Majorie Grayson: Sheffield hospital scolded for discharging vulnerable woman to house where she killed husband
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Marjorie Grayson, aged 85, was found dead at her home in Orgreave Lane, Handsworth, on September 3, 2020. It was the same house where, two years earlier, she killed her husband, Alan, over a “trivial disagreement” brought on by a lapse in impulse control.
Mrs Grayson’s death came after a lengthy stay in two psychiatric hospitals, where she suffered from low moods, a vulnerable state of mind and evident guilt at what happened.
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Hide AdBut despite this, and with no firm diagnosis in place, Marjorie was discharged to community care in March 2020 – where the decision was made not to see her face-to-face, but instead to handle her over the phone for fear of giving her Covid-19.
It placed a huge responsibility on her already grief-stricken family to care for the 85-year-old, who were expected to look for warning signs.
Tragically, it ended with Mrs Grayson taking her own life at home.
Now, coroner Abigail Combes has scolded Grenoside Grange ward, managed by Sheffield Health and Social Care Trust, for seemingly ignoring all warnings from the Ministry of Justice, other hospitals, or even Mrs Grayson herself that she should not be sent home to the house where she killed her husband.
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Hide AdA preventing future deaths report published this week (May 19) said the Ministry of Justice warned there were two “very clear” things that should not happen in Mrs Grayson’s care: That she be sent home alone to the scene of the killing, or that the responsibility is placed on her family, who were given “little or no support”.
“Unfortunately… [this] is exactly the approach that was taken,” wrote Ms Combes.
“… she had returned to her home address which was the scene of the index offence and that she felt guilty about what she had put her family through.
“I can find no evidence of a clear risk assessment balancing the risk of exposure to Covid-19 for Marjorie against the risk of not physically seeing her upon discharge.”
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Hide AdFurther, in the three weeks after her release in March 2020, at what would have been a time of immense stress for Mrs Grayson, the support team only phoned her twice.
Dark thoughts and expressions of guilty and low moods were not acted on by the team.
During her stay at Grenoside, staff stopped psychological therapy Mrs Grayson had been receiving at her previous hospital – St Andrew’s, in Northampton – after deeming it would ‘make things worse’. Ms Combes threw this out, saying there was little in the way of risk assessment in this decision.
A firm diagnosis for Mrs Grayson was never made, other than ‘mild cognitive impairment’, which would not supported the loss of impulse of control that led to Mr Grayson’s death. Despite, the report alluded to two incidents of loss of impulse control “at the highest level” during Mrs Grayson’s time in hospital.
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Hide AdThe coroner scolded the team supporting for seemingly “completely separating” the tragic killing of Mr Grayson and her diagnosis, and failing to manage risk as a result.
Ms Combes ordered Sheffield Health and Social Care Trust and the Ministry of Justice to respond to the report within 56 days.