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Home / Crime and Justice / Coroner Blasts Hospital for Missed Suicide Assessment

Coroner Blasts Hospital for Missed Suicide Assessment

11 Feb

•

Summary

  • A patient died after a missed opportunity for a mental health assessment.
  • He waited two hours, exceeding the 10-minute target for suicidal patients.
  • Coroner cited chronic understaffing and a lack of resources.
Coroner Blasts Hospital for Missed Suicide Assessment

A coroner has determined that a "missed opportunity" occurred when a high-risk patient was not adequately assessed before his death by suicide. Stephen Loughead, aged 50, died in hospital the week following his rescue from a body of water in March 2026.

He had been taken to the Mater Hospital's emergency department by police after visiting a city centre station. Despite being considered "actively suicidal," Mr. Loughead waited two hours for a doctor's assessment, far exceeding the recommended 10-minute timeframe. The coroner, Anne-Louise Toal, noted that chronic pressures on staff meant longer waits were not uncommon for such patients.

Coroner Toal highlighted that the emergency department's noisy and busy atmosphere worsened Mr. Loughead's declining mental health. This led to a crucial missed chance to address his suicidal thoughts before he left the hospital and subsequently entered the River Lagan. The coroner concluded that a "chronic lack of resources" at the hospital currently makes it difficult to foresee any significant changes in similar future situations. The case was described as extremely tragic, with condolences extended to Mr. Loughead's family. His organs were donated following his death.

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Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
The coroner found a missed opportunity to assess Stephen Loughead, a high-risk patient, before his death by suicide.
Stephen Loughead waited two hours at the Mater Hospital's emergency department due to chronic pressures on staff and a lack of resources.
The coroner cited a missed opportunity for assessment, the hospital's busy environment exacerbating his mental health, and a chronic lack of resources as contributing factors.

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