The Scotsman

Call for inquiries into youngsters’ deaths

● Report says FAI should always be held when someone who has been in care dies

- By LYNSEY BEWS

The sudden or accidental deaths of people under 25 who have been through the care system should be subject to fatal accident inquiries (FAIS), according to a new report.

The document, published by Scottish Labour MSP Kezia Dugdale and researcher Ashley Cameron, made the recommenda­tion after uncovering a lack of data on the deaths of looked-after young people.

It found that at least 84 young people in secure care died prematurel­y in the past ten years.

Charity Who Cares? Scotland previously reported that young people who have been in care are 20 times more like- ly to die before the age of 25 than their peers who have not been in care.

Ms Dugdale said that holding FAIS was “the right thing to do” to ensure that lessons could be learned for the future.

The MSP and Ms Cameron, who grew up in care, spent a year compiling their report by gathering data from councils using Freedom of Informatio­n requests.

Only 20 out of 32 local authoritie­s provided informatio­n on the causes of death for young people in care while those who did respond were unable to provide summaries of the circumstan­ces of death in each case.

Glasgow, Scotland’s largest council, was among those who did not provide figures. Of those councils who did respond, it was found that 84 young people, aged up to 24, had died in secure care over the past ten years. The most common reasons are suicide, overdose, accidents and complex health issues. Cause of death was either “unknown”, “unreported” or the local authority “refused to comment” in 29 cases.

Figures were not provided for deaths of those in foster or residentia­l care. The report sets out a series of recommenda­tions for the Scottish Government including a change to FAI protocol and statutory requiremen­ts for recording data on deaths of both those under 18 who are in the care system and those aged 18 to 25 who have experience­d it.

Ms Dugdale said: “It’s a scandal that we don’t know exactly how many care-experience­d young people die before their 25th birthday – but we do know it’s far too many.”

She added: “Who Cares? Scotland tells us you are 20 times more likely to die before your 25th birthday if you’ve been in care. I think there should be fatal accident inquiries to recognise what’s gone wrong here.

“It’s not about apportioni­ng blame and pointing at one social worker or one hostel and saying ‘you were the one who got it wrong’, it’s about learning from those experience­s to make sure it doesn’t happen again.”

Ms Dugdale said that while FAIS are expensive and subject to lengthy waits, “that doesn’t mean they are not the right thing to do”.

The report also proposes the Lord Advocate would have the discretion to not hold an FAI in certain circumstan­ces, with a written reason made publicly available.

Ms Cameron said: “The lives of care-experience­d people and their subsequent premature deaths should always be considered a matter of public interest.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom