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My mum took her life after hospital. Yet lessons won’t be learnt

As The Times reports on how the failure to act on coroners’ recommendations costs lives, Lottie Hayton says many are not issuing Prevention of Future Deaths reports in the first place.

Lottie's mum, Carrie, was sectioned on September 16, 2022. When Carrie took her own life two months later, the inquest into her death criticised the care she received and her “rapid discharge”. But, owing to significant flaws in the inquest system in England and Wales, lessons from her care and death will not be learnt.

Four days after Carrie’s admission, on September 20, when the duty doctor came back from bank holiday leave, he “introduced” himself. The brief introductory meeting amounted, according to the medical notes, to an assessment of mum’s mental state. Thirteen minutes after he recorded the introduction, mum was discharged.

The discharge notes read: “Mrs Hayton utilised her leave well and did not present with any suicidal thoughts. It was felt the inpatient environment would be detrimental to her grieving process and her risks could be managed with home treatment and community team support.” That the risks were not able to be managed with home treatment is obvious by the fatal outcome.

The review recommends a clear solution: “Acute Inpatient Operational Policy must take place to ensure clear provision for what should happen when a rapid discharge occurs.” In Carrie’s case, there was no evidence of a policy or process being followed.

At the conclusion of an inquest a coroner can issue a Regulation 28 Prevention of Future Deaths report, or PFD, to an organisation or individual, outlining actions which could be taken by them to prevent future similar deaths.

An average of 500 PFD reports are issued every year but it is ultimately up to an individual coroner to decide whether they issue one. The facts of Carrie’s case and the serious incident investigator’s submission, would, you might assume, lead to the coroner thinking that a PFD should and could be issued with simple recommendations. But the coroner overseeing the inquest in Dorset, chose not to issue a PFD.

Read full story (paywalled)

Source: The Times, 15 January 2025

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