Ali-Haapala, Anita
Deceased
Anita Elsa Ali-Haapala
Demographics
20y, female
Date of death
2005-05-20
Finding date
2006-10-31
Cause of death
injuries received from a fall from the viewing platform at Perriwen Lookout at Mapleton Falls
AI-generated summary
Anita Elsa Ali-Haapala, a 20-year-old with a long history of mental health issues, presented to Nambour Hospital on 17 May 2005 expressing suicidal ideation. She was admitted to the psychiatric ward with initial diagnosis of adjustment disorder with depressed mood and anxiety. On 20 May 2005, she showed objective clinical improvement: appeared less anxious, denied current suicidal ideation, and made future plans. She was released on leave (not discharged) for weekend monitoring by the Crisis and Assessment Treatment team. Hours later, she drove to Mapleton Falls and fell from a viewing platform. The coroner found her death resulted from either intentional suicide or accidental fall from placing herself in a dangerous situation. Key clinical lesson: despite showing apparent improvement and not meeting involuntary admission criteria under Mental Health Act 2003, heightened suicide risk assessment in patients with recent suicidal ideation requires careful consideration. The coroner recommended that CAT make initial contact with patients and families immediately upon discharge in similar situations.
AI-generated summary and tagging — may contain inaccuracies; refer to original finding for legal purposes.
Specialties
Contributing factors
- recent suicidal ideation
- adjustment disorder with depressed mood
- prominent anxiety symptoms
- long history of mental health issues
- early discharge/release on leave despite recent self-harm and suicidal ideation
- lack of immediate Crisis and Assessment Treatment team contact at discharge
Coroner's recommendations
- When persons with psychological problems are released from hospital in similar situations, the Crisis and Assessment Treatment team should make initial contact with the patient and family at the time the patient returns home to reinforce availability of support and assistance
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