[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Chambers v HM Coroner for Preston and West Lancashire & Ors [2015] EWHC 31 (Admin) (14 January 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2015/31.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 31 (Admin) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT (MANCHESTER)
B e f o r e :
THE CHIEF CORONER (HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER THORNTON QC)
____________________
MISS REBECCA CHAMBERS (BY HER MOTHER AND LITIGATION FRIEND MRS DEBORAH CHAMBERS) |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
HM CORONER FOR PRESTON AND WEST LANCASHIRE |
Defendant |
|
-and- |
||
NATIONAL OFFENDER MANAGEMENT SERVICE FOR HM PRISONS MRS PAULINE CHAMBERS |
Interested Parties |
____________________
Bridget Dolan (instructed by HM Coroner for Preston and West Lancashire) for the Defendant
Thomas Leeper (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) for the First Interested Party
The Second Interested Party did not appear and was not represented.
Hearing dates: 16 December 2014
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Bean :
This is the judgment of the court to which we have both contributed.
a) "between 09:30am and 10:12am on 26th January 2004 at HMP Preston in Cell C2-31; and that this was
b) from hanging which caused his death. Among the contributing factors were his family problems and bullying. There is not enough evidence to suggest that the prison were aware of this bullying."
Irregularity of proceedings
"… while any deliberate killing by state agents is bound to arouse very grave disquiet, such an event is likely to be rare and the state's main task is to establish the facts and prosecute the culprits; a systemic failure to protect the lives of persons detained may well call for even more anxious consideration and raise even more intractable problems."
Insufficiency of inquiry
"From the evidence available to me it is clear that Stephen Chambers was a vulnerable individual, at times a fantasist (his account that his mother had died was not true) who at times, and in response to (usually) family issues, but also to issues (perhaps bullying) in the prison presented with serious self-harm behaviour. The records suggest that in a prison environment he was a significant risk of harm through hanging. There appear to have been since 1991 5 hanging incidents in prison, prior to the event that led to his death.
I have no information about him in the community. There is no evidence of any contact between the prison service (healthcare) with his general practitioner in the community to identify if there was any mental health history in the community which would have been of relevance. In the setting of his history of self-harm this would have been a normal practice in my view.
I cannot find any evidence that when he was seen by mental health nurses or when he was seen by doctors (and I have presumed that all his medical contacts were with prison doctors) he was given a formal medical illness diagnosis. However he was being treated with antidepressants, this indicates that he must have been thought to be suffering from a depressive disorder (in the International Classification of Mental Disorders ICD10 this is defined in F32). Apart from sleep disturbance at times and depressed mood there is no evidence from the notes of the symptom profile that one would expect to find in a depressive disorder. I therefore cannot give any support to a formal mental health depressive disorder diagnosis. Nevertheless he was clearly thought to have had an abnormal mental state/illness by the prison doctor, which required medication rather than support.
Finally in the setting of serious self-harm, he should in my view have been assessed by a psychiatrist, and this was not done at any stage during his period in prison. HMP Preston would have had visiting psychiatrist availability. A psychiatric detailed assessment of diagnosis and risk could then have been undertaken. This was never triggered, and should have been in the setting of his history.
It is also of concern that a F2052SH process initiated for self-harm (of which there was an extensive history) could be closed by staff who would not have had any specialist understanding or training in mental health assessments or risk."
"I believe he was not suitably reviewed. If one considers the concept of equivalence – that a person in prison should receive the same quality of healthcare available in the community – then there were omissions. There was at no stage a psychiatric assessment, and this could have been easily accessed. Such an assessment would have allowed a better understanding of diagnosis and risk. If he had presented with same self-harm behaviour in the community, he would have been assessed in a casualty department and probably admitted for a period for psychiatric assessment.
The input from mental health professionals appears to have been nurse led. Whilst this is not a criticism, at some point a psychiatrist should have been asked to see the prisoner. But, the decisions to take him off active F2052SH monitoring was taken by non-mental health professionals. In the setting of his history of risk, and the fact that he was being treated with antidepressant medication, this all suggests that mental health expertise should have been brought into the decision making process."
"[An] inquest in this particular case that does not have available to it evidence from an independent consultant psychiatrist and, I would add, an independent general practitioner, would not comply with Article 2 … I should emphasise that this decision is confined solely to the facts of this particular case. It does not necessarily follow that evidence of this kind will be required in every case of a suicide in prison."
Discussion and conclusion
"By one means or another [by short-form conclusion, narrative conclusion or conclusion given in answer to the coroner's questions] the jury should, to meet the procedural obligation in article 2, have been permitted to express their conclusion on the central facts before them."
"These questions [on family problems and bullying], in my view, address central factual issues in the case. But, members of the Jury, what are the central issues in the case are a matter for you. If I have not addressed an issue which you think is an important issue you should record your findings on this point, whether this relates to an individual's conduct or a system operated by the prison. If you identify any actions by an individual or defects in any system operated you should go on to consider whether or not this problem may have caused or contributed to Stephen Chambers' death."