Mental health trust failed to heed safety warnings, campaigners say

A mental health trust linked to thousands of unexpected patient deaths repeatedly failed to act on coroners' safety warnings, campaigners say.
BBC News has been given exclusive access to new evidence from coroners' reports gathered by a campaign group.
It wants a criminal investigation into why so many patients died at Norfolk and Suffolk NHS Foundation Trust - and has sent police the evidence.
The trust said it was "working really hard" to learn from past deaths.
Bereaved families told the health minister the trust should be shut down.
Campaigners, including patients and bereaved families, claim it is failing to make vital safety improvements despite promising to do so.
Last summer, a report found more than 8,000 mental-health patients had died unexpectedly in Norfolk and Suffolk between 2019 and 2022. This is defined as the death of a patient who has not been identified as critically ill or whose death is not expected by the clinical team.
The new evidence, based on 38 coroners' prevention of future death (PFD) reports since 2013, suggests there were repeated warnings more patients could die unless safety issues were addressed, including:
- dangerously poor record-keeping and communication
- family concerns being ignored
- unsafe levels of staffing at the trust
And campaigners say the trust's failure to improve safety has led to more deaths.
'Real change'
They met Minister for Mental Health Maria Caulfield and MPs, at Westminster, on Tuesday, and demanded an independent public inquiry over "the ongoing deaths crisis" at the trust.
Natalie McLellan, whose daughter Rebecca died in November, says the 24-year-old was abandoned by her mental health team after being diagnosed with bipolar disorder. She wants "real change".
"You can't keep ignoring mental health in this country - there is a death crisis and these beautiful young people, and old, are losing their lives because of inadequacies," Natalie said. "We need to address it now."
Seven years ago, following the death of Henry Curtis-Williams, 21, a coroner warned about poor record-keeping.

Henry was sectioned and taken to hospital in 2016, after being found by police on a bridge, but was discharged the next day by a junior member of staff and a few days later killed himself.
In the PFD report about Henry's death, assistant coroner Dr Séan Cummings said there was a "culture of not recording contemporaneous notes" and communication between staff was "very informal" with "no record kept of important messages relayed".
Henry's mother, Pippa, says her only child's death has had a catastrophic impact on her and she remains devastated by his treatment.
"I replay it in my mind often," she said. "It really was a catalogue of one failure after another, particularly in the clinical note keeping and the premature discharge.
"I feel on a daily basis nothing other than anger and bitter resentment towards the trust.

"If you don't keep accurate clinical notes in chronological order, then how can a new nurse that comes on shift have any idea what's happened previously to the patient":[]}