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Preventable Death: Family Fights Mental Health System
7 Jun
Summary
- Family claims Gus' death was preventable after discharge.
- Concerns raised over unclear advice and delayed response.
- Systemic issues in mental health transition of care highlighted.

Gus was discharged on November 18, 2026, after his final electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) session, still experiencing cognitive side effects. His care status was downgraded from high to low needs just days before his death. His mother reported he expressed suicidal ideation the night before he died, but felt uncertain about whom to contact for immediate help.
Despite communication with various mental health services, his mother received what she described as unclear advice, including being told to let Gus sleep and that he would be checked on later. The community mental health team did not contact Gus until after his father called emergency services.
An internal review acknowledged miscommunication regarding care responsibility but stated it did not impact follow-up arrangements. Gus' parents disputed the review's findings, arguing it misrepresented Gus and downplayed systemic issues. Public health officials and experts have long warned about the strain on community mental health services and the heightened suicide risk post-discharge.
Calls for strengthening discharge safeguards and family communication have intensified, especially following a significant number of suicides in NSW. Experts emphasize the critical nature of the period immediately after hospital discharge, citing extraordinarily high suicide rates during this time and the need for better contingency planning for families.