The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Father wants probe into mental health provision

TAYSIDE: Man says level of care has left daughter ‘broken’

- derek healey dhealey@thecourier.co.uk

A “desperate” Dundee father has backed calls for a full inquiry into mental health provision at NHS Tayside following claims his daughter was left unable to speak after a year in their care.

The man, who asked not to be named out of concern for the teenager, said his “intelligen­t, articulate and capable daughter” deteriorat­ed suddenly after being admitted to a series of the health board’s facilities.

The family say they now face the heartbreak of the teenager being sent more than 400 miles away to Northampto­n because the health board claims no available facility in Scotland is capable of meeting her needs.

The teenager first presented to Dundee’s Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services unit early last year after saying she did not want to return to school due to anxiety.

Her father insists the level of care she received was “not fit for purpose”, adding that unsuitable loud and busy environmen­ts in the facilities had “significan­tly contribute­d to her deteriorat­ing mental health”.

He said his daughter, who has since been diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder, struggled to adjust to the surroundin­gs and has adopted worrying new behaviours such as head banging, cutting, swallowing batteries and food deprivatio­n.

He claimed the deteriorat­ion of his daughter, who initially enjoyed activities but now spends almost all of her time in her own room, was left unacknowle­dged by three consecutiv­e consultant­s assigned to her over the past eight months, until very recently.

“If it wasn’t happening to my own family I would never believe something like this could happen,” he said.

“It’s been horrendous. The care she has received has not been fit for purpose and has left my precious daughter broken. She has been placed in an environmen­t that she finds tormenting and is not conducive to her healing.

“I went to see her the other day and she was lying on the floor of her room unable to speak.

“I am desperate for my daughter to get the care she needs and deserves.”

NHS Tayside announced on Friday an inquiry into mental health services delivered at the Carseview Centre.

However, the probe will stop short of examining other facilities, such as the Dudhope Young Person’s Unit where the girl is being treated.

Scottish Labour leader Richard Leonard said a “much wider and deeper” inquiry was urgently needed.

“This is a tragic, heartbreak­ing case,” he said. “The thought of a vulnerable 17-year-old being sent away more than 400 miles from her family for treatment is very distressin­g.”

“This is the third case of a young woman with autism struggling to receive the help she needs in Tayside that I am aware of. There will be others.”

A spokeswoma­n for NHS Tayside said it cannot comment on individual cases.

 ?? Picture: Bob Douglas. ?? NHS Tayside announced an inquiry into mental health services delivered at the Carseview Centre, but it will stop short of examining other facilities – such as the Dudhope Young Person’s Unit where the girl is being treated.
Picture: Bob Douglas. NHS Tayside announced an inquiry into mental health services delivered at the Carseview Centre, but it will stop short of examining other facilities – such as the Dudhope Young Person’s Unit where the girl is being treated.

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