A 17-year-old girl with major depressive disorder, a history of self-harm and overdoses, parent-child conflict, and a disclosed history of childhood sexual abuse died by suicide on her first day of Year 12. Critical clinical failures included: (1) Monash Health's failure to report her disclosure of childhood sexual abuse to Child Protection despite mandatory reporting obligations and policies in place; (2) inadequate specialist assessment and treatment of trauma from sexual abuse across mental health services; (3) failure to provide information about specialist sexual assault services; (4) discharge from CAMHS without adequate safety planning or follow-up after Catherine disengaged. While complex psychosocial factors contributed, the coroner found the health service failures represented lost opportunities for earlier specialised intervention, though no direct causal link to her death was established. Improved staff training and access to specialist services for abuse survivors are essential to prevent similar deaths.
AI-generated summary and tagging — may contain inaccuracies; refer to original finding for legal purposes.
failure to report disclosure of sexual abuse to Child Protection
inadequate trauma-informed assessment and treatment
lack of specialist sexual assault service referral
disengagement from mental health services
first day back at school after holiday
social conflict with friends on Facebook and regarding romantic relationship
Coroner's recommendations
Monash Health Emergency Department should develop patient and family information sheets regarding Victorian specialist sexual assault and other appropriate services for patients/families who disclose or are aware to have made disclosures of sexual assault
Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists should provide advice to members and incorporate into training program guidance on best practice responding to disclosure and clinical treatments for impacts of childhood sexual abuse, including available Victorian specialist services
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