Girl, 14, killed herself after being denied in-person consultations during Covid
A coroner has said the UK is ‘failing’ young people after a 14-year-old girl was denied face-to-face consultations before taking her own life during lockdown.
Penelope Schofield warned there is a ‘clear risk’ young people will succumb to mental illness unless urgent action is taken as she announced she will be writing to health secretary Sajid Javid.
The Senior Coroner for West Sussex concluded that schoolgirl Robyn Skilton killed herself after being let down by ‘gross failures’ in NHS mental health services.
They were so severe in the case of the suicidal teenager – who was continually turned down for assessments – that Ms Schofield ruled the health service was guilty of ‘neglect’.
Robyn, from Horsham in West Sussex, disappeared from her £670,000 family home and hanged herself in a park on May 7 last year.
The inquest into her death heard she had a long history of self-harming and expressing a wish to take her own life.
Despite ‘real serious concerns’ about her mental health, Robyn did not get face-to-face consultations, was not seen by a child psychiatrist or assessed for mental health issues, and was discharged from anNHS service a month before her suicide despite being on its high-risk ‘red list’.
Her father Alan Skilton pleaded with authorities for help. He told the inquest the lack of care his daughter received was ‘astonishing’.
Ms Schofield, who has presided over a number of high-profile inquests including the Shoreham Airshow disaster, announced she will now be writing a report to the government following the hearing.
‘As a society we are failing young people,’ she warned.
Ms Schofield said she was ‘shocked’ to hear evidence during the two day-long hearing that the number of young people seeking mental health help has increased 95% in recent times.
She said: ‘Trying to manage it without more resources means we are not providing the help that young people need. Robyn’s case is a testament to that.
‘It’s a clear risk that more lives will be lost if we don’t address it.
‘Therefore, I will be writing a Prevention of Future Deaths report to the Secretary of State for Health to address these concerns.’
Ms Schofield added that young people ‘need resources to get them the help they need’.
The coroner ruled there were ‘gross failures’ by Sussex Partnership NHS Foundation Trust in Robyn’s case and the Trust’s Sussex Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service [CAMHS].
She said: ‘I do appreciate the landscape the Trust was working in as Covid-19 heightened the level of complexity, but there were many failings in the care provided to Robyn.
‘The totality of these failures, in my mind, means I must reach a conclusion of neglect. There was a gross failure to provide care for someone in a dependant state.
‘Robyn took her own life while struggling with her mental health.
‘Mental health services failed Robyn as they didn’t recognise the deterioration of her mental health, nor provide her with the care she required.
‘Her death was also contributed to by neglect.’
Dr Alison Wallis, the Trust’s clinical director for children’s services, tearfully told Robyn’s parents ‘you didn’t get the service you deserved’ and that Covid impacted their care.
Ms Schofield outlined the key failings.
These included failure by CAMHS to assess her ‘appropriately or at all’, leading to missed opportunities to address her ‘escalating needs’ over several years.
This was most evident ‘in April 2021, when it was clear there was a risk to life’.
Ms Schofield said there was a failure to arrange face-to-face consultations, a lack of direct communication, a failure to offer her CAMHS treatment when she met its criteria, and a failure ‘to have Robyn assessed at any time’.
She ruled the ‘decision to discharge her from CAMHS and instead pursue autism treatment was inappropriate’ and that Robyn should have seen a child psychiatrist.
Robyn’s father, who attended the inquest in Chichester with his wife and Robyn’s mother, Victoria, said ‘we tried everything we could to help’ the teenager.
He said: ‘We do believe if Robyn had been seen properly earlier… her mental health would have improved, and she would not have committed suicide.’
Robyn was ‘outgoing, sociable and made friends easily’, enjoyed ballet, gymnastics and swimming, and was ‘naturally artistic’ and loved singing and dancing.
However, her troubles began in late 2018, after she moved to all-girls Mallais School in Horsham the year before.
Robyn suffered mental health breakdowns, repeatedly self-harmed, attempted suicide, and was admitted to hospital four times, later telling medics she was hearing voices and seeing images.
She was referred to West Sussex County Council’s Youth Emotional Support Service and attended group sessions, but they did not provide her support and was kept on a waiting list for a one-to-one consultation for 10 months.
Eventually, when she had a consultation, it was not effective as it was remote due to the Covid-19 pandemic.
CAMHS would not initially take her on even though she met the criteria, and when the service did, it focused on trying to assess her for autism.
Her parents were told self-harming was a ‘coping mechanism’, Robyn didn’t get bi-weekly check-up calls, and she was not spoken to directly by CAMHS.
Mr Skilton was ‘shocked’ when Robyn was given a self-questionnaire to fill out when she was suicidal and was left repeatedly frustrated at not being kept in the dark by authorities due to ‘confidentiality’.
‘The hospital just seemed to go through a tick-box exercise trying to get her discharged,’ he claimed. ‘Even when she threatened to jump off a bridge our pleas for help were dismissed.’
Robyn said, ‘nobody could help her’ and that she was ‘looking forward to ending her life’.
In early 2021, she was rushed to hospital for trying to overdose on paracetamol and stayed three nights.
Mr Skilton said: ‘We were astonished that after she attempted to take her own life, she left hospital with less support. Nobody seemed to take her mental health seriously.’
He and his wife became so ‘desperate’ at the lack of help their daughter was receiving near her death that they asked CAMHS if she could be sectioned and considered having her admitted to the Priory at £1,300 per night.
Mr Skilton said in the days before her death they got some ‘false hope’ when ‘her mood changed completely’.
Solicitor Rebecca Agnew, from Sussex Partnership NHS Foundation Trust, admitted that ‘CAMHS didn’t assess Robyn appropriately, leading to missed opportunities for her escalating needs’.
She added: ‘The Trust extends a formal apology to her parents for these failings.
‘The Trust did not adequately assess Robyn and provide her with the care and assistance she needed, and this more than minimally, trivially or negligently contributed to Robyn’s death.’
Giving evidence, CAMHS senior practitioner Carly Mendy admitted: ‘It was inappropriate to discharge her from the service.’
CAMHS clinical specialist, Velani Bhebhe also conceded their risk assessment of Robyn was ‘not detailed enough’.
Sussex NHS Trust has started implementing large changes to its mental health services and Ms Schofield will reconvene the inquest in three months to assess them.
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