Victims' families urge review of 'abusive' inquest system

Families of suicide victims have met with Prime Minister John Key and urged him to consider a review of the "abusive'' coronial inquest system.

The meeting comes after a spate of youth suicides have rocked communities in Masterton and the small Bay of Plenty logging town of Kawerau in recent months.

Suicide prevention group Casper, along with victims' families and supporters from Kawerau, yesterday presented Mr Key with its latest strategy on tackling suicide.

The strategy calls for shifting suicide prevention efforts from mental health clinics to families and communities.

Casper spokeswoman Maria Bradshaw said the group asked Mr Key to conduct a review of the coroner's court, which is tasked with identifying lessons to be learned from individual suicides and making recommendations to prevent further deaths.

She said taxpayer money was being poorly spent given there was no evidence the court was achieving that outcome.

The group told Mr Key of the "deep dissatisfaction'' families had with the inquest process, calling the experience "abusive'' and saying the court routinely ignored evidence from people who knew suicide victims best.

They also raised concerns that families were actively discouraged from participating in investigations into the deaths of their loved ones.

The group called on Mr Key to consider a Royal Commission of Inquiry into suicide, which he said he would consider.

Mr Key has already indicated his commitment to tackling the issue, having instructed his department to launch a review of the youth suicide rate, which is the highest per-capita in the developed world for girls and the third highest for boys.

Casper's suicide prevention strategy presented evidence that social interventions were more effective at addressing suicide risk than the current mental health model.

The group said that approach could save the Government money while saving lives.

"Millions of dollars are spent annually on mental health services and pharmaceuticals which research has shown increase rather than decrease suicide deaths,'' Ms Bradshaw said.

Figures released by the Ministry of Justice last month showed more than 550 New Zealanders had killed themselves since July last year - 12.65 suicide deaths per 100,000 people - which was slightly up on the past three years.

 

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