The Scotsman

1,500 deaths investigat­ed by first public inquiry into mental health in England as chair tells of ‘areas of concern’

- By SAM RUSSELL

The deaths of 1,500 people are being investigat­ed by the first public inquiry into mental health to be held in England.

All of the 1,500 people died while they were a patient on a mental health ward in Essex, or within three months of being discharged, between 2000 and 2020.

Dr Geraldine Strathdee, chair of the Essex Mental Health Independen­t Inquiry, said she wants to gather evidence about mental health inpatient deaths in the county over the 21 years. She said she wants to see whether the issues identified are unique to Essex or evident elsewhere too.

Dr Strathdee said that so far "there are some areas of concern that I have consistent­ly heard", including a lack of basic informatio­n being shared with patients and their families about their care and treatment.

Patients and their families have concerns about patients' physical, psychologi­cal and sexual safety on the ward, and there have been "major difference­s in the quality of care patients receive both in staff attitudes and in the use of effective treatments", she said.

"Right now, we have very limited informatio­n on the 1,500 deaths we've been made aware of," said Dr Strathdee. "But as it stands, for example, we have only been given the cause of death for around 40% of these deaths."

The inquiry was announced by Nadine Dorries in 2020, when she was a health minister, following a series of deaths at an NHS mental health unit in Essex.

Robert Wade, 66, lost his 30-year-old son Richard Wade to suicide in 2015, shortly after he had been admitted for the first time to a mental health unit.

His son, who lived in Chelmsford, had completed a PHD and had a high-flying job at accounting firm PWC in London.

"He went in (to the mental health unit in Essex) just after midnight," said Mr Wade. "He was dead by midday.

"He was there for less than 12 hours before the injuries he inflicted on himself."

Mr Wade, of Suffolk, continued: "It boils down to something really quite simple. "They didn't care. They didn't care for him, they didn't seem to care for their profession­alism. The consequenc­e was he paid a big price."

 ?? ?? 0 Nadine Dorries announced the inquiry in 2020
0 Nadine Dorries announced the inquiry in 2020

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