Whanganui Chronicle

Harrowing face of our failure goes to jail

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Few would not be moved by the photo taken of Anita Cumming in the Dunedin District Court this week as she was jailed for a year.

During sentencing, Judge Michael Turner repeatedly asked her to restrain herself. “Please don’t do this, sir,” Cumming wailed. “Will someone help me?”

The court had heard how an obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) had afflicted Anita Dorothy Cumming, 39. She would scream at her 71-year-old mother and force her out of bed to clean the house early in the mornings to “exacting specificat­ions’’.

Cumming had admitted three protection order breaches, which had been put in place to shield her mother from such attacks.

Eventually, Cumming was carried from the dock and could be heard yelling for some time. Later, she was beamed in by audio-visual link (on mute) so the sentencing could take place.

A psychologi­st’s report said Anita had an “insecure attachment pattern’’, relying on her mother to alleviate her anxieties inherent with OCD.

Judge Turner said even if there was a home-detention address available, only imprisonme­nt was appropriat­e. “To permit you to return home will only lead to further offending and harm to your mother,” he said.

Psychother­apist and Herald columnist Kyle MacDonald said after the sentencing Cumming was clearly a person who needed help. “This is not a person who needs imprisonin­g,” he said. “Being in prison is unlikely to enable her to access the help she needs.”

Cumming’s lawyer said there weren’t enough options aside from jail for dealing with people such as her client. Patricia Cumming meanwhile stood by her daughter and attributed her decline to her treatment through the mental health system. “She’s in the too-hard basket.”

It would seem Anita

Cumming’s too-hard basket is a prison cell. That is wrong.

It’s estimated one in five New Zealanders experience mental illness in their lifetime. In prison these figures are nine out of 10 (91 per cent).

Many have asked whether prison is the right place for such cases. It seems it is the only place. Surely, this is not acceptable.

Three areas identified in the Wellbeing Budget offer hope: Improving support for people experienci­ng a mental health crisis; mental wellbeing support for parents and wha¯ nau; and forensic mental health services for adults and young people. The latter assures investment will “ensure safe and secure mental health services are available for people within the justice system or integratin­g back into the community”.

Would it be so. The image of Anita Cumming’s anguished face during this ordeal should move us all — and it should move us to action.

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