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Mental Health patient
71y · Male·hypoxic brain injury due to hanging
A 71-year-old farmer with a 10-year history of major depressive disorder with melancholic features died by hanging on 22 July 2005, three days after admission to a private psychiatric hospital (Belmont) following a medication overdose of uncertain intent. His psychiatrist (Dr D.) documented suspicions on 20 July that the patient might be harbouring concealed suicidal thoughts, but this concern was not adequately communicated to nursing staff or family. No formal check of the patient's belongings at admission identified a physiotherapy rope that was subsequently used. Key clinical lessons include: the importance of thorough suicide risk assessment with comprehensive documentation; direct communication between psychiatrists and family members when suicide risk is suspected; explicit written instructions to nursing staff regarding safety concerns; structured assessment within two hours of psychiatric admission; and systematic checking and removal of potential ligature points and harmful items during admission. The hospital subsequently improved its admission processes, risk assessment procedures, and physical environment safety audits.
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