70 results for “possible personality disorder”
Inquest into the disappearance and suspected death of Helen Stacey
19y · Female·The available evidence does not allow for a finding as to the cause of death
Helen Stacey, a 19-year-old university student, disappeared on 19 August 1958 after absconding from Broughton Hall mental health facility. She had been referred for urgent psychiatric admission following concerning disclosures of suicidal ideation, knowledge of suicide methods, and increasing depression after a relationship ended. Medical staff documented her as a real suicide risk with signs of psychosis and possible severe personality disorder. Despite her family's extensive search and modern investigative checks (DNA database, financial records, immigration records, Medicare records), no trace of Helen was ever found. The coroner concluded on the balance of probabilities that Helen died intentionally by self-harm shortly after leaving the hospital on 19 August 1958, though the specific cause and place of death could not be determined. This case underscores the critical importance of suicide risk assessment, secure management of high-risk patients, and early family notification and involvement when psychiatric patients abscond.
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