Toronto hospital and her family still doesn’t know why she died.

Pamela Minocha’s family remembers her as the life of the party.  

But in May of 2013 Pamela Minocha died, she was 33-years-old.

She was an MBA student living in Toronto and had gone to a dentist because of a toothache.

Pamela Minocha told her family the medication from the dentist made her feel worse, but the dentist told her to continue taking the prescription.  Eventually, she went to the emergency department at St. Joseph’s Health Centre in Toronto.

In a phone call a doctor from the hospital apparently told the family in Calgary she would be okay, but several hours later Minocha was dead.

An autopsy revealed that Minocha has an allergic reaction that stopped her heart.

The family said after they asked for more clarification, the coroner requested that the hospital do a review.

In a letter to the family, St. Joseph's Hospital said Pamela Minocha received "intensive and appropriate treatment...at this point, we consider the review complete.”   

However, that’s the part of the report the Minocha family disputes.  They have shown the reports and medical records to other medical professionals and as a result of that input the family doesn’t feel that Pamela Minocha was given adequate care in the hospital.

Pamela Minocha’s mother Usha Minocha said “I don’t want any other parents, family to go through what we are going through.”

In a letter to the family, the coroner said "I have not identified any systemic issues that would suggest a need for preventative recommendations."

The Minocha family say they raised a number of questions about the investigation.

The coroner has now told the family he will meet with hospital staff behind closed doors to review the case.

It is also being moved to the Patient Safety Review Committee.

Pamela's brother Arvin said they want closure and assurances for others, "the public needs to be protected and people need to be held accountable.  Learnings need to happen to prevent this from happening to someone else."

(With files from Ina Sidhu)