The New Zealand Herald

Hospital ‘failed’ musician

Internal review identifies shortfalls ‘in a number of areas’ leading up to his death

- Simon Collins

Middlemore Hospital has admitted that it “failed” musician Peter Gutteridge, who died in the hospital’s Tiaho Mai mental health unit.

Deputy Chief Coroner Brandt Shortland has found that Gutteridge’s death early on Monday September 15, 2014, was self-inflicted.

Gutteridge was a founding member of late 1970s and early 1980s Dunedin bands The Chills and The Clean, and was described by Flying Nun, the label that released much of his music, as “a true hero of New Zealand music”.

A $57 million rebuild of the Tiaho Mai unit includes design changes aimed at preventing future deaths, but constructi­on has been delayed by this month’s financial collapse of the builder, Ebert Constructi­on.

Gutteridge, who was 53, was admitted to Tiaho Mai under the Mental Health (Compulsory Assessment and Treatment) Act after arriving at Auckland Airport in an “agitated and confused” state on Friday September 12, after visiting the United States.

The hospital placed him on a system requiring observatio­ns every 15 minutes, and the coroner’s report records that this regime was followed through the night before he died.

Two friends who visited him over the weekend told a registered nurse that they were concerned for his safety because he said, “I don’t know if I’m going to last very long,” and he was worried that he had not made a will. This informatio­n was passed on to nurses on the overnight shift.

But Counties Manukau District Health Board clinical director of mental health and addiction services Dr Peter Watson told the inquest that his service “failed Mr Gutteridge”.

An internal review found “shortfalls in a number of areas” including:

● “Staff competency in recognitio­n, assessment and the treatment of acute opioid dependence detox was lacking.”

● “There were issues with clinical leadership and communicat­ion across the continuum of care with after-hours medical and nursing teams.”

● “The different on-call clinical leadership structure at weekends affected staff communicat­ion and collaborat­ion issues.”

● “There were environmen­tal risk factors within Tiaho Mai.”

● “There was a failure to organise a follow-up medical review, as requested by the admitting consultant psychiatri­st.”

● “Clinical notes were at times poor and the checklist for the generic 15-minute observatio­ns was completed inconsiste­ntly.”

An external review by Dr Sue Mackersey of the Bay of Plenty District Health Board found that Gutteridge’s “acute and changing needs were not formally reassessed during the two and a half days following his admission”.

Mackersey found that the initial assessment “was not formulated in a way that directed monitoring and treatment of withdrawal” from opiate drugs, and that staff failed to consult with Gutteridge’s next of kin, his sister Elizabeth Gutteridge in Dunedin, after she rang the unit twice on the day he was admitted.

Mackersey recommende­d changes including having acute patients reviewed by a registrar and a psychiatri­st over a weekend and liaising with family members.

“Dr Watson acknowledg­ed that Elizabeth Gutteridge was Mr Gutteridge’s next of kin and their quality of informatio­n and communicat­ion was woeful,” the coroner found.

An inquiry by the Health and Disability Commission­er also found failings. Changes since the musician’s death include having a senior doctor rostered to work on weekends and holidays, improvemen­ts to staff handovers and safer design features for a new adult inpatient unit.

 ?? Photo / Christophe­r Andrews ?? Peter Gutteridge was a founding member of The Chills and The Clean and was described as “a true hero of New Zealand music”.
Photo / Christophe­r Andrews Peter Gutteridge was a founding member of The Chills and The Clean and was described as “a true hero of New Zealand music”.

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