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Australia

Youth suicide report urges reform to emergency department care for young people in distress

Australia’s national peak body for suicide prevention is calling for urgent reforms to care offered at emergency departments for young people in mental distress.

Suicide Prevention Australia consulted dozens of young people with lived experience of self-harm or suicidal ideation and found hospital emergency departments were poorly equipped to deal with young people needing critical mental health support.

The report’s authors recommend all states and territories fund trials for youth-specific “alternatives to ED” to better support young Australians who present to a hospital after self-harming or attempting suicide.

Nieves Murray, the CEO of Suicide Prevention Australia, said young people were being failed by EDs.

“Emergency departments are not the place for people in suicidal distress, particularly not younger people in suicidal distress.

“We need to co-design places for people in suicidal distress with the people who use them … particularly young people.”

A lady speaks into microphones with her hands raised.
Ms Murray warned that youth suicide rates tend to worsen a few years after a traumatic event – ​​like a global pandemic.(Supplied: Facebook)

Ms Murray said evidence showed that poor quality care for a young person’s first suicide attempt tended to lead to worse mental health outcomes, and highlighted the need for specialized “peer support workers”.

“It’s really critical that the first time that somebody tells their story, they’re telling it to someone who can actually assist them, to navigate through that.”

‘Sent home barefoot in a taxi’

Jack Heskett, 25, from Sydney, was 17 when they attempted to take their own life.

Jack said the months and years following were spent in a “revolving door” between home and presenting to emergency departments after multiple suicide attempts.

Jack, who was consulted in Suicide Prevention Australia’s report, believes EDs are a “terrifying” place to be when in acute mental distress, and can make patients like them feel significantly worse – not better.

“It feels overwhelming, it feels terrifying, and very isolating. You’re in a bed with very thin curtain partitions around you. But you can still hear absolutely everything going on around you, and can feel that chaos.

“It only seemed to add to that feeling that I was a burden.”

Jack remembers feeling particularly disappointed after one suicide attempt, when they left the hospital barefoot.

“I’d probably been in the ED for about eight hours… I was told once again, there’s not really anything more they can offer me. And that’s when I had to leave the ED, I didn’t even have any shoes on, and I had to get a taxi home.

“And it was terrifying for me, because I would swing in and out of these acute experiences, and then all of a sudden be at home, left quite isolated.

“Each time I was sent home with no support, it just solidified to me that there was no help.”

Jack said they were “lucky and privileged” to eventually receive extensive care at a private hospital with a specialized team to help with their treatment and mental health diagnoses.

‘Stop talking about 1950s solutions’

Ian Hickie from The University of Sydney’s Brain and Mind Centre, who was not involved in the report, agreed that EDs were at breaking point – and often weren’t appropriate places for young people in distress.

“We saw a movement in the 2000s to wanting to put more mental health in emergency departments as if it would fit easily. It doesn’t.

“It works for some people for some needs, but it hasn’t really worked for young people.

“It’s not that the health professionals don’t care. The system is under pressure. And the physical environment is very challenging.”

Professor Ian Hickie wears a blue suit and red tie and looks into the camera from an office space.
Professor Hickie says EDs often don’t provide quality care for suicidal young people(ABC News: Bryan Milliss)

Professor Hickie said emergency departments played an important role for young people who have physical injuries after self-harming or a suicide attempt, but alternative places for acute care were needed for young people with psychological symptoms.

“It could be another safe location that can be staffed by people who have healthcare experience, or have personal experiences and provide a safe, supportive, warm, human environment.

“It might be close to a hospital, it might be quite separate.”

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Categories
Australia

Royal Commission into Defense and Veteran Suicide calls for end to claims backlog, shares ‘dismay’ at ‘limited’ government action

Urgent action needs to be taken to eliminate the “unacceptable” backlog of veterans’ compensation claims, with almost 42,000 awaiting processing at the end of May, a royal commission has warned, saying the situation may lead to suicides.

The Royal Commission into Defense and Veteran Suicide handed down its interim report this morning, calling for an end to the backlog and for a simplification of the claims system to make it easier for veterans.

The commission made 13 recommendations, with five focused on the Department of Veterans’ Affairs’ claims processes and staffing levels.

Another eight are intended to make it easier for witnesses to appear before the commission and allow it to more easily access documents.

The commissioners also said they were “dismayed” at the “limited” ways the federal government had reacted to previous reports relevant to the topics of suicide and suicidality among serving and ex-serving defense force members.

“We have identified over 50 previous reports, and more than 750 recommendations [since the year 2000],” the report said.

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‘There’s nothing else left’: Jacqui Lambie makes emotional plea for veterans to speak to royal commission

‘Lives depend on’ clearing claims backlog

Commission chair Nick Kaldas said the Department of Veterans’ Affairs’ (DVA) claims backlog was “unacceptable” and could lead to suicide and suicidality in some cases.

“Behind each claim is a veteran who needs support, and it is seriously important that this assistance is provided as quickly as possible — lives and livelihoods depend on it,” he said.

The commission has recommended the department be given until March 2024 to eliminate the claims backlog, and called on the government to streamline processes and ensure DVA had the necessary resources to do so.

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Veteran Gavin Tunstall on lack of training to deal with traumatic scenes

The report found Australia’s veteran compensation and rehabilitation system was “so complicated that it adversely affects the mental health of some veterans” and it recommended the federal government introduce legislative reforms by the end of the year.

“Previous reports and inquiries … have called for legislative simplification and harmonization,” the report said.

“We recognize that making change will not be easy, but the difficulties of reform provide no justification to delay any further.”

Witness calls department ‘cruel and inhumane’

A woman looks seriously to the side of the camera, gazing out over water.
Widow Madonna Paul told the commission she struggled to access support after the death of her husband by suicide.(ABC News: Luke Bowden)

The commission has heard wide-ranging accounts of horrific abuse and trauma since public hearings began in November last year.

At the Tasmanian hearings, which wrapped up on Wednesday, the commission heard from Senator Jacqui Lambie, who said a back injury that resulted in her being medically discharged began a six-year battle with the Department of Veterans’ Affairs for compensation, as well as debilitating pain and depression.

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Jacqui Lambie says a department spied on her from a bush behind her house for weeks.

She said the department put her under surveillance after becoming suspicious she was faking her injuries, and representatives from the rehabilitation service spied on her from a bush near her back fence.

The widow of an ex-serviceman also spoke out about her struggles with the “cruel and inhumane” Department of Veterans’ Affairs.

She said she struggled to access support following her husband’s suicide.

And a former soldier spoke of his trauma after seeing the bodies of two boys killed in combat in Afghanistan.

Australia has lost more serving members to suicide than recent combat: Minister

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Veterans’ Affairs Minister Matt Keogh said the federal government was committed to a better future for Australia’s current and ex-service personnel and would look into implementing the report’s recommendations.

“Unfortunately, the rate of veterans’ suicide in Australia is a national tragedy,” he said.

“It’s devastating that Australia has lost more serving and former serving personnel to suicide than it has lost through operations over the last 20 years in Afghanistan and Iraq.”

A commissioner and the Governor-General hold a report between them in an office.
Governor-General David Hurley receives the interim report from commissioner Nick Kaldas this morning.(AAP: Mick Tsikas)

Mr Keogh said it was important the recommendations were “addressed as a priority” and the government had already started hiring 500 additional staff to help the Department of Veterans’ Affairs clear its claims backlog.

He also said it had been made clear to the defense force and government departments that “the royal commission must be assisted in any way possible to ensure that it can make the most effective recommendations on how to address the scourge of suicide that has plagued our defense personnel, veterans and families.

Mr Keogh said he was “deeply sorry” if there had been failings in the way the defense force and the Department of Veterans’ Affairs had operated.

‘We’ve had silence for long enough’

A woman holds a photo of a man in a Navy uniform.
Julie-Ann Finney called for the royal commission after the death of her son.(ABC News: Luke Bowden)

Julie-Ann Finney, the mother of a veteran who took his own life, said it was “uplifting” to know that people were finally talking about the high rates of suicidality among current and former defense force personnel.

Ms Finney became a high-profile campaigner for the commission to be established after her son, Petty Officer David Finney, took his own life in 2019.

She has attended hearings all over the country, carrying a photo of David with her each day.

Ms Finney said the hearings were confronting, but incredibly important.

“It’s frustration, anger and trauma associated with all this listening, but the alternative is silence, and we’ve had silence for long enough,” she said.

“Unfortunately, I was quite naive before my own son took his life but I don’t find myself naive anymore. I need to keep learning, keep listening to people.

Ms Finney called on the federal government to immediately act on the interim report’s recommendations, but she said she was more confident than ever that change would occur.

“I don’t want to speak to another mother who has recently lost her child, or a father or a partner,” she said.

“We need to look at why this is happening and find solutions, and I feel at the moment that that is coming out.

“We will just keep fighting. I’ve said it from the beginning that I didn’t bury my son to walk away — and there are hundreds like me.”

Ms Finney said she wanted to see the creation of an independent body where service personnel could report concerns about their mental health and unacceptable behaviour, and she also wanted the Department of Veterans’ Affairs to immediately clear its claims backlog.

Surge in compensation cases sees backlog grow six times in size

The commissioners said many people who had participated in the royal commission so far had spoken about their “frustration and disappointment” with the processing of compensation claims and “an unhelpful and negative attitude” from the Department of Veterans’ Affairs staff.

“Negative engagement with DVA staff regarding claims and entitlements was pervasive,” the report said.

“Long waiting times to action and pursue claims produced considerable frustration for ex-serving members.

“Many said that they dealt with simultaneous injuries, mental ill health and complex socioeconomic pressures.”

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Categories
Australia

Critical investigation launched after on-duty detective, 46, found shot dead inside Sydney’s Ermington Police Station

A detective has been found dead inside a police station in Sydney’s north-west.

The 46-year-old detective sergeant was on duty when he was found dead by colleagues inside a room at Ermington Police Station about 12:30pm on Monday.

NSW Police revealed initial inquiries suggest there are no suspicious circumstances surrounding the death.

The Daily Telegraph has reported the man died after a “shooting incident” and early investigations suggest the officer was shot with a police-issued firearm.

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Detectives have launched a critical incident investigation into the man’s death.

“The 46-year-old detective sergeant from a specialist command was on-duty at the time and initial inquiries suggest there are no suspicious circumstances,” a statement from NSW Police read.

“A critical incident investigation has been launched by detectives from the South West Metropolitan Region, who will prepare a report for the Coroner.

“The investigation will also be reviewed by the Professional Standards Command and independently oversighted by the Law Enforcement Conduct Commission (LECC).”

Support services have been made available to the man’s colleagues, the officers who found him and those who were in the station at the time.

The death comes less than two years after another police officer took his own life at the Sydney Police Center in Surry Hills.

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