GB
  
You are currently viewing the United Kingdom version of the site.
Would you like to switch to your local site?
4 MIN READ TIME

Deaths in mental health care follow NHS failures, investigation shows

At least 271 highly vulnerable mental health patients have died over the last six years following failings in NHS care, according to an investigation carried out by The Guardian.

As part of this, coroners have issued ‘prevention of future deaths’ notices to 136 NHS bodies between 2012 and 2017 because of lapses of care, The Guardian has revealed.

The NHS bodies included mental health trusts, acute hospitals, ambulance services and GP surgeries. The coroners identiied problems including errors, misjudgments, lawed processes, a lack of staff or beds and poor training.

Read the complete article and many more in this issue of Mental Health Nursing
Purchase options below
If you own the issue, Login to read the full article now.
Single Digital Issue April/May 2018
 
£4.99 / issue
This issue and other back issues are not included in a new subscription. Subscriptions include the latest regular issue and new issues released during your subscription. Mental Health Nursing
Annual Digital Subscription £19.99 billed annually
Save
33%
£3.33 / issue

This article is from...


View Issues
Mental Health Nursing
April/May 2018
VIEW IN STORE

Other Articles in this Issue


Mental Health Nursing
LEARNING HOW TO KEEP STRESS UNDER CONTROL
Athia Manawar, senior memory nurse, Tees Esk Wear Valleys Foundation Trust
NHS failing on mental health
Vulnerable patients with mental health conditions are
Call to minimise the financial harm caused by mental health crisis
Call to minimise the financial harm caused by mental
Government urged to restore student bursaries
The government needs to restore nursing bursaries as
Action needed to end barriers to CAMHS
Barriers for mental health services for children and
Submission provided to consultation on role of nursing associates
Submission provided to consultation on role of nursing
MHN lead professional officer update
Dave Munday, Unite in Health. Twitter: @davidamunday
A focus for students
Colin Walsh, Mental Health Nursing editorial board
Learning to carry out effective assessments
Colin Walsh reflects on the importance of carrying out assessments in an understanding manner
Equally Well: building a new collaborative for equal health
Andy Bell reports on a new initiative to support the physical health of people with a mental illness
Emotional intelligence and compassion: considerations for recruiting mental health nursing students
Steve Lyon Senior lecturer, University of Huddersfield Correspondence: steve.lyon2@hud.ac.uk
Non-violent resistance: towards a radically alternative mental health nursing practice
Mark Batterham Young persons’ specialist substance misuse worker Luke Cousins Young people’s substance misuse worker Ramon Wilson Young persons’ specialist substance misuse worker Dr Andrew Mathers Senior lecturer in sociology and criminology
Celebrating and promoting radicalism
George Coxon highlights the importance of encouraging radical approaches in mental health care
Speak up: There is always hope
Hope. It is the one thing that, whatever the situation
The Power Threat Meaning Framework: An alternative to psychiatric diagnosis
Lucy Johnstone reports on the development of a new non-diagnostic perspective on mental illness
Inside the mind of…Vanessa Garrity
Mental Health Nursing meets the mental health nurse, healthcare consultant and director of Sociable Angels. Follow her on Twitter at @WeMHNurses and @VanessaLGarrity