logo
Ex-classmates died after being treated at same mental health hospital - as concerns raised over other deaths

Ex-classmates died after being treated at same mental health hospital - as concerns raised over other deaths

Sky News21-06-2025
They were former classmates who both died after receiving care from the same mental health hospital three years apart.
Warning: This article contains reference to suicide
Multiple failings led to the death of 22-year-old Alice Figueiredo - who took her own life in July 2015 - and the NHS trust responsible for her care was charged with corporate manslaughter.
Last week, following a months-long trial, the trust was found not guilty of that charge but was convicted of serious health and safety failings.
Karis Braithwate, who had gone to school with Alice, also died in 2018, having been treated by the same NHS trust.
Reports seen by Sky News detail a decade of deaths at North East London NHS Foundation Trust (NELFT), with coroners repeatedly raising concerns about the mental health services provided by the trust - in particular at Goodmayes Hospital in Ilford.
Rushed assessments and neglect were often cited. One patient was marked as alive and well, even though he had taken his own life inside the hospital the previous day.
Another patient told staff he was hearing voices telling him to kill himself, yet staff did not remove crucial items from his possession - items he would later use to take his own life.
Karis, 24, was sent to Goodmayes Hospital after she tried to take her own life at a train station in October 2018. The next day, staff spent 27 minutes assessing her and a further two minutes confirming their conclusion.
She was discharged from hospital in the afternoon. She then went to a nearby railway station and took her own life. Her death came less than an hour after she had left the hospital.
Karis had been friends with Alice, her mother said. The pair had been classmates at the same school.
Karis told her mother she was upset at being put on the same ward where Alice had taken her own life three years earlier.
Her stepfather Mark Bambridge called Karis sweet and kind and said she often "struggled with life". He felt relief when she was taken to hospital, saying: "She was in a place where she would be taken care of."
Karis's mother - who asked not to be named - said her daughter confided in her about the neglect she endured at the hospital.
Karis told her mother that her carer would sleep when they were supposed to be watching over her and said she never felt safe.
"She spoke of her belongings going missing, of being treated with indifference and disrespect, and of staff who showed little concern for her wellbeing," her mother said.
Karis's mother said her daughter was failed by the hospital and the family was offered only a "hollow, superficial and indifferent 'apology' from the administration team of those who were meant to protect her".
In the wake of the verdict in Alice's case, Karis's mother said: "I am holding Alice's family in my thoughts and praying they receive the justice they - and we - so clearly need and deserve."
A spokesperson for NELFT called Karis's death a "profound tragedy" and said the trust had conducted an in-depth review of patient safety since 2018, "resulting in significant changes in the way we assess risk of suicide".
"We train our staff to consider the trauma in a patient's history, rather than focusing solely on their current crisis," the spokesperson added.
"This approach allows us to see the person behind the diagnosis, making it easier to identify warning signs and support safe recovery."
The trust said it had also improved record-keeping and communication between emergency workers and mental health practitioners.
The man marked as alive after he'd died
Sky News looked at more than 20 prevention of future death reports, which are written by a coroner to draw attention to a matter in which they think action could be taken to prevent future deaths.
Behind each report is a different person, but there are some strikingly similar themes - failure to carry out adequate risk assessments; issues sharing and recording information; neglect.
One report said staff at Goodmayes Hospital "panicked and did not follow policy" in the wake of a man's death in 2021, instead writing that he was still alive when he had died the day before.
Speaking in response at the time, the trust said it had written a "detailed action plan" to address concerns raised.
Another report said one woman developed deep vein thrombosis after she was left to sit motionless in her room. She had not eaten or drunk anything in the two days before her death, and the trust was criticised for failing to record her food intake.
Responding to the report at the time, the trust said it had implemented new policies to learn from her death.
Issues stretched beyond Goodmayes Hospital and spanned the entire NHS trust.
One man was not given any community support and overdosed after his access to medication was not limited.
Another man, a father of three, was detained under the Mental Health Act but released from Goodmayes after just a few hours. The 39-year-old was found dead two weeks later after being reported missing by his family.
At his inquest, a coroner raised concerns about the lack of a detailed assessment around him, with a junior doctor saying he was the only doctor available for 11 wards and 200 patients.
'Don't kill yourself on my shift'
It has been 10 years since Alice took her own life inside the walls of Goodmayes Hospital. But current patients say the issues haven't gone away.
Teresa Whitbread said her 18-year-old granddaughter Chantelle was a high suicide risk but she still managed to escape from the hospital "20 times".
"I walked in one day and said, 'Where is Chantelle?', and no one could tell me," she told Sky News.
On another occasion, Chantelle managed to get into the medical room and stabbed herself and a nurse with a needle.
She said one nurse told her granddaughter: "Don't kill yourself on my shift. Wait until you go home and kill yourself."
Teresa grew emotional as she talked about her granddaughter, once a vibrant young girl and avid boxer, whose treatment is now managed by community services.
"It's made her worse," Teresa said of Chantelle's experience at Goodmayes Hospital. "There's no care, there's no care plan, there's no treatment."
The NEFLT said it could not comment on specific cases but added that "patient safety is our absolute priority, and we work closely with our patients and their families to ensure we provide compassionate care tailored to their needs".
Chantelle's family say she is a shell of her former self and have begged mental health services not send her back to Goodmayes.
"Something has to change, and if it doesn't change, [the hospital] needs to be closed down," Teresa said.
"Because people are not safe in there."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Vaccinate your children, parents urged amid surge in measles
Vaccinate your children, parents urged amid surge in measles

Telegraph

time24 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Vaccinate your children, parents urged amid surge in measles

Parents have been urged to vaccinate their children during the summer holidays amid a global surge in measles. The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) fears cases could rise rapidly once the new school term begins in September, with its latest data showing that there have been 145 cases since the last report on July 3. That brings the total since Jan 1 to 674 cases. London and the North West are driving the increase, the agency said, with the majority of infections in children aged under 10. Almost half (48 per cent) of the 674 cases for the year so far have been in London, with 16 per cent in the North West and 10 per cent in the east of England. It comes amid a global rise in measles over the past year, and the UKHSA is concerned that travel during the summer holidays could lead to increased cases in England when the new school term begins. Measles is highly infectious and can lead to serious complications. People with the infection have cold and flu-like symptoms, with a rash appearing a few days later.

First war-injured Gazan child arrives in UK for treatment
First war-injured Gazan child arrives in UK for treatment

BBC News

timean hour ago

  • BBC News

First war-injured Gazan child arrives in UK for treatment

Majid Shaghnobi can't eat or speak like he used to. He can't with his injured mouth covered by a surgical mask, his eyes were beaming as he arrived at London's Heathrow airport on a flight from Cairo, with his mother, brother and little sister."I'm happy to be in England and to get treatment," the 15-year-old told was out trying to get humanitarian aid in the Kuwaiti area of northern Gaza in February last year when an Israeli tank shell exploded nearby, shattering his jaw bone and injuring his leg."One of my friends helped me and took me to the hospital," he says. "They thought I was dead. I had to move my hand to show them that I was alive."Doctors in Gaza saved his life and Majid spent months in hospital, breathing through a tracheostomy tube, before he was evacuated to Egypt in February this year - with Israel's permission - for further medical he's in the UK for surgery at Great Ormond Street children's hospital in London to restore the function of his face. He is the first Gazan child to arrive in the UK for treatment for war injuries, almost two years into a conflict in which more than 50,000 children have reportedly been killed or injured, according to the UN children's charity, Unicef. His arrival follows months of work by a group of volunteer medical professionals who came together in November 2023 to set up Project Pure Hope, which helps injured and sick Gazan children get to the UK for treatment. It is funded by private donations."The UK is home to some of the best paediatric facilities in the world, yet while countries like the US, Belgium, Italy, Switzerland and many others have stepped up to help, the UK has yet to do the same," Project Pure Hope arrival in the UK comes less than a week after Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer promised to evacuate more badly injured children, although the government has released few details of the medical team – all working for free – will include craniofacial, plastic and orthodontic surgeons, with hospital bills paid for by private donations."If we're able to give him a face and a jaw which he can use then it won't be completely normal, but hopefully he'll be able to feed himself and speak, and his facial expressions will be better," says lead surgeon Noor ul Owase Jeelani, a professor of Paediatric Neurosurgery at Great Ormond Street."Hopefully that's going to make a big impact on how he lives and on his future."Our hope is that we will be able to help many more children like him in the coming months. It's our collective moral responsibility." Doctors from the hospital have previously treated patients from Ukraine, and last year helped separate co-joined twins in Jeelani is disappointed that it has taken so long for the first child from Gaza to be treated for war injuries in the UK."As a doctor and as a human, I don't quite understand why it's taken us over 20 months to get to this stage," he Pure Hope has identified 30 critically injured children in Gaza who it hopes to help bring to the UK. It says the government's announcement is "vital and long-overdue", but time is of the essence."Every day of delay risks the lives and futures of children who deserve a chance to live, to recover and to rebuild a life," said Omar Din, its co-founder. In April, the group of volunteers secured visas for two girls -13-year-old Rama and five-year-old Ghena - with life-long medical conditions to also have privately funded operations in the were brought to London after being evacuated to Egypt from Gaza, where - with the destruction of the healthcare system there - they weren't receiving the treatment they I met them in early May, Rama has put on weight and Ghena, who was deeply traumatised and withdrawn, is noticeably more has had laser surgery to relieve the pressure in her left eye, which she was at risk of losing. And Rama has had exploratory surgery for a serious bowel girls are doing well, their mothers they are sick with worry - finding it hard to eat and sleep - about family members left behind in Gaza, who are now struggling to feed themselves."It's better than Gaza here," Rama tells me. "There are no bombs and no fear."But friends message her from Gaza, telling her that they haven't found bread for 10 days and she says her older brother is sleeping on the street after first his home, and then his tent, were bombed."They're hungry. So I don't want to eat either. I feel like I'm still there with them," Rama experts said this week there was mounting evidence that widespread starvation, malnutrition and disease is driving a rise in hunger-related deaths among the 2.1 million Palestinians in who suffered life-changing injuries while out trying to get food for his family, is also worried about his two brothers still in Gaza."I'm scared that they'll die or something will happen to them," he says. "I just want them to be safe."

Female psychologist destroys her career by having SEX with one of her patients
Female psychologist destroys her career by having SEX with one of her patients

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Female psychologist destroys her career by having SEX with one of her patients

A Canadian psychologist had her license revoked after she had sex with one of her clients and gave others illicit drugs. Tatiana Zdyb, of London, Ontario, lost her license on Wednesday after the College of Psychologists and Behaviour Analysts of Ontario found her guilty of professional misconduct. Zdyb had sex with a patient whom she saw from November 2017 to September 2022. The unidentified man began therapy with her on November 14, 2017, and the pair entered into an intimate relationship around the time their sessions were coming to an end. The pair are still together, as of March 2025, a hearing notice revealed. She also provided a female patient with ketamine treatment through MindSetting Institute, where she is the clinical director and owner, from November 2020 to July 2022. She had given the woman a referral to Dr. Michael Hart to get a prescription for ketamine, as she could not provide it as she doesn't hold a medical degree. Ketamine is legal in Canada if it's used medicinally, but it is illegal recreationally. From January to November 2021, the woman received four ketamine-assisted psychotherapy sessions, with the dose increasing each time. After the patient did not receive the results that she wanted, Zdyb then switched her to psilocybin - better known as magic mushrooms. The woman took the substance in gummy form after they were hand-delivered by the psychologist to her door, a hearing notice revealed. Zdyb also shared personal health information with the woman, invited her to her home, and exchanged personal gifts with the patient, the board found. The board also accused her of providing 'psilocybin to [the patient] without adequate knowledge of the quality and/or source of the controlled substance, nor of the safety or efficacy of using it with a vulnerable client with multiple psychiatric diagnoses. 'Ms. Zdyb lacked skill, knowledge and judgment to provide [the patient] with competent services addressing gender dysphoria and related issues.' Zdyb also signed a contract with the the college in January 2024 that she would not refer to herself or let her patients call her doctor and to 'refrain from providing any psychedelic enhanced psychotherapy' to clients - both, of which, she failed to follow. An uncover investigator with the College of Psychologists and Behaviour Analysts of Ontario attended a virtual session with Zdyb through Nectara for a consultation about psychedelic therapy in March 2024. In May of that year, she provided psychedelic-related psychotherapy to the investigator and failed to correct them when they told her they choose her because she was a doctor. She claimed to have obtained a doctorate degree from the University of Western Ontario, her LinkedIn showed. In March 2017, she requested to be able to use the term doctor through the College of Psychologists and Behaviour Analysts of Ontario, but was denied permission. It is unclear why she was denied. The highest level of education that the college recognized for Zdyb was a master's from the Adler School of Psychology in Illinois. Zdyb is a big proponent for psychedelic medicine and has been studying it for 30 years, she said in op-ed for Mental Health Professionals Connector. The drug is administered into the patient intravenously, intramuscularly, sublingually, orally, or nasally, and then they engage in talk therapy while under the influence. Those who use ketamine will have a 2.5-hour session where they ingest 2mg of the drug and then listen to music for 20 to 45 minutes while wearing an eye mask, and then do talk therapy, she told the outlet. The therapy is used to treat multiple psychological conditions, but is most well known for depression treatment. Zdyb's license and certification were revoked after a hearing. Dr. Ian Nicholson, the chair of the panel, said: 'The public places trust in psychologists to uphold the highest standards of care and integrity,' he said. 'Your actions demonstrated a fundamental and egregious betrayal of that trust.' Her lawyer, Grant Ferguson, said the psychologist was remorseful. 'She will be ending her chosen career path and she has taken accountability for all these various faults,' he said. 'She breached the standard and warrants the end of her profession with this college,' he said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store