Mums say delays to inquests an âact of crueltyâ
Two bereaved mothers have said waiting years for their daughtersâ inquests is unacceptable and has been an âact of crueltyâ against them.
BBC analysis of Ministry of Justice figures found that the number of families in England and Wales waiting for an inquest for more than two years has more than tripled since 2018.
Gina Schiraldi, from Taunton, said waiting five years for her 19-year-old daughterâs inquest left her in constant âlimboâ, while Joanna Davis, from Cheltenham, said waiting six years for her 22-year-old daughterâs inquest meant she could not process her death.
A Government spokesperson said they are determined to reduce delays to inquests for grieving families.
âNot acceptableâ
In 2019, Cariss Stone was found unresponsive on the bathroom floor of her room at a mental health unit at Wellsprings Hospital in Taunton.
The 19-year-old died two days later after a decision was made to withdraw life-sustaining care.
As with most people, the first time that her mother, Ms Schiraldi, had experienced inquests was when she was told that one had been launched to examine the circumstances of her daughterâs death.
She said: âI think somebody from Somerset coronerâs office got in touch with me and they said Carissâ inquest would be in about a year.
âAnd then it was two years and then it was three years and then four years.â
The inquest was finally held and concluded in April this year, almost half a decade after her death.
Ms Schiraldi said: âNearly five years is just not acceptable. We shouldnât have to wait that long.
âIt feels like an act of cruelty, not only having to deal with all the grief and then youâve got that [incomplete inquest] in the background.
âYou feel in limbo, basically until one day you get a phone call to say the inquest is going ahead in a few monthsâ time. Itâs delayed the grieving process.â
An inquest is held when:
- The cause of death is unknown
- The person died of an unnatural or violent death
- The person died in prison or police custody or an NHS mental health facility
The Coroners (Inquests) Rules 2013 stipulate a six-month timeline for the completion of an inquest. Yet a BBC investigation has found that in the West of England â Bristol, Somerset, Gloucestershire and Wiltshire â nearly half of all inquests opened in 2023 took longer to conclude.
Additionally, the number of families waiting more than two years for an inquest in England and Wales to conclude has risen from 472 in 2018 to 1,685 in 2023, a rise of 257%.
The situation Ms Schiraldi described is something that Joanna Davis and her Cheltenham-based family know all too well.
Her daughter Laura Davis took her own life at a mental health hospital in Warrington in 2017, aged 22, but the family had to wait until last year to get answers about the circumstances of their daughterâs death.
Ms Davis believes the six-year delay at Cheshire Coronerâs Court hampered their ability to grieve properly.
She said: âYouâre just sitting around waiting for reports, looking through reams of paperwork and meeting people to go over how she died.
âGoing over that for such a long period, you donât actually have time to absorb that your child is dead.â
The charity Inquest helps families whose loved ones have died in police and prison custody, immigration detention, a mental health setting or where the death involved multi-agency failings.
Its support extends to help with the inquest process, and has said delaying inquests, delays changes and improvements from happening.
Inquestâs parliamentary and policy manager, Rosanna Ellul, said: âA key reason why a lot of families go through this process is so that the same thing doesnât happen to another family.
âIf an inquest is taking several years to be heard by a coronerâs court, those conclusions canât be stated by the coroner and thereâs no way that the relevant organisations can enact that learning⊠and possibly preventing deaths happening in the future.â
Indeed, Laura Davisâs twin sister Nicola is currently receiving treatment at Wotton Lawn Hospital in Gloucester, which also came under criticism from the coroner in Lauraâs case.
Her mum, Ms Davis, said: âNicola has been very close to death, sheâs been in a coma on four occasions. Exactly the same things are happening over and over again so itâs frightening.â
Gloucestershire Health and Care NHS Foundation Trust which runs Wotton Lawn Hospital, said in a statement that they had conducted their own investigation after Lauraâs death and that âall learning from those processes has been incorporated into our trustâs policies and procedures in a timely mannerâ.
âChronic under-resourcingâ
So what is behind the delays?
The now former chief coroner His Honour Judge Thomas Teague KC embarked on a tour of every coroner area in England and Wales, between January 2022 and March 2023.
In the report, published this year, he said: âGiven the chronic under-resourcing of the service, the recent rise in reported deaths, the increase in case complexity and, in some areas, the continued existence of backlogs from the pandemic, it is not surprising that avoidable delays persist.â
But the issues plaguing the system go further back.
Ms Ellul said: âWeâve actually seen significant delays prior to the pandemic and so it speaks to an issue that is pre-existing.
âItâs a system that is in great need of much better investment and prioritization.â
Considering recommendations
The issue of coroners court delays and reforms was also examined by a parliamentary committee earlier this year.
The recommendations made included encouraging greater funding, ensuring the steady availability of pathologists and reiterating their 2021 calls for the establishment of a National Coroners Service.
A government spokesperson said: âThe entire justice system has been under significant strain for many years including coroner services, but we are determined to reduce delays for grieving families.
âWe are carefully considering the Justice Committeeâs recent recommendations in this area and will respond in due course.â
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