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STV News
17-06-2025
- Health
- STV News
'I missed around half of school - I refused point-blank to go'
Care experienced young people are receiving as little as 30 minutes of education a week, according to a report. Charity Who Cares? Scotland found that looked-after pupils face an exclusion rate almost six times higher than the average. The research has been described as a 'reality check' for those claiming Scotland is on track to keep The Promise to transform care by 2030. It calls for an end to formal and informal exclusion for care experienced pupils. STV News spoke to young people affected, including Honey, who has been in foster care for four years. She's recently been assigned an advocacy worker to ensure she has a say in her future, after missing out on around half of her education. iStock Honey said she missed her S3 exams. She said: 'I missed probably half of my school because I didn't go to my S3 exams. I barely went in. 'I just refused point-blank to even go into school. 'Even when I had a cut down timetable, I would still not go in. I've probably missed a huge bit of school. 'Going to school is a huge support system and having teachers that understand you help a lot. I've also just been given an advocacy worker. 'I think if I was younger, I would have benefited a lot from that if I had it before. 'When you're a kid, it's really hard to speak up in front of loads of strangers, in meetings because you don't have that sort of confidence. 'Sometimes it's just good to have someone that's there for you and you know that they have the right thing planned for you.' Nicola Killean, Children and Young People's Commissioner Scotland, said: 'Within the report we heard that there were some children and young people who were getting offered 30 minutes a week of education, sometimes in a room with minimal support and minimal engagement with other children, young people and the rest of the school. 'That's really worrying. 'I'm calling for the Scottish Government to ensure that there is monitoring scrutiny of when these are happening, why they're happening, and whether they are in the best interests of children and young people.' The Promise, set out in 2020, aimed to radically reform how young people are cared for in Scotland. At the time, Nicola Sturgeon described The Promise as 'one of the most important moments' in her time as First Minister, and the Scottish Government said it was committed to implementing the recommendations within a decade. Louise Hunter, chief executive of Who Cares? Scotland, who produced the report, said: 'Unfortunately, this tells us what we've known for a while that The Promise isn't being kept for the vast majority of care experienced children, young people who had an education. 'That basic right to education is not being met. And that's not what The Promise said.' She added: 'We know that are huge pressures on the workforce, on funding. 'The young people that we work for and speak to tell us that if they had someone who was in their corner helping them understand their rights, then they might have an opportunity to have those rights upheld.' The Scottish Government insists exclusion should only be used as a last resort. First Minister John Swinney said this week: 'There are good examples in our education system about nurturing approaches, about inclusive practices that enable individuals to sustain their education. 'It is far preferable to exclusion and that will particularly relate to care experienced young people whose prospects and opportunities we need to address as a matter of urgency.' Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country


Scoop
14-05-2025
- Health
- Scoop
New Zealand Ranked 32nd Out Of 36 Countries For Child Wellbeing Is Unacceptable
A new international report card comparing childhood experiences in wealthy countries shows the need for urgent progress in Aotearoa New Zealand, says Chief Children's Commissioner Dr Claire Achmad. Published today, the latest UNICEF Innocenti 'Report Card 19: Fragile Gains – Child Wellbeing at Risk in an Unpredictable World' ranks New Zealand in 32nd place out of 36 countries for overall child wellbeing. It ranks New Zealand last – in 36th place of the world's wealthy countries – for child and youth mental health. The report card shows New Zealand has the highest suicide rate for children out of the world's wealthy countries, at a rate of almost three times higher than the average*. It also shows again that New Zealand's children face a major problem when it comes to bullying, with the second highest rate of children experiencing bullying, out of the countries included. Dr Achmad says these rankings, published just a week before Budget Day, show that meaningful investment in children and young people is urgently needed to support child and youth mental health, including suicide prevention measures, and to better support the prevention of bullying in schools and communities. 'I've been clear that we need to see a central focus on children in Budget 2025,' she says. 'This is necessary to deliver on the Government's own Child and Youth Strategy to 'make New Zealand the best place in the world to be a child.' 'It's devastating that among other high-income countries, we reported the highest youth suicide rate. We also know that attempted suicide rates for rangatahi Māori, Rainbow children and young people and disabled children are higher. 'This is absolutely unacceptable and we need to focus on making our country one where all children and young people are included, safe and where their diversity is respected and valued. I call on the Minister for Mental Health, and all ministers, to pay close attention to these findings and progress implementation of recommendations that already exist under reports such as the cross-party 'Under One Umbrella' and the Auditor-General's 'Meeting the mental health needs of young New Zealanders' reports. 'I'm also calling on the Government to collect and publish good-quality, disaggregated and timely data relating to child mortality. 'Significantly reducing childhood poverty must be a core investment area for the Government, given the ripple effects it has on children's lives. The data in the Government's own recent Annual Report on Children and Young People's wellbeing shows that we are going backwards when it comes to providing enough safe housing, healthy food and primary health and dental care. 'I want to see all children in our country flourish to their full potential. As this international comparison shows, we can and must do much, much better for children. These are their basic rights that we are talking about, and as a small, relatively rich country, it shouldn't be like this.' 'The solutions to the problems highlighted in this report card have already been identified by children and young people themselves, and are well documented in our mokopuna voices reports such as such as 'A place to talk peacefully' and 'You need to get in early, as soon as you see people struggling'. 'These solutions must now be actioned because children only get one chance at childhood, and right now for too many in New Zealand, it's far from the best in the world.' * UNICEF Innocenti used the most recent reliable data from each country, with 3-year averages to smooth fluctuations. The most recent reliable suicide data from New Zealand was from 2020. Therefore, the New Zealand youth suicide data in the report card relates to 2018 – 2020. The Ministry of Health has stated that unpublished data on suspected suicides indicates that rates are falling. However, New Zealand's youth suicide rate is still a notable outlier among the group of countries in this report card, which is consistent with other sources like the New Zealand Youth Health Survey.

Sydney Morning Herald
23-04-2025
- Health
- Sydney Morning Herald
‘They took my child from me': Families call for change after Indigenous suicides in same hospital
Jessica was an Indigenous woman with Aboriginal lineage from her father's side. Her great-grandfather was an Arrernte and Warumungu man, and part of the stolen generations. Between March 2018 and January 2020, Jessica was hospitalised following self-harm or suicide attempts and on January 8, 2021, she was taken to Melbourne's St Vincent's Hospital and placed in the ICU following a suicide attempt. There, a doctor noted she had borderline personality disorder and ongoing suicidal ideation. Days later on January 12, 2021, Jessica was admitted to the acute inpatient service as a voluntary patient, and on January 27 and 28, her family said she took unescorted leave, in contravention of her hospital risk assessment. While off hospital grounds on her own, she purchased items she'd later use to take her life. She was found unconscious in her hospital room at 12.40pm on January 28, 2021, and died four days later. The family say the hospital owed them a duty of care and has begun legal proceedings against the hospital while also advocating for an inquest into Jessica's death, as they fear she wasn't provided with culturally safe care. 'She was just the most beautiful, caring, gentle, loving kid. Except to her herself,' Jones said. Jessica's family has fond memories of her childhood, of her adopting a blue-tongue lizard as a pet and of lining snails up along her arms to feed it. 'I still remember a little girl at school who was a little left-of-centre and pretty difficult. Jess said, 'Mum, she's got no other friends, I've got to be her friend',' Jones says. 'That was grade 3.' Jessica also loved cows, dogs and the cats at her aunt's property in Western Australia where she spent Christmases and other holidays during her teen years. There, she connected with her Aboriginal heritage and bonded with the paternal aunty she'd grow to call her black mum, Aunty Jacqueline McGowan-Jones, the current Commissioner for Children and Young People in Western Australia. Her family recall Jessica grew a little too fond of hair dye, colouring her locks all colours of the rainbow despite the pleas of her family to 'not this time'. That, Jones says, later grew to be a warning sign that Jessica was trying to become a different person, and a sign she was spiralling as a chronic self-harmer when the demons took hold. Jones says the only way to obtain documents about her daughter's death has been to apply under freedom of information laws, but more than four years later, she says she still has no idea what her daughter had in her system at the time she committed suicide. 'In my head, I have it that she was intoxicated,' she sobs. 'If it comes back that she was stone-cold sober, I'll have to re-write the whole story in my head.' Jessica's two mums have since launched a civil case against the hospital as the law mandates civil proceedings commence within three years of a death. They don't know if an inquest will ever be held. At a Yoorrook Justice Commission hearing in May last year, Aunty Jill Gallagher, the chief executive officer of Victoria's Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation [VACCHO], raised the issue of Indigenous suicides in hospital, including in Watts-Owens' case. Gallagher said mandatory, cultural safety training – which might include more checks of patients – was a 'fundamental necessity' if the community was to receive equitable and respectful care for First Nations peoples. At the time, Gallagher revealed that three Aboriginal people had killed themselves in hospitals in the preceding two years. She said Watts-Owens, who worked at the Office of Public Prosecutions, admitted herself to St Vincent's Hospital mental health unit for help in January 2024. After receiving medication, the 24-year-old was left alone before she was found unresponsive, Gallagher said. 'They were not going there to die. They were going there for help and to live,' she told the commission. For Sharon Watts, Makalie's mother, learning her daughter died at the same hospital in similar circumstances to Jessica Rain Jones has only compounded her grief. She believes the hospital also failed in its duty of care for her daughter, a proud Tagalaka Worimi Kukatj woman, and is also hopeful of an inquest into her death. 'My child went to hospital because she wasn't feeling well. Since she was a little girl, I always said, 'bubba, go to doctor or hospital when you're not feeling well',' Watts says. 'How, in this day and age, are Jennie and I now sitting here in the same situation? They took my child from me. They had a duty of care.' Watts says her daughter was a young, active, intelligent Aboriginal woman – one of five girls – who mentored others at university and was proud to be an advocate for Indigenous people and women. 'Makalie was a special child, one of five girls. I will not leave this earth until I get justice for my child so no other family has to go through what I had to go through,' Watts says. 'We loved her, we miss her and we grieve. The pain is unimaginable.' Last month, the Coroners Court of Victoria revealed 27 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people died by suicide in 2024, up from 22 in 2023, and 19 in 2022. A report published by the Coroners Court of Victoria for the first time in March found: For Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander females, suicides most commonly occurred in those aged 18–24 (38.2 per cent) and 25–34 (35.3 per cent) between 2020 and 2024. From 2020 to 2024, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander suicides occurred more frequently in regional areas (54.9 per cent) than metropolitan areas (45.1 per cent). For non-Indigenous people, 66 per cent of suicides occurred in metropolitan Melbourne. 56.6 per cent of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander suicides were people aged under 35 years, compared to 30.2 per cent of non-Indigenous suicides. The data showed the average annual rate of Victorian suicides among this demographic remains almost three times higher than the non-Indigenous population. The report also found stressors contributing to suicides between 2020 and 2023 included diagnosed and suspected mental ill health, interpersonal concerns, substance use, exposure to family violence and recent contact with the justice system. At the time, State Coroner John Cain labelled the findings 'deeply concerning' and said it was critical to ensure proper supports were in place to drive down suicides in these communities. Loading This week a Coroners Court spokesperson said the investigation into Jessica's death was ongoing, with no further hearing dates currently scheduled for this investigation. St Vincent's Hospital Melbourne chief executive officer Nicole Tweddle offered the organisation's sincere condolences to the families and loved ones of Jessica and Makalie. Tweedle says even with the efforts of skilled people, motivated by the best of intentions, premature and preventable Aboriginal deaths in institutional settings – including healthcare – continue to confront Australia. Tweddle says St Vincent's has made changes to its acute mental health service – and in other areas of the hospital – to make it safer and to respond to issues raised by Jessica's death. These include working with the Victorian Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisations and Karabena Consulting to improve the cultural safety of people in their care. 'We have been open to guidance and best-practice recommendations on what to change or improve. We will always be open to such advice,' Tweddle says. 'Nothing we say will reduce the sorrow and hurt felt by these two young women's families, friends and communities, nor diminish their need for answers. What we commit ourselves to doing is always being open and working towards better health outcomes for First Nations Australians.'

The Age
23-04-2025
- Health
- The Age
‘They took my child from me': Families call for change after Indigenous suicides in same hospital
Jessica was an Indigenous woman with Aboriginal lineage from her father's side. Her great-grandfather was an Arrernte and Warumungu man, and part of the stolen generations. Between March 2018 and January 2020, Jessica was hospitalised following self-harm or suicide attempts and on January 8, 2021, she was taken to Melbourne's St Vincent's Hospital and placed in the ICU following a suicide attempt. There, a doctor noted she had borderline personality disorder and ongoing suicidal ideation. Days later on January 12, 2021, Jessica was admitted to the acute inpatient service as a voluntary patient, and on January 27 and 28, her family said she took unescorted leave, in contravention of her hospital risk assessment. While off hospital grounds on her own, she purchased items she'd later use to take her life. She was found unconscious in her hospital room at 12.40pm on January 28, 2021, and died four days later. The family say the hospital owed them a duty of care and has begun legal proceedings against the hospital while also advocating for an inquest into Jessica's death, as they fear she wasn't provided with culturally safe care. 'She was just the most beautiful, caring, gentle, loving kid. Except to her herself,' Jones said. Jessica's family has fond memories of her childhood, of her adopting a blue-tongue lizard as a pet and of lining snails up along her arms to feed it. 'I still remember a little girl at school who was a little left-of-centre and pretty difficult. Jess said, 'Mum, she's got no other friends, I've got to be her friend',' Jones says. 'That was grade 3.' Jessica also loved cows, dogs and the cats at her aunt's property in Western Australia where she spent Christmases and other holidays during her teen years. There, she connected with her Aboriginal heritage and bonded with the paternal aunty she'd grow to call her black mum, Aunty Jacqueline McGowan-Jones, the current Commissioner for Children and Young People in Western Australia. Her family recall Jessica grew a little too fond of hair dye, colouring her locks all colours of the rainbow despite the pleas of her family to 'not this time'. That, Jones says, later grew to be a warning sign that Jessica was trying to become a different person, and a sign she was spiralling as a chronic self-harmer when the demons took hold. Jones says the only way to obtain documents about her daughter's death has been to apply under freedom of information laws, but more than four years later, she says she still has no idea what her daughter had in her system at the time she committed suicide. 'In my head, I have it that she was intoxicated,' she sobs. 'If it comes back that she was stone-cold sober, I'll have to re-write the whole story in my head.' Jessica's two mums have since launched a civil case against the hospital as the law mandates civil proceedings commence within three years of a death. They don't know if an inquest will ever be held. At a Yoorrook Justice Commission hearing in May last year, Aunty Jill Gallagher, the chief executive officer of Victoria's Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation [VACCHO], raised the issue of Indigenous suicides in hospital, including in Watts-Owens' case. Gallagher said mandatory, cultural safety training – which might include more checks of patients – was a 'fundamental necessity' if the community was to receive equitable and respectful care for First Nations peoples. At the time, Gallagher revealed that three Aboriginal people had killed themselves in hospitals in the preceding two years. She said Watts-Owens, who worked at the Office of Public Prosecutions, admitted herself to St Vincent's Hospital mental health unit for help in January 2024. After receiving medication, the 24-year-old was left alone before she was found unresponsive, Gallagher said. 'They were not going there to die. They were going there for help and to live,' she told the commission. For Sharon Watts, Makalie's mother, learning her daughter died at the same hospital in similar circumstances to Jessica Rain Jones has only compounded her grief. She believes the hospital also failed in its duty of care for her daughter, a proud Tagalaka Worimi Kukatj woman, and is also hopeful of an inquest into her death. 'My child went to hospital because she wasn't feeling well. Since she was a little girl, I always said, 'bubba, go to doctor or hospital when you're not feeling well',' Watts says. 'How, in this day and age, are Jennie and I now sitting here in the same situation? They took my child from me. They had a duty of care.' Watts says her daughter was a young, active, intelligent Aboriginal woman – one of five girls – who mentored others at university and was proud to be an advocate for Indigenous people and women. 'Makalie was a special child, one of five girls. I will not leave this earth until I get justice for my child so no other family has to go through what I had to go through,' Watts says. 'We loved her, we miss her and we grieve. The pain is unimaginable.' Last month, the Coroners Court of Victoria revealed 27 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people died by suicide in 2024, up from 22 in 2023, and 19 in 2022. A report published by the Coroners Court of Victoria for the first time in March found: For Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander females, suicides most commonly occurred in those aged 18–24 (38.2 per cent) and 25–34 (35.3 per cent) between 2020 and 2024. From 2020 to 2024, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander suicides occurred more frequently in regional areas (54.9 per cent) than metropolitan areas (45.1 per cent). For non-Indigenous people, 66 per cent of suicides occurred in metropolitan Melbourne. 56.6 per cent of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander suicides were people aged under 35 years, compared to 30.2 per cent of non-Indigenous suicides. The data showed the average annual rate of Victorian suicides among this demographic remains almost three times higher than the non-Indigenous population. The report also found stressors contributing to suicides between 2020 and 2023 included diagnosed and suspected mental ill health, interpersonal concerns, substance use, exposure to family violence and recent contact with the justice system. At the time, State Coroner John Cain labelled the findings 'deeply concerning' and said it was critical to ensure proper supports were in place to drive down suicides in these communities. Loading This week a Coroners Court spokesperson said the investigation into Jessica's death was ongoing, with no further hearing dates currently scheduled for this investigation. St Vincent's Hospital Melbourne chief executive officer Nicole Tweddle offered the organisation's sincere condolences to the families and loved ones of Jessica and Makalie. Tweedle says even with the efforts of skilled people, motivated by the best of intentions, premature and preventable Aboriginal deaths in institutional settings – including healthcare – continue to confront Australia. Tweddle says St Vincent's has made changes to its acute mental health service – and in other areas of the hospital – to make it safer and to respond to issues raised by Jessica's death. These include working with the Victorian Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisations and Karabena Consulting to improve the cultural safety of people in their care. 'We have been open to guidance and best-practice recommendations on what to change or improve. We will always be open to such advice,' Tweddle says. 'Nothing we say will reduce the sorrow and hurt felt by these two young women's families, friends and communities, nor diminish their need for answers. What we commit ourselves to doing is always being open and working towards better health outcomes for First Nations Australians.'