Essex council hiring mental health officer due to high suicide rate

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The successful applicant is told they will work in partnership with the NHS and the police

A council is hiring a new mental health officer to help address above-average suicide rates.

Essex County Council is offering £37,500 for a public mental health and suicide prevention officer.

The successful applicant would work in the north east of the county, where in Tendring and Colchester the suicide rate was significantly above the England average.

Coroners have previously criticised mental health services in the county.

The job advertisement read: "Suicide rates in some parts of Essex have historically been higher than the national average, so this role presents a real opportunity for the right candidate to make a difference."

According to data from the Office for National Statistics, external, 13.8 people for every 100,000 in Tendring took their life each year between 2019-2021, and 15 per 100,000 in Colchester.

The average figure for England was 10.6 during that period.

The job advert, external said the candidate would work with the North East Essex Suicide Prevention Programme, working with the police, hospitals and GPs - including leading on activities and projects - to help improve collaboration.

Earlier this year, Essex County Council was criticised by area coroner Sonia Hayes over the death of Molly-Ann Sergeant, external in West Mersea near Colchester in 2020.

The council did not act on "appropriate referrals" by the NHS, conduct "required assessments" while she was a mental health inpatient and did not appoint a social worker until she was discharged, Ms Hayes said.

Essex, in response, said it implemented additional training and changed some of its assessment policies.

Another Essex area coroner, Sean Horstead, last year criticised care from NHS mental health staff given to a 66-year-old man from Walton-on-the-Naze.

An inquiry looking into the deaths of up to 2,000 people cared for by Essex Partnership University Foundation Trust between 2000 and 2020 was given statutory powers in the summer.

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